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December 13, 2024 29 mins
Clint & Dr. Jenn reflect on the first episode over 6 years ago and some of the wackier topics they've talked about over the years. They both share their appreciations and main learnings, and Clint ends with a story about Trust in Cod.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, this feels a bit weird, doctor Jen, does it
not to you?

Speaker 2 (00:03):
It feels I know, it feels totally weird, Like this
is it? This is our last episode.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Six plus years of doing this and now this is
the last one.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
It's like, what, wait, I guess we're done. Yeah, so
did you go back and listen to the first one?

Speaker 1 (00:21):
I blew it. I can't believe you just asked me
that and I didn't. I completely forgot. And what a
fool I am for that.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
I uh, it's super sweet. Don't worry. I knew you.
I knew you'd forget, so don't worry. But I did,
and I took notes on it, and it was super
we we were like, so what I forgot is we
we had we had done a bunch of morning TV together.
I mean, I didn't forget this. I knew this. And
we had done radio together, and we had done sort

(00:50):
of sex related topics, but we were always on live
TV or live radio. This is our very first time
that we could talk openly, like directly and bluntly about
sexual topics. And it was like so cute. We were
both like kind of giddy about it. Yeah it's adorable.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Yeah, I mean look from day one, I've had a
blast with you. It has everything to do with you
and us and talking and the people listening and the
and the message. But it's the scheduling that is the
Oh yeah, no, no worries.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
No, I mean it's six years is a good run,
two hundred and fifty five episodes, that's fantastic. So we talked.
We talked. The first episode was a lot about body
shame and because you brought up the shame topic right
away and why it was so important to you to
do this podcast. Yeah, and then specifically was sharing about
body shame and asking like where it comes from and

(01:45):
how it was just so good. You know, your sons
were twelve and fourteen when we started. I was like,
oh my god, they were just little kid even like
really teenature?

Speaker 3 (01:56):
Yeah, eighteen and twenty now I know, so which and
side note, is so crazy that I'm dating somebody now
for two and a half years and his kids are
eleven and thirteen.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
So like, little did I expect six years later? You know,
have teen preteens in my life?

Speaker 1 (02:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Regularly?

Speaker 1 (02:16):
Well, I mean think, okay, so that's one thing, right,
and that's a huge thing. But throughout our tenure together too.
You've written a book, You've had a book signing, which
I thought was huge.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Yeah, my book.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
Yeah, my boys are now in college.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
You've got.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
What I was going to bring up was your boyfriend
with his kids and all the travel you do with
him and the different lifestyles.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
Yeah, there's been a lot going on.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
I know. No, it's like a lot has changed in
six years.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
I think about the fact that I'm fifty five and
I was forty nine when we started.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
This, I know. So we both talked. I was forty
five and you were forty nine. I was like, oh
my god, we were in our forties. Cliffs Yep, that
seems like and I'm only fifty one, and that seems
for a go for me. Yeah, so I can only
I was like, oh shit, we were such spring chickens.

Speaker 1 (03:06):
Still are I don't know what you're talking about. We
still are?

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Oh my god? Either No, no, there's no spring chicken
left in my body, sadly.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
Oh maybe some chicken, just not the spring some chi
just some chicken.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
But one of the things that stood out was and
why your your son's age came up, was that you
were talking about how much you had done when they
were kids, to normalize nudity for them, so that you
hope that they didn't have body shame in the same
way that you did, and that you used your own
body even though you were uncomfortable sometimes, just to like,

(03:40):
you know, walk out of the bathroom in the shower
and go into the room to get dressed, and just
to normalize it. And I just thought that was such
a you know, beautiful thing you did for your sons.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
Oh yeah, you know, it's funny. I still have that
body shame for me, but uh, you know, I hope
they do not. But I mean, and that's something with you,
by the way, something that I you know, because I
know we've we've each taken a couple things away from this,
and I've got a couple of things. One of them is,
you know how you are so open with all of
your knowledge through excuse me, geez, through all of your

(04:14):
knowledge and all of your studies and your profession well
and your personal life really that you've just you've kind
of made it more normal to me personally, though I
still have a little bit of I guess you'd call
it shyness with it, always have, even when I was
in good shape. It's better now than it was. Like
now it's like, nah, well, you know, be comfortable with

(04:36):
who we are. That's it.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
That's good. Oh that's great. Oh wow, that's awesome to
hear you say that. Nice.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Don't get me wrong again, I'm not completely cured, but
much better than I was.

Speaker 2 (04:46):
Yeah. Another thing that stood out to me from the
first episode and that you know you have carried throughout
is like being a role model around masculine vulnerability, your
own insecurities and your willingness to talk about shame and
you know, the first time you masturbated and going to

(05:10):
therapy and working on yourself and kind of where you
get your own way and struggles that you have. So
I mean, I just think you've been a really beautiful
model yeah, of masculine vulnerability and you know, I know
you have for your sons, but you know now you
have through this podcast too, well thank you.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
But again, you know, I've learned throughout that it's okay
to be that way and you've made it. You know.
That's your thing is like you've shared that. I don't
know what the word is, I keep saying knowledge, but
your experience, that's what it is. Your experience through through
what you do saying hey, this is all okay, you

(05:47):
know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
I know we all struggle with one thing or another
in one way or another like that is absolutely normal.
It's just been yeah, we all then if we feel
shame embarrassment around it and then we don't talk about it,
and then it takes on a life of its own.
And so I certainly hope through our two hundred and
fifty five episodes that we've made folks feel more comfortable

(06:11):
about these topics and about talking about these topics. And
that's certainly that they've hopefully learned skills and tips along
the way about how to how to have these hard
conversations and how to address these uncomfortable beliefs and emotions.

Speaker 1 (06:29):
Yeah, well, you know, and then all of that throughout
our I keep saying, tenure our time together here. You're
what what I've taken away from with you is, even
though you may disagree with many things that I've said
or things that you've shared other people have said, you've

(06:49):
always been open minded.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
You know.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
I had a friend ask me this. A couple friends
over the time that we've been doing this, and one recently, Mark,
you know, how do you, uh, how do you handle
it if you guys, you know, if you just don't
agree on a topic. And I said, well, we don't
disagree too often, and when we do, it's not that
we're complete polar opposites. It's that we just have different
points of view for certain aspects of that topic. And
I said, but you know, the thing about doctor Jen
is she's always open to explaining why she disagrees and

(07:16):
then we'll look at the other side of it as well.
That's one thing I think you do better than most
people I know.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Thank you. I appreciate hearing that because that is something
that I literally work on. That's an intentional thing I do.
And at this point, thankfully, it's become more second nature
to try to apply critical thinking skills to every situation,
to try not to just dig my heels in with
specific beliefs and ways of doing things, and you know,

(07:45):
you know, trying to practice what I preach around generous
listening and trying to understand other people's perspectives and choices.
So I appreciate that. I think, you know, very few
topics are just black and white, even though you know
that's how they get treated in the media and in
many people's relationships, and so I like to think we

(08:06):
brought a lot of complexity and nuance to you know,
difficult topics and taboo topics, and hopefully got folks thinking
in some new ways.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Well, I thought on this topic that I would share
an email that I found. It was from Thursday, April sixth,
twenty twenty three. You may remember this. Good morning, Clint.
Just wanted to take a minute to tell you how
much I enjoy your podcast with Doctor Jen. I'm listening
while I work night shifts. It's really helped me pull
myself out of a dark time in my personal life
and brings me lots of new insights into personal growth. Also,

(08:39):
I've been a long time listener to DSc and now SBC.
Of course that was with Sarah on it. Are Sarah
Boyer and Clint loving the new show. You complete it
in a way I don't think they could have achieved
without you. I forgot about this last part. I was
just talking about the podcast parts, So now it sounds
like I'm bragging. But anyway, thank you for everything you do.
You are making a different saleoad to Doctor Jen for me.
Tira Masou and san Tee so I just thought I
might remind you shared that email over a year ago,

(09:02):
year and a half, and I thought, why not.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
Right, that's awesome. I barely remember that.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
I'll be honest, as I'm reading it, I barely remember
it because it was over a year I know.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
And I was like, that's such a lovely thing, Like
how do we not remember that more? And I would
say that's because our lives are too fast paced and
our world is too fast paced, no joke, that's lovely.
Oh that makes me really happy. Thank you for finding that.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
I went through and reviewed on Apple to write down
like various topics we tawd, I mean, we have you know.
I read these and I was like, I would read
like the heading and a little description. I was like, cool, lord,
we've talked about a lot of topics and like ridiculous stuff.
But so I wrote down some of them of like
watching porn, fantasy, sexual regrets, my personal turn on. I'm

(09:50):
wondering what I shared it.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
Oh, I don't remember all of it, but I do remember.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
You were like, Mom, if you're listening, Dad, you can
you can? You can? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (10:00):
I remember early on we had an episode where I
ended up talking about going to like like like BDSM
or like sexual power play or like going to sex parties,
and a few of them that had gone to in
the past. And I remember at that point because my
parents had been listening to the show and I was
like hey. I was like, hey, you guys listened to
this week's episode. They're like, oh, no, we haven't had
the chance yet. I go, yeah, you might. You might

(10:22):
want to.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
Not remember that.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
You might want to just stop listening. And I was like, yeah,
I do remember one of those. And then I was like, ooh,
this is definitely not something I need. You know, my
parents knowing, Wow, I talked about my favorite sex toys.

Speaker 1 (10:38):
Oh yeah, I remember. You talked about how you've had
a company or two, or maybe a bunch of companies
send you so many over the years. You're like, yeah,
I try them out.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
I know, and I don't. But most of them because
I'm so particular and I need like really high vibration
of a certain of like a funny variety, not many
of them work for me.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
So you're kind of snootier, You're upper krusty.

Speaker 2 (11:03):
In the I'm so not like Glitterist is snoody. Let
me tell you was not super helpful. When I was
like twenty years old and trying to figure out how
to use a vibrator and have orgasm, it was not easy.

Speaker 1 (11:19):
You're like, hell, this doesn't work for me.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Don't work right, They're like too high vibration, and like
it just doesn't. It didn't work. So it was and
I don't orgasm easily. So yeah, it's uh yeah anyway, Yeah,
I hadn't thought of it as being snooty, you know,
I'm kidding, Well, I need I need a higher end vibrator, right, need.

(11:44):
I just need not that high pitched I can't do
like the bullet vibes and and the smaller ones. I
need something was a little more girth.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
Let's say you need the gray poo pond of vibrators.

Speaker 2 (11:56):
Well, Zina, I mean some of them out there like
thousands of dollars, So I'll just go with like a
I'm good with like an eighty dollars vibrator, which is
a lot. But thankfully, yes, I don't know the last
time I bought a vibrator like decades, because I've won
them at events, they've been mailed to me to get
reviews of. Yeah, so thankfully, then.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
There's naked volleyball. I will never forget. At the first
two or three episodes, you and I talked about that
and I was like, whoa, what's And I have never ever,
ever since then six years later, I have never had
the visual out of my head of a bunch of
naked people with you playing volleyball.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
Oh so funny. I know. I'm well, I was naughty
there and I was like, people, I don't care that
we're naked. We're here to play some volleyball. Let's play.
Are we gonna play quality volleyball? What are we going
to do here?

Speaker 1 (12:48):
You got to bounce it off you're junk to keep
it from itting the ground. You do that, but don't
draw attention.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
But it is I mean, but like anything at Black
Beat in a new you know, once you're there for
like a half hour and everything is just sort of normal,
but it is like somebody's like a dude in particular,
is like leaning over or diving for a ball and
you're seeing his like junk hanging between his legs. It's
just anyway, good times. But I remember you calling it, like,

(13:16):
you know, talking about asking nudist colonies, and I was like,
nobody calls them nudist colonies anymore, Clint.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
I remember that. Well. I also call it a meat whistle.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
So you know, well, there you go. Okay. Other topics,
we talked about bad Valentine's Day gifts, which I don't
remember what we talked about, that's right, yeah, I mean
you over the time brought him tons of stuff about
like sex and the new sex in Hollywood, all sorts

(13:47):
of things with that. We talked about the love languages,
I know. I remember diving deep the one day talking
about like your son's and how to teach your son's
sort of critical thinking skills and their willingness be awkward
and vulnerable in like uncomfortable social settings with their friends,
so that they would have the courage to stand up

(14:09):
for what they knew was right. Oh yeah, and then
not going all wrong with like the cool boy things
or dangerous things and drinking and driving exactly.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
That's exactly where my mind went. I remembered that to
a tea when you just started talking about this. That
was the main part of it was, I don't care
if you've got some a whole friend who thinks coulvo dope,
be a puss or whatever. I don't care. I told
him you don't drive, you don't drive.

Speaker 2 (14:30):
Yeah, had you be the not cool person. But then
like like that takes like, that takes self awareness, and
it takes courage and strength because that feels so awkward
and uncomfortable. And I know I talked about a lot
like where we feel that discomfort in our chest and
we're afraid of being judged and not cool.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
But you got to sit in it too, You said,
you gotta let yourself sit in there just a minute.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
Yep, fit with it, get comfortable with it, breathe into it,
and then and stay with it because otherwise, right, those
feelings come up and they're so uncomfortable, and we just
run from them and do something automatic so I don't
have to feel it. And I was like, no, gain
skills and sitting with it and dealing with it. Yeah,
we talked. We took lots of listeners questions over the years,

(15:10):
which I loved when folks wrote into us, and so
thank you, thank you to all the folks that did
in a handful of folks who wrote in a number
of times, you know, people asking about dating, cheating, breakups, boundaries.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
The gentleman who was living in the house with his
ex wife, but he wasn't sure if he should be
dating because his kids still lived with Remember that. Yep,
that was cool to him to open up like that.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
Sexless marriages, all sorts of stuff, boring sex. Yeah, yeah,
I know. We've talked about dating apps. I certainly talked
about my dating experiences for a while. I have to say, Yeah,
if there is one thing I am most happy about
what's happened in the past six years is that I
have a serious boyfriend who is wonderful, and I am

(15:56):
so appreciative and still like no lie, probably at least
once a week or something, we are both expressing to
each other how appreciative we are that we found each
other and that we have each other, and we're like
two and a half years in now, that's awesome.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
Soon, but that's great?

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Is that it is that at once you hit two
and a half years, that pretty much then you just
fully start taking each other.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
You got three years and it slows down quite a bit.
That once a week will be once a month, and
then after about the fourth year it is literally, eh,
probably once every six months, and then it becomes only
birthdays and holidays.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
It's so much true.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
Yeah, And then it goes twenty years without one, So
don't get me started on.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
That one anyway. I don't agree with you.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
You should not agree with me. I'm totally full of crap.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
Do you know what part of it is? Is that?
So why we don't live together normally in any relationship
that this serious and who like we talk to each other,
that we want to be each other as life partners
and planning our future together, we would totally be living together,
and we are not because he lives in North County Inland,
and I don't want to live there until he has
his kids halftime, and I don't want to disrupt that,

(17:16):
and plus I just don't that would not be like
me dropping into a family and living in the suburbs
would be really truly the opposite of everything I've been
intentional around the way I've set up my life of
living at the beach and traveling a lot and walking
and biking everywhere and going to coffee shops and you know,

(17:36):
and focusing on my career. So all of that being said,
and he gets all that, doesn't disagree with my choices
at all, And I think we are way less likely
to take each other for granted because we're not under
the same route.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
I am with you one hundred percent. I am no
joke here. I really do believe you are correct, I think,
because then there's that excitement of being with each other.
There's that excitement of I haven't seen him for a
couple of days.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
I know.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
Yeah, when you live together, don't get me wrong, it's comfortable.
You still love each other and all that, but there's
the butter you know, the butterflies, and even even of
the butterflies. If you're comfortable enough not to have the butterflies,
which you eventually get to, you're probably already there. But
it's super exciting to know that, oh, you know what,
he's been gone for, you know, four or five days,
or I've been gone for four or five days. We
get to see each other. That's kind of cool.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
It's still and yes, and we still have that and
we have like tomorrow night, we have a date night
that we're going tonight. There's actually I'm super excited. He
works at the Salk Institute, and the Salk is having
its annual big Christmas party, which we've actually never gone to,
and they have rented out the Natural History Museums.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
And Balboa Park damn, they went big.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
This is tonight, yes, yeah, So it's from like six
to nine tonight. So there's drinks and food and dancing
and you get to explore the whole museum. And I
didn't know there's a roof you can go out on,
and so I can't wait to see like Valboa, you know,
the lights and stuff in the park and everything at
night time. So I am. So I've got my my

(19:04):
ugly Christmas sweater which is actually adorable because it has
a cat with fuzzy glasses on it, and I'm going
to wear my stantsa hat and my Christmas earrings. And
actually I'm going to get there probably an hour before them,
because they've got He's got some like you know, kids
lessons and stuff. So I was like, well, I'm going
to go early because I like want to drink and explore,
dance and have fun and then I can go and
like you know, joining into family mode. So but anyway,

(19:27):
I'm decided. I'm just super excited. I'm like really excited
about I love it.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
I love it.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
It's super fun. But yeah, no, we don't. Last night
he had his lab party. They went out to dinner
and and drinks and I was at his house though,
and normally, you know, I normally would have gone home
or whatever. And he's like, I don't know, I'm probably
not going to be back to late. I'm like, you know,
I'm going to stay at your house. I'll still sleep
over tonight and leave in the morning. And but like he,

(19:53):
I know, I know, he came back a little sooner
than he probably would have because he's like, Chen's wait
for me, and I know she's going to go to
bed soon, and I want to fall into bed next
to her to be able to talk to her. And
it was just like we were we were like genuinely
excited and happy to see each other. You know, we
had just seen each other, you know, that morning when
he was leaving the house at like, you know, nine

(20:14):
in the morning or whatever. But there is and so
that that piece of not taking each other for granted,
because we still we have to schedule our time together
and then we're really intentional with our time together, and
you know, and that's super hard when you're living under
the same roof and taking care of kids together and
making meals and paying bills and yeah, doing all of that.

(20:38):
So as much as I wish we could live together.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
I do.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
I see the positive sides of it.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
Yeah, I agree. And there's one other thing I want
to tell you too that I said I would already
kind of spill the beans on this last week. Compassionate listening.
That's probably the number one thing that I would say
I told for listening. Gosh damn it. Yeah, except I.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
Never remember the real time and we go worry just
a made up term. But I like generous listening because
I like this sense of generous to the open heart,
the warmth, the allowing the person to you know, to
not be perfect in their wording and really trying to
understand them.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
And that's the thing. To listen to the words that
come out of their mouth instead of waiting to respond.
That actually really really did me some good in several
conversations that could have turned sideways, and even the ones
that did could have been a lot worse. Brought it
back around with hold on generous listening. Compassionate listening.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
Do you actually still like is that still on your mind?
You kind of like catch yourself, Oh yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
Not every single time, but it is absolutely. I think
it's in my rote memory now. I really do think
it's my subconscious where where when I get upset, I
gotta go hold on, listen to what they're saying, Listen
to the words, understand where they're coming from, because otherwise,
you know, I don't do it often.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
Yeah, well, we.

Speaker 1 (22:00):
Want to defend ourselves. So you know that was something
I think was huge. There is one thing I want
to share with you real quick, because if we end
this podcast in four minutes, before we do this, I
just want to share with you. I got a tattoo
last week. You did, Yes, I did.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
Wait did you have one before I had?

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Okay, so I had a regret. It was trust in
God in barbed wire. Was supposed to look a little
bit more like Crown of Thorns meats barb war. I
never did. And this was before Pamela Anderson, back in
way back. I got this when I was drinking in
Pacific Beach. I was shocked they let me get it.
But it's a little, you know, just a little armband

(22:38):
kind of thing on the right side that I have
a picture of I can send you. But so for
years it said trust in cod It never looked like God.
And over the years it's faded and kind of stretched. Yeah. Yeah,
so I said, why did I just get I love fish?
But and then when it got fixed, it didn't look
like God, it looked like trusting Goo. I'm just like,
come on because the words were so small. So so

(23:02):
I was with POD.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
I was.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
I came to work about a week and a half ago,
two weeks ago, and there's this motor home that is
off point TV and it's got a picture of Sonny,
the lead singer of Pod. The band huge band. If
you don't know who they are, trust me, you've heard
their music. And then and then South Bay Mike, who's
a tattoo artist who would tour with him and do tattoos,
and I met him several years ago. We ran into

(23:26):
each other. He's out there, he's part of this. It's
him and Sonny who are going to interview these artists
while they're getting tattoos in the business. And the idea
is that they that Sonny conducts the interviews, Mike does
the tattoo, and they you know you're you're really honest
when you get a tattoo.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
Because endorphins are released, a great idea for like podcasting
and interviewing people. That's a great idea.

Speaker 1 (23:47):
I agree, And they're doing it on camera, and his
motor home is a tattoo studio and a broadcast vehicle,
Like he can totally do filming. And they have lighting
and they have the software, they have everything the equipment.
So he sees me, we start talking. I do a
quick video. If you look on the Clint August Radio
Instagram thing, you'll see it's about a minute and ten
seconds long. And they really liked it. And Mike's like, dude,

(24:09):
that's a great video. Can you share that with me?
So I did. Yeah. And then but while we when
we were done filming, I was in there and I go, dude,
you got to see this terrible tattoo. I've had this
regret for years. And I showed him and he goes, bro,
we got to fix that. And I'm like, yeah, I know.
I've been talking about doing this for years. He goes, no, bro,
we got to fix that. And I don't know. I

(24:29):
think it's because he's a Christian and I'm a Christian
and because I said it has to say something about God. Well, yeah,
next thing, I know he wasn't just talking a mean game.
He sent me a proof real quick, like three days later,
like he said, hey, dude, here's what I got so far.
I'm like, wait what, I go, You're moving on this quickly?
He goes, yeah, man, we got to fix that. So

(24:50):
instead of trusting God, which I said I wanted to keep,
but just completely fix it, he sends me this thing's
like ten times bigger. It's like from like a short
sleeve even barely cover the very bottom and the top
goes to my shoulder. So it's like way bigger than
it was. Wow, but I love it. So he sends
it to me and I go, you know, dude, you
made a mistake. It's not trust in God. What you

(25:12):
put was in God. I trust, And I said, but
I like that even better. So he went with this
certain kind of font and text and anyway, long story short,
last Monday, this past week, four days ago, got to
his house at five forty five in the morning, started
at six, done at ten, ten thirty. And it's yeah,

(25:32):
I'm just I can't believe it. And he's so damn
good at what he does, and I'm stoked. Anyway, I
just wanted to share that with you because it's sort
of a life event for me. For thirty something years,
I've wanted to fix that tattoo, but.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
Never did holy cow. Yes, yes, yeah, that's also okay.
So you've got pictures and video of it online. I
could find it.

Speaker 1 (25:52):
I'm gonna send it to you because I'm waiting to well,
there is there is a video of me in here.
I had to keep my sleeve rolled up the first
day when I had Raymond Lucero Joseph Raman Lucero, who
plays Creeper on the Mayans MC. He's a biker, local guy,
you know, movie guy, he's a television star, all this stuff.
He came in to help us with something. He's promoting
an event. Well in that video, uh, while we were

(26:14):
talking on the air, I posted that, not realizing, oh crap,
my tattoo showing. Because what I want to do is
a tattoo regrets stories next week and then reveal the tattoo.
But I'll send it to you, and it's going to
change a little bit of color. The red surrounding it
is going to become like gray and sort of silvery
to make it look like it's embedded in my arm
rather than just red clouds around him. That's just the
you know, that's just my my body healing is all

(26:36):
that is so but that's it. Yeah, So I just cool.

Speaker 3 (26:40):
Good for you.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
I applaud you. That's awesome.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
Well, and it's funny because he came up with all
of it. I like, I just a dude.

Speaker 2 (26:46):
I like it.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
I like it.

Speaker 2 (26:48):
Yeah, but you jumped on it and you did it.
Like you said, you've been waiting sort of like thirty
years to feel like pride in that.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
Yeah, that's awesome.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
Anyway, that's awesome. Well, two things I want to say
in conclusion. In one, I would be remiss if I
didn't do a shout out to my sister Christine Dean
and Sarah Compassionate Sarah, because they've been our big listeners
all along and text me many weeks laughing about the

(27:15):
show and such. So I just, you know, thank you
too for listening. I probably kept doing the show partly
because of you guys, So thank you. And you know,
and I know I've said this in other times when
we've done sort of like retrospective episodes, but like, I
really like I learned so much watching how because you know,

(27:37):
you are a seasoned radio on air personality, and how
you know how to host a show and keep things
moving and teens topics and your storytelling and your vulnerability.
Like I just learned so much from watching you and
getting to experience you hosting our show. So thank you,

(27:58):
like it made it's absolutely made me a better professional,
and I really appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
Well, you have no idea how that makes my day.
The fact that you learned anything from me is amazing
to me because I felt like it was the entire
time me learning from you what we talked about earlier,
you know, just really listening with compassion and really really
or with kindness, but just all of that. The way

(28:24):
you are able to handle a perspective that is not
your own and sort of see the other side whether
you disagree or not, that to me was the just
a huge, huge learning tool for me from you.

Speaker 2 (28:36):
So thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank
you for you know, because you were the ones through
iHeart Radio and media to get this going and to
have a place to host it and to be doing
all the tech stuff. So I appreciate it just being
able to show up or call in and talk about
topics that are my favorite things to talk about. So

(28:57):
thank you, thank you for these two hundred and fifty
five episode.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Hey, I love it, and thank you doctor Jen, for
taking time out of your business schedule to be the
smart person on this podcast by the way, real quick, Stiffy,
that's right, baby, had to say it, and we're hanging out.
We are going to hang out. We're going to be
you said, we have to make a make it a priority.
I don't care if it's once a month, whatever, we

(29:21):
gotta do it.

Speaker 2 (29:22):
Okay, all right, I will be in touch in January
about that.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
All right.

Speaker 2 (29:28):
Happy holidays.

Speaker 1 (29:29):
Merry Christmas, got you too, wow, Merry Christmas. Yeah, all right,
doctor Jen. You've been phenomenal on here and now we're
going to continue off here.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
Awesome. Thank you, clan, thank.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
You, and to our listeners. By the way, I know
you already said that, but I'm make sure that I
got to say that as well.

Speaker 2 (29:45):
Thanks folks.

Sex Talk with Clint & The Doc News

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