When the Bird Leaves the Nest: A Father-Daughter Tale of Staying Connected & Soaring Into Adulthood
Hey friends! In this episode of The Teevee Show Podcast, I sit down with my daughter Anastacia for a cozy and candid chat about her college adventures. We dive into everything from her initial fears and challenges to the unexpected joys of learning Python and grappling with complex math problems.
It’s not just about academics, though; Anastacia opens up about finding her tribe and how distance made our bond stronger.
Whether you're navigating your own educational journey or just love a story about personal growth and connection, this conversation is packed with insights and a good dose of father-daughter banter.
Join us and maybe even see yourself in our stories. Looking forward to having you tune in!
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00:00:00:02 - 00:00:13:18
Unknown
I feel like I talk to you more there than I did where I was at home. We didn't really call. I was here because I'm 15 minutes away, so I'll just see you when I shine. Is strangest thing.
00:00:13:19 - 00:00:31:05
Unknown
Finding new friends. Was that a challenge? That there was something that you're working on? I didn't want to make it a big deal. That when I'm there, I need to find a circle. I need people to be with. So I don't feel alone as fast as possible because I wanted I wanted to be very, very thoughtful of the decisions and the people that I'm around.
00:00:31:06 - 00:00:51:09
Unknown
So when I got there, knowing that I would find alone I could take my time, and I told my dad I love just learning was something that I really loved. Last semester was Evie was learning and trying to really retain it so I can come back and explain the Nina's better. Like, yes, I try not being that person where it's like, oh, I'm so politically correct.
00:00:51:09 - 00:01:10:23
Unknown
I agree with everything they're saying, because obviously you must be right. I wanted to really understand it. So I did really change my way of thinking, not just, oh, I agree in class because I want you really think I'm a good person, but I just do it. I understand it and it makes sense. Welcome everyone to The Teevee Show Podcast.
00:01:11:00 - 00:01:33:22
Unknown
My name is Teevee and this is. And this box. This is a rock star right here. This is my baby girl. For many of you devoted fans, all of you, all 157 of you, I don't know. I'm making that up. You actually have met her. She was on the podcast in the summer of last year, right before she was going to college.
00:01:34:00 - 00:01:58:17
Unknown
Hey. What's next? That was six years ago. What happened last year during that podcast? You never quite arrange it before. And now I have to retake the rest. She's making a record. Record? Record. Record. We're. We're recording, and I'm excited to have her back. She's home for the summer. Visiting because, you know, she she lives in Indiana these days.
00:01:58:19 - 00:02:19:12
Unknown
How is Indiana? What's it like for you up at Notre Dame? Not at Notre Dame, but the weather's amazing. Just so you like. Yeah. Oh, look, I guess I didn't really get that. I got there, it was still summer, but it was 70 degrees every day. But winter. Nice. Well, I didn't leave campus, and they really shelter us there.
00:02:19:14 - 00:02:46:10
Unknown
They follow the sidewalk, so I never. It was snowy, icy, but I never really experienced the harsh lines. But I did go out, so any any crazy incidents, any stories of following and slipping and sliding as you're adjusting to what's your weather up north? They forgot to salt the sidewalks and it wasn't snowing, but in the middle of classes it randomly started sprinkling and it was freezing temperatures.
00:02:46:12 - 00:03:03:23
Unknown
So once you're all in classes, all the sidewalks froze over and everyone was slipping back to the door. And soon as you can even escape the snow on sidewalks and people just like you know what? I'll get my shoes wet in my school and they're walking in the snow sidewalk. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that makes sense. Okay. Well, good.
00:03:04:00 - 00:03:19:22
Unknown
I'm glad that you haven't had an unfortunate incident. I've had some of those in my days here in Texas when it has frozen wherever I speak. Busted my ass. And it's not all. I'm so very happy. Ever since the weekend, everyone was saying, like, it's going to happen. Once it did it, I was very careful and got such kick.
00:03:19:22 - 00:03:41:07
Unknown
Anyway, how was your freshman year? How would you describe it? Settling in and then moving a little while? I know it's crazy, but it definitely exceeded my expectations of me because I wasn't sure how well I would do. Everyone always says like, oh, I just so different compared to mine. You really have to study along.
00:03:41:07 - 00:03:56:19
Unknown
You know, how to study. So when you get there, it's going to be hard. And I did study a lot of high school on edge labels. And by and that was simple enough. So when I got there I was really nervous in my setup and my and my like my bad habits going to set me up for failure.
00:03:56:19 - 00:04:11:11
Unknown
But I wasn't too much of a challenge. I just knew what was important. I knew I wanted to get my work down and do well, and so I just did it and I enjoyed it. You know, like my classes and I love my teachers. So it felt very worth it. What was the most challenging thing for you? Settling in.
00:04:11:17 - 00:04:34:07
Unknown
Settling in. Yeah. As you first month or two. What did you do? You remember what it was like? This thing, like anything? I don't think so. Like, it was a really good first year. Wow. Really? That myself? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I'm always you. You always telling stories of how I like. I'm happy alone. And you used to worry you.
00:04:34:08 - 00:04:53:18
Unknown
You did? No, I was there, and I. And I was alone, doing a lot of work. And then I'm going out. And now that I made some friends. But like that solitude wasn't a bad date. Getting started. I didn't I didn't feel that that homesickness, because I had no one. I was an angel myself. I like things at issue.
00:04:53:20 - 00:05:14:18
Unknown
So when she was little, it was actually a real concern of mine because she was raised with her sister, her older sister, a couple years older, and they would play and do things. But inevitably I would find under anesthesia, like in the backyard, for example, I know they would play in here and then I know would wander over to the corner and I'd be like, is she okay?
00:05:14:20 - 00:05:34:16
Unknown
Is she does she get in trouble with it? Did you get did you argue with your sister? What's going on? And the more I pay attention and pay attention to that, you were just having a good old time. You could be playing the grass. You could just be, I don't know, playing imagination. I don't know what you were doing, per se, but you never seemed set.
00:05:34:18 - 00:05:56:01
Unknown
So that gave me hope as you went off to college. That that would also play itself out. So, it's I'm glad. And I know that, but I was super happy to hear that. That is absolutely how it played out for me. All right. So the very next question, follow up question would be I encouraged you to actually go out of state.
00:05:56:04 - 00:06:18:03
Unknown
I know it was, recommended by some friends to stay in-state, but I really, really wanted you to push yourself to go out of state, to create new friendships and to learn something new and just a whole new environment, same country, but it's basically a whole nother country. And that's something I've learned by just traveling. Like every pocket of the state has different cultures.
00:06:18:03 - 00:06:39:16
Unknown
What was that like for you? Given that you've had to basically move away, you had no friends up there? No. No social circle that was already established? Well, a lot of times when I was there, like, we'd all introduce ourselves and while it's a private college, a lot of them came from nearby, like the furthest south, like for Normal People was like Chicago.
00:06:39:18 - 00:07:01:10
Unknown
That's not very far. Well, you know, it's a few hours away. It's like, can you go upstairs and race? Which is a drawing, but it's different. So every time I got there and I'd say like, oh, I'm from Dallas, Texas, they're always, oh, what's the what's the biggest, culture shock or whatever? So and I always had some time because even whenever like I'm driving there are I'm flying back.
00:07:01:10 - 00:07:16:19
Unknown
I'm like, oh, I miss my family. Once I'm there and I'm there and I'm not thinking about my just. I think I'm a very out of sight, out of mind courtesy. So, I didn't do a lot of comparing back to whenever it asked me. I'd have such a difficult time answer. You know, I want to give them a great answer again.
00:07:16:21 - 00:07:35:04
Unknown
So, you know, I would I would default to like, oh, I'm very, self-conscious of how much I see things wrong because it is very natural for us. And it is not till I'm there that it kind of sounds a little country's. Yeah, because you're one of few. Right? Yeah. That are actually there from from south. Yeah. But other than that I don't know.
00:07:35:06 - 00:07:54:03
Unknown
I did some of them like, once in certain classes for some reason, like there's more people that were from all across the world, like, I don't know, I didn't do a lot of country that come out of it. I was always just you were there. I know you've already said to wish. I wish you was suffering more because I was like, I want to give better answers for sure.
00:07:54:05 - 00:08:09:22
Unknown
But for, I mean, for me, I was just going to school that I didn't know look at, because I know for a lot of people, they it tends to be a thing. You want to stay with the group of people that you graduated with. And it's it's not a comfort. And I wanted you to have to be uncomfortable.
00:08:10:00 - 00:08:28:15
Unknown
And I felt like it was gonna help you grow. And to hear that is actually what's comfortable for you. There wasn't too uncomfortable and that you were able to, stay close, but live through it with that have feeling homesick is obviously makes me have a new feel. Like if you were homesick a little, I feel better about myself.
00:08:28:17 - 00:08:53:22
Unknown
We could. But if she missed her pops a little more. But I think I didn't miss too much because we had somebody we had called on the calendar to catch up with each other. I would call back frequently, or that school would call me and I would and I would like my family, and I would answer and while I'm home, I feel like I talk to you more there than I did where I was at home.
00:08:54:00 - 00:09:09:18
Unknown
We didn't really call. I was here because I'm 15 minutes away. So I'll just see you when I shine is strangest thing. But when I'm gone, since I'm so far away now it's almost. It's on the calendar. Let's call every Thursday at 7 p.m.. Yes. Call you on the date. Wait for the second to return, and we get.
00:09:09:19 - 00:09:32:17
Unknown
We talk forever. When it's two two hours, we have to call each other off. Okay, we got to go. I got to get back to life. So Arizona was talking to my family more, while so once far away. And it's only limited to a phone. I'm getting my fix still, so I feel like I still, I still feel that that love and that connection.
00:09:32:19 - 00:09:52:15
Unknown
And now that I don't even know I'm seeing or I'm visiting everyone, it's so special because, like, oh, you're gonna leave again. I'm gonna miss you. So let's really make sure we catch up, make sure we get everything scheduled. Would you say that the scarcity is actually what plays into it? That's something I always thought of. But scarcity becomes, something, a benefit, something that has value to it.
00:09:52:17 - 00:10:12:06
Unknown
I'll. I'll tell a story. I never had trouble getting the girls. When we go anywhere to a party, like a cousin has a party, or somebody else has a party, I never had trouble wrangling them up and getting them ready to go, you know? Go with us. Somewhere along the line, I figured out this little trick.
00:10:12:07 - 00:10:33:05
Unknown
Where I at? When? When I'm ready to go, I start announcing five minutes, and at the five minute mark, they're like, okay. So they start running around trying to have fun. All right, let's do one more game. Because we're playing the we again I think you want more game. You play that you play. Or maybe at the end of that, by the end of it, we're all kind of scattering.
00:10:33:07 - 00:10:52:05
Unknown
People have gone to their rooms and we're all kind of like the five minutes, five minutes we jump up inside. Anything we can do is become a joke amongst the cousins. But I would do that. And then I would do four minutes and do a countdown. And the idea behind it would be to set an expectation. It was never five minutes, it was never five minutes from 5 minutes to 4 minutes.
00:10:52:05 - 00:11:16:07
Unknown
It could have been five minutes in between there, but it was a countdown of sorts for their little brains. So like, okay, I know that after five is four and after fours, so forth and so on. So at three minutes it literally might have been 30 minutes later. But the cutest thing is that when it was at one minute, one minute you see them scampering around trying to get as much like fun as possible and fun fun.
00:11:16:09 - 00:11:36:05
Unknown
And I can't help but feel like that's exactly what happens. Because of that. It's like, okay, you're not here often, so I need a hug on you. Love on you. Do everything I can spend time with you have conversations that I regularly wouldn't have. Okay, I love that. It's, It's unfortunate that we don't. Or that we do kind of take people for granted.
00:11:36:05 - 00:11:54:01
Unknown
When you're around all the time, you're 15 minutes away. Why is that about me now? I said I'm not. I actually would not. Yeah. We're down to the last couple of weeks of summer and I'm like, oh no, I won't apologize. I haven't seen you. You need to come over. She's spending the night. You need to hang out.
00:11:54:01 - 00:12:14:11
Unknown
Let's go to the movies. Let's do something because we're running out of time. So I guess that's exactly what's playing itself out there, right? So what? How how was finding new friends? Was that a challenge? Is that still something that you're working on? Because that was something I was concerned with. Obviously leaving. You have no friends?
00:12:14:13 - 00:12:35:03
Unknown
All right, get go find drinks. Go be friendly. Go be social. What did you do to start to, find a new social circle, or. How was that? When I got there, I kind of set a different approach. I just I didn't want to make it a big deal there, weren't there? I need to find a circle. I need people to be with.
00:12:35:03 - 00:12:56:09
Unknown
So I don't feel alone as fast as possible because I wanted I wanted to be very, very thoughtful of the decisions and the people that I'm around. So when I got there, knowing that I would fight alone, I could take my time. And I told my dad I did. I found some friends to begin with, but I made sure not to get like, totally John.
00:12:56:13 - 00:13:16:00
Unknown
I mean, you hear in relationships, like love bonding, but friendship wise, when you say that at the hip the whole time and then you lay around, you realize all the men don't like this person as much. But now we're like, listen, we got to dorm together next semester or next year now because I went in so hard. Yeah, luckily I did have a single dorm.
00:13:16:02 - 00:13:36:16
Unknown
Very grateful for that because it gave me the the solitude of being able to take a break, because sometimes I did get overwhelmed with it's a lot. It's a small school, but everything is new anyways, so I didn't go in needing needing something ASAP, so I let it happen naturally. I met some people. Those friendships in your work, I just let it go, let it fizzle out.
00:13:36:18 - 00:13:54:09
Unknown
But through them I met someone else triumphs and it's very coming home. I sleep well, it's funny because I'll say her last night causing me to like, know it's not a sponsorship for Natalie and for like there I was just talking to the first friend that I made, and that's how I met her. And I was talking about flying back to Dallas.
00:13:54:11 - 00:14:10:16
Unknown
And she's from Houston. She goes, and then we're leaving the dining hall. We live in the same dorm. And she just. So you're flying back, what was like? Yeah, because I have a layover in Dallas, and I found out we're on the same flight a few rows from each other. And then from there we we took an Uber together, was at the airport.
00:14:10:16 - 00:14:34:08
Unknown
We talked I just I let this happen naturally. And I brought with her for a while. I was over with her and, she introduced me to someone else because the second semester. So we're already six months in. And then the second semester, she introduced me to one of her friends. We had a tax together. So during lunch, after we would go, and I'm not very big on like, scheduling meals, I'm really bad at that.
00:14:34:11 - 00:14:48:20
Unknown
I think that eating. Yeah, I mean, if I'm hungry, I'll just like, I would never go, okay, I go after class. I'm like, well, at this time or whatever, I had time, I would go and I grab a snack or wait for dinner, you know, notorious for not eating too late. It's too late. Oh, no. Yeah. I haven't eaten it.
00:14:48:22 - 00:15:05:08
Unknown
Yeah. And that was close. And I have to DoorDash. What's it? Anyways, but with her, then I was like, you know what? I like this person. I like her a lot. I now that I tested the waters, I let it be. I'm gonna I'm going to I'm going to. I got a little hold on her, you know.
00:15:05:10 - 00:15:25:09
Unknown
So I'm moving. Yeah. So I noticed that after class you would always go to lunch. So I made sure to always do, like, okay, I'm going to be hungry. Let's go. And then we. That's where I met one of her friends, and we became a thing. Every Thursday after class, we would go to lunch together. So they made sure you that they didn't know that, but they made sure that you followed me under.
00:15:25:09 - 00:15:48:02
Unknown
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00:15:48:03 - 00:16:12:18
Unknown
We take your marketing dollars and actually make them do something like work one video content and as a stop your audience from scrolling faster than they stop for a baby panda video. Yeah, we do that. So if you're done setting your marketing dollars on fire, there's a rockstar marketing. And let's turn those crickets into cash. And all of us, we don't have a class like another two hours after, so we would spend a lot of time just talking, just the three of us.
00:16:12:20 - 00:16:29:18
Unknown
And now I love her. So I'm to like I'm holding on to it. And then so I have those two and I'm very confident in those two. I just let it happen. I didn't get too attached. I waited for like, the right with the right, personality traits to get the right signals to be like, oh, that's it.
00:16:29:18 - 00:16:49:20
Unknown
Now give me, give me. Now you've got to hold up. Yeah, right. And then I have some pending friendships. But you did say that question. I'm sorry. I started gaining momentum at the very end. And then we went to summer break. And then right out of them, those are all hold. We have classes next semester, and I'm very looking forward to nourishing well and students there.
00:16:49:21 - 00:17:12:07
Unknown
My major under the hammer see them a lot and they seem like really cool people. One of the better. I've seen the and I'm very excited for that. So friendships I don't it's also them happen organically. Yeah. It was basically what you're saying. Just don't force anything like release all these celebrations and stop rushing them, right? I mean, I take my friendships very seriously with my like so it's circle.
00:17:12:07 - 00:17:31:02
Unknown
Yes. It's the right thing to say. You shouldn't force anything. It's like a fart force. It it may. Yeah. Some will. Yeah. Just don't force. Yeah. Just let it organically materialize and and that's a good approach. I'm happy that you did that. There's something that I was keeping tabs on because as a dad, I don't like you hanging with.
00:17:31:02 - 00:17:53:17
Unknown
Where are you at? Just working away. Yeah. Like where? As she did she we we did have schedule, meetings. Daughter. Daddy. Ketchup. Ketchup, meetings on Thursdays. And we continue them during the summer because she's still very busy, young lady. You know, she's got a job, she's in sales. She celebrates, so it's like I feel it up.
00:17:53:19 - 00:18:13:15
Unknown
Yeah, right. And it is something that was. It was clear to me that if I didn't schedule time with her, I wasn't going to get it. So because she's busy, she's, she gets she she gets thrown into her books and her studies and her friendships and her work. You take short circuit. And I it actually didn't matter that much.
00:18:13:17 - 00:18:39:11
Unknown
Next question, next topic. How? As the year went on, I noticed a pattern in the in your passions. Oh, you know what we're talking about. Yes. That like, oh, oh I see what's happening here that we would have the same not the same conversation. Have the conversations about the same topics. Oh. Okay. I think our passions are rising and bubbling to the top.
00:18:39:13 - 00:19:00:19
Unknown
Share with us what are what do you feel are those passions and those subjects that you do find yourself like, just enamored with and like determined to figure out and learn more about? Okay, so the very end up, like I say that I read the second half of the year is where this came from. I think I started to my first coding class.
00:19:00:21 - 00:19:27:20
Unknown
I learned Python, and every time we com we'd always talk about something new. I learned there's some new assignment or little task I had to do or obstacle yeah, I learned or ideas I had. It was always about coding. We spent a good hour of me just showing him my code, explaining line by line, running it over and over, because I'm also excited just to watch you run and get it and show it.
00:19:27:20 - 00:19:43:11
Unknown
Yeah. And explain to you like, I love explaining it to you because and I can remember what it was like trying trying to write it and come up with the ideas. And I love that part. It's like tickles my brain and in a matter of speaking, you were teaching me. Yeah. And I felt I felt it. I was like.
00:19:43:11 - 00:19:59:13
Unknown
And the person that I love to talk about is like, would one teach us to learn? It was, I feel like you were teaching me and trying to share what you were learning and trying to regurgitate that, you know, with the class. So within a few months, there's so much jargon I can't use and explaining it to you.
00:19:59:13 - 00:20:19:20
Unknown
So I started trying to I had to understand it and find a way to explain it in. I feel like I got to understand some of the systems or some of the whatever. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I do know just enough code and just to actually get a little carried away. Yeah, I know I'm like whoa. And she's like down those rabbit hole.
00:20:19:22 - 00:20:36:09
Unknown
But I'm keeping up on some level enough to say, oh, I see what you did there. And I see the sense because a lot of it is figuring out a problem. You have a problem and you want a solution, and you're trying to figure out how to get there is something. She gave us our very first project. It wasn't even coding.
00:20:36:09 - 00:20:56:12
Unknown
It was just, here's a problem. How would you attack it? Yes. And she was saying when she was getting one of her degrees by teacher, her professor would tell her there's no one right answer. Yeah, just there's a, there's a quicker, some quicker solution is, is tens and hundreds, but there's not a right one. The best one is just to get there faster.
00:20:56:12 - 00:21:25:00
Unknown
It more organize more elegantly clarity. And so where was I going with this? I know what you just tell me. How. I guess one of the lessons you're talking about, the one of the first lesson, wasn't even a computer science problem. It was a a problem solving. How would you attack this war using language? But I was just telling you that you were sharing different concepts and trying to figure going, I don't know, but going over to mind, like I find myself, that was my one solution.
00:21:25:00 - 00:21:38:03
Unknown
But going over with, oh, maybe I could do this or I could do this is one of my favorite things, is I would come up with all these ideas, and every time I would think I was like, oh, it's possible. I just had to write it. And I love it. Like there's just so many ways and go about it.
00:21:38:05 - 00:22:05:11
Unknown
And I had so much fun just sitting there and brainstorming it. I don't I'm I've never been a person that like writes a rough draft and then go through an edit and revise it or like brainstorm doesn't things like that. They tried really pushing that at in elementary school, making brainstorms and whatever ends up doing that. But when it was this, I had so much fun getting out a piece of paper and pencil before before writing it, and like figuring out my map.
00:22:05:11 - 00:22:21:23
Unknown
Okay, here's what I need to get here. Here's where I need to go. How do I get there? Okay, what do I need to get there? Nick? You know, working back. Oh, I love it. Why? Why would you say you love it? Let's. What does it feed? What does it trigger exactly? That it just problem solving. Like I had a problem.
00:22:22:00 - 00:22:46:01
Unknown
So I figured it out. And that feeling of I'm like, well I see this. Like whenever we started the clash, there's you might struggle. It's basically a language. It's a brand language we're learning. And so it's going to take some time. And so being able to to take this new language and all these new things like I've only known this for a few months and being able to apply it and manipulate don't have where I want.
00:22:46:03 - 00:23:02:17
Unknown
And the one of my favorite things, like I had so much fun, was like, I want to learn more. And whatever the specific problem that I had, I had an idea that we hadn't learned yet. I wasn't sure if we were ever going to, why? It was just introduction class. So I used my best friend ChatGPT and I.
00:23:02:19 - 00:23:20:00
Unknown
I was hesitant to mention this like class, that I use it because everyone's scared of it, but I would use it as this, as my as my teacher. I'd be like, can I is this possible? But don't give me the answer is a yes as possible. Here's the function. Like here's the thing, you need to use it. I learned how to use errors and whatnot, which how did you do it?
00:23:20:00 - 00:23:42:16
Unknown
Why was that? What is it in real quick is whenever you're writing code, if there's some sort of error that pops up as a much like a typo. So you use something that wasn't supposed to be used in a service. So if you're talking about integers, but you're using text to do an Arabic pop up and whatnot, but you can use those, there's a way to write code where if that ever happens, then do this and it won't be able to because then that's me.
00:23:42:18 - 00:23:59:03
Unknown
That's your code. Yeah, yeah. But there's a way you can use code progressive to write. Right? So I didn't know that. And that's what I was wanting. And so is like yeah, it's called a tiger or whatever. And there's like how do you use it? Give me an example. And it showed me and it would explain it to me.
00:23:59:04 - 00:24:20:00
Unknown
I could ask it so many times, can you dumb it down? Can you dumb it down? Okay, okay, I like to use it. And then I went back and I showed we teacher and then we see combo. Oh you're asking me why. And I love it. Yes. It's just that satisfaction I do. I've always loved math available solving sitting there, working out all your, working out all the math and then looking back at the piece of paper I started here.
00:24:20:00 - 00:24:39:19
Unknown
Here's all my work, all my brain power. And I got the right answer. I love that feeling. So I was able to do that. And then when my teacher says my code looks looks professional in. Oh, yeah, you got two words. I told you elegance. That's my word. And I think that would be very elegant because people can code and I've seen code, I've written codes.
00:24:40:00 - 00:24:55:19
Unknown
And when I was taught code is like, no, if you really you want to make it legible for another question to read or for you to refer back to like, oh, I see what happened. Yeah, yeah, I knew what I was getting. Oh, I but that's right. Your code is elegant. I've seen it. You've shared it. What is pretty, good.
00:24:55:20 - 00:25:12:01
Unknown
And I and I love, like, there's so many times I just stare at it. I'll take a picture of the screen because I want to remember it. Yeah, actually, look at, What what did you remember going? If you wanted to go back to that and so on, certain assignments. I wasn't sure how far she wanted us to go.
00:25:12:03 - 00:25:33:15
Unknown
I think one of them was analyze a presidential speech. Oh, that's right, how to recognize words and pieces of a word. And one had a frequency in the place that happened. And I was. It was only worth the ten points. It was like, oh, surely this shouldn't be that much, but I wanted you want. And sometimes I do as much as I can.
00:25:33:16 - 00:25:47:18
Unknown
Would you say what you're asking? Who was really driving you? That really was the I wrote code and I was like, oh, there's a better way to do it. Oh, there's a better way to do. Oh, I can use those pieces of you over here. And by the end of it, I have so much. So we have we have a weekly call scheduled.
00:25:47:20 - 00:26:07:16
Unknown
But during that entire problem, I would get calls from her almost every single day with her sharing updates. Yeah. I was like, oh, I just love it up. And you were gone. I'm like, okay, let's go to the okay. I something I wasn't really proud of is whenever I run into like a problem, oh, I got a problem.
00:26:07:16 - 00:26:33:14
Unknown
Well the math, what I love going back in the math was figuring out where I was wrong, redoing it and then correcting myself. And so when the code when something wouldn't work, I loved. Even though, like, sometimes I get really frustrated. I love sitting there beating up where is it going wrong, breaking it down, and just because then I'm really analyzing it, I'm really making sure I understand what I'm writing and how it's working.
00:26:33:16 - 00:27:01:02
Unknown
And it and it helped. By the end of it all, I was the code was I mean, the some of the stuff we did in classical easier because I was taking it further and yeah, when it is, is exactly that I read it. The reason I really love code and coding is it really forces you to think through a problem and try to figure out how to simplify it and find a solution, how to break it down its components, like what is the real problem?
00:27:01:04 - 00:27:23:00
Unknown
What is the desired outcome, and then going through and actually breaking it down. What needs to happen? What information do I need? Wait, what ingredients in the dish do I need to write and I can't? For me, yes, exactly. Is is what it's chemistry essentially is. But with like exact numbers. But I find that to be true in communication.
00:27:23:02 - 00:27:44:00
Unknown
Like if you almost always I feel like it's like, yes. I don't know if we did it in circuit, we're geeking enough. But if you're talking to someone and you want them to do something and they don't get it done, and they're actually a good person and a good employee, or just a good person that wants to follow through, and chances are you didn't communicate it well.
00:27:44:02 - 00:28:05:20
Unknown
So you have to, like, break down. What did I say? How did I say it was I like it's literally another way to say it. Yes, several times until they get it. You change it. Yes. And you have to run it even like when you're human, in human, behavior, you can't read it. And and I mean, you they will that will do it.
00:28:05:20 - 00:28:23:06
Unknown
But now it's like they messed up. And now you have an error right there in front of you. But in coding is like, well, you look at it and you go back and you, you unpack it to see where they are happening. Recoded and re re formatted or whatever. You can read it again, but with a human you might get really upset.
00:28:23:08 - 00:28:42:20
Unknown
There might be feelings are hurt. A lot of times. So I find human communication to be that way is something that I'm just fascinated with. But I that's why I love code because it really forces you like that's because the machine is going to do exactly what you tell it. It's like, no, it's thousand. I run into this like, no, it's impossible.
00:28:43:01 - 00:29:03:00
Unknown
Everything's perfect. Nope. It is it. I can tell you right now, but. So did you have a follow up to that? Okay. What was the other subject that you became? Incredibly, that was a new thing that I'd like revealed. This, I think was the original. Yes. It was my gender and women's studies. That's right. Yes. I was teaching him so much, I think something yeah.
00:29:03:02 - 00:29:19:20
Unknown
Like, I love just learning was something that I really loved last semester was Evie was learning and trying to really retain it. So I can come back and explain everything. You as best as I can. Yes. Oh, Virginia, you want to talk about. Oh, yeah. Oh, it helps. So I don't really need to pay attention because I'm going to tell you.
00:29:19:22 - 00:29:42:02
Unknown
I know that's interesting. Yeah. So with that one, we was it was broken into three different sections of this. First one was gender is second was sexuality. The last one was like contemporary debates. And the first one was really mine. Like we had to really build our thinking because it's talking about gender in a way that is traditionally talked about or something that we're trying to move towards.
00:29:42:02 - 00:30:04:09
Unknown
But it's very nontraditional in having to like, stop and think of different ways. Sometimes that, yeah, and then have it and then teaching it and explaining it to you. You're like, what? Scratch through the floor like I know, right? Yeah. It's actually mind bending. It's is my is I try not being that person where it's like, oh, I'm so politically correct.
00:30:04:09 - 00:30:22:18
Unknown
I agree with everything they're saying, because obviously you must be right. I didn't want to then. I didn't want it to just be that because I'm reading it in this class. This is obviously correct way of thinking. I wanted to really understand it. So I did really change my way of thinking, not just, oh, I agree in class because I would.
00:30:22:18 - 00:30:41:08
Unknown
I really think I'm a good person, but I shift student, I understand it and it makes sense and I'm trying to think of something we're talking about. Oh, just how like gender and sexuality are different. And, I don't know, I tend that was it was very intense the conversation because before class, we need you to repeat that.
00:30:41:10 - 00:31:04:09
Unknown
And it's like the just the wording is ever so slightly different and a bit, oh, it was and it was great because in there it felt like a very safe place. Very safe place to be wrong. Whenever is where you're trying to interpret what this what this, office scientist is saying, this is this, author and and the teacher was also the thing I like terms I use more or less.
00:31:04:09 - 00:31:22:05
Unknown
I love all my teachers. I had, I mean, people, people there have had bad teachers and it's it's it's they're present in every, in every school. But I had very let's meet and I think I have this semester's that would be just so today I, I love my professors there. And by the end of the year, I think I was really close to them.
00:31:22:06 - 00:31:45:23
Unknown
And we're excited to see them again. And third, which is the main reason you went to school with subject. So oh gosh, it was so hard to talk about this with you because like, I want to go all the way in and explain every last bit of it. Well, how to really help myself. Yeah, she had to because my math, I did reach Pre-Calc, but it was a nightmare in high school was the fourth one I was in the first semester.
00:31:45:23 - 00:32:21:00
Unknown
But we'll go back, okay? Okay, okay. Oh, that's right. Was right. So before we go there, I want to really touch on math before we go there because it ties in to the first thing it does. What. What's that what you did actually say. But talk to me specifically about math. To me. Why is it important? I took calculus two and I had kind of gotten like a little taste of that when I was senior because I took a level off of calculus, I skipped one and went straight there because the second one had all of the first one, plus some more.
00:32:21:02 - 00:32:37:19
Unknown
But I was like, I'll just do the second one so that I can get as much as I can. And I didn't do very well because it was very is crammed in at the end of the semester after we learned all the first stuff and I just I had no idea what was happening in. So whenever I went in to count two, at least I knew what I was getting myself into.
00:32:37:19 - 00:32:56:14
Unknown
I knew what to expect, and I had some idea of it. So I felt like, well, I did well. I took credit in that. And so when I went into the yeah, if you have some level of awareness around it, it wasn't brand new information. Right. So I was the second semester calc three. I was like, oh gosh, this is the first time I'm in a math class in a while that I've no idea what we're going to learn.
00:32:56:20 - 00:33:25:19
Unknown
And then they introduced 3D, the third dimension into mathematics, which basics really like is no longer flat, isn't the first. There was some really hard class here. Are you really going to struggle? This is my second time getting in or whatever and it really scared it that hard. How is it me in me being in a math class for I guess I mean last semester, but it felt like two years being in the same math for two years.
00:33:25:21 - 00:33:49:21
Unknown
Like, I know, taking me out of I'm like slow at like five and throwing it out of brand new math. I'm like, going to do switch me. Me doing well. So much, so much fun, so terrified. Yeah, I just felt so like every time I understood it, I look like, well, I'm my favorite. It me. We're dealing with numbers, but because it's 3D space is very, applicable in geometry.
00:33:49:21 - 00:34:09:15
Unknown
So we're able to really visualize it as opposed to like series okay. A series of numbers. Okay. What what is what is it six. What is its significance for this. You can see it and it's it is very physics. Really really physics. Well and it was I loved it. Oh my gosh. Just that this time I'm learning something brand new that I was very scared that I wouldn't.
00:34:09:21 - 00:34:29:13
Unknown
I said, it's a good thing. And I'm you and getting it and I literally you were you went to you were going to third grade. You're like, daddy, third grade is really hard. Everyone's telling you that third grade to interact with people. You get there, you could be okay. Just know that I like this happening every semester.
00:34:29:13 - 00:34:50:08
Unknown
Yes. This is just it's the feeling is is consistent. You're going to feel that way all the time. And once you get there like, oh, you're going to learn the lessons and it'll be broken down for you and you'll figure it out and you can enjoy it. Yeah. And great fun. I had a great teachers. Hey, remember earlier when I told you about Rockstar marketing, how we could stop your marketing strategy from flopping around like a fish in the desert?
00:34:50:10 - 00:35:09:04
Unknown
Yeah, that's still true. But maybe you didn't catch that. Maybe you're thinking, oh, I'll just keep throwing money at random ads, I'm sure. Something to say eventually, right? Wrong. Spoiler alert it won't. Look, you don't want to be that business owner that keeps trying to solve their marketing woes with duct tape and wishful thinking. You need results, need Rockstar, not marketing.
00:35:09:07 - 00:35:34:01
Unknown
So if you're finally ready to stop a slow motion train wreck, that is your current marketing plan. There's a rockstar marketing. Let's make your business the rockstar it deserves to be. Otherwise, enjoy those crickets. And now back to our show. So at one point or another, you could tell the story to fill that fill in the details. She has a math problem that is are really involved and she figured it out, but she can correct me if I'm wrong.
00:35:34:02 - 00:35:54:16
Unknown
This is where the number you have the math problem and you're like, I will not fucking code the solution. Okay, well, the thing is, I never got to because it's it's it's projectile motion. So just predicting a ball and where we go, the speed it is at a certain point how long it takes to land and all that.
00:35:54:18 - 00:36:11:00
Unknown
But it's gravity. And gravity is always the same. So like by the end of we can get a whole bunch of problems above, but after a certain point all of them are the same. Just the numbers are changed after a certain point. But you can count how many scenarios there are and that's it. On what you need to solve for.
00:36:11:02 - 00:36:29:18
Unknown
But they're all with the same variables at the same acceleration in Scrabble. And so I really feel like I saw I dealt with this my senior year in physics. I love those problems because the same way I was able to like, oh, these are very similar. I just have to know how to do it, like generally and then apply the numbers, which is also something that Cody.
00:36:29:18 - 00:36:46:12
Unknown
And so when they write the consistency, like figuring out how to solve a problem with just the variables. Oh yeah. It's like the whole point is like we would write a function like a write your own function. So you want it to be applicable no matter what numbers you put it as this. So this I was thinking of no matter.
00:36:46:15 - 00:37:05:15
Unknown
It's the same steps every single time. You know, I, I was very ambitious and I started writing code to, to do the steps for me because it's the same. Yes. And then I got to a certain way, whereas, okay, I don't know how to do that. And I hadn't yet, befriended ChatGPT. So I was like, I want to go back to it.
00:37:05:15 - 00:37:28:17
Unknown
That'd be something cool to figure out. But you did get to a certain point where you saw that you solved at least a portion of it, like the very first thing I'm thinking calculus. One step of it. Right? And you were like, it's one of those personal projects that you gave yourself for, like, what if? So, then couple of days and then like, instead of watching a show before bed, I was just sitting there working, and I was beautiful in marriage.
00:37:28:17 - 00:37:51:01
Unknown
Two different. Yeah, things and two things I'm loving. Yes. And that was where it was really like overwhelmed and like, dang, it really taken off. I was a proud dad. I'm like, all right, college is worth it. And I know, and I have this general philosophy that like, I don't. Regardless of what happens with her college education and what she actually does with it, my thought is it's going to serve her.
00:37:51:03 - 00:38:20:01
Unknown
She may never actually do anything in the cabinet space or the math, but the problem solving and that, that vigor that you have for it will apply across life. Whatever comes up, whatever problems come up, or jobs that need that kind of mindset will help you in service. Yeah. It's, it's a really fun thing to watch you grow and continue to to, like, just get into, and I, we're geeking out and.
00:38:20:05 - 00:38:39:18
Unknown
Yeah, I really realize it too, right now, but I think by having the conversations with me, it truly helps you, like, ingrain the information because you're like, I didn't realize how how much of a thing it was for you to, like, get to understand this. Dude, I was playing with my dad, and I'm calling dad. You teach a little, like you're getting a little called.
00:38:39:19 - 00:39:02:06
Unknown
You congratulated me. Yeah, yeah, a little a little mini masters at the end of it, it's. Oh, I got, So, like, I was going to ask that. I just went blank, with, like, that's the first major career. Go back to all my papers. Oh, yes. Thank you. So and this is actually something that I felt incredibly, proud of.
00:39:02:06 - 00:39:24:02
Unknown
So proud of all of them. But this one, because it ties into something that she's been doing all her life. Virtually all her life, which is writing. But tell us about the writing, and the, the papers that you had to write being a freshman your first semester. So you were saying you felt like no matter what happens at college is also beneficial for no matter where I go, yeah, it's working my break, I don't I don't get credit.
00:39:24:02 - 00:39:43:12
Unknown
Just look where I'm going. I, the schools numerics, I it's such a small school, so it's very everything is very intimate with your teachers and and the, the lesson that everything. But even like the programs they have, I had read a paper in math that I've never done before, and I had I worked at it for 14 hours straight.
00:39:43:14 - 00:40:01:16
Unknown
You you slept soundly? No. I woke up early in the morning, get started with them. And so I wore, degree I didn't. Okay, okay. At least. Did you? This is a Thursday. Did you eat with your buddies? It was a Saturday. Damn. Dammit. Okay, but you still like cheese? Yes. Please eat. Well, I was so in it.
00:40:01:17 - 00:40:17:04
Unknown
Yes. But I, like. I was really working for, like, how I. Right enough. Who? I've never done this before. Yeah, I do, I do differently than all my goal, my writings. Well somebody else is in that they do that to make sure that you can write in what I would I had the right method because that's my major.
00:40:17:06 - 00:40:31:23
Unknown
And so even though it's not required yet, I was always a first year. As I move up, I'm I have to start writing papers. So they wanted to make sure. Let's get you started. Now let's introduce it to you. Yeah I, I basically a code the paper with the program we did. Oh that's right. You had to like, present it.
00:40:32:01 - 00:40:55:00
Unknown
Yeah. And and based basically that I called the designer and that took forever. And that's why it would be so apparent or estimated how long you would take me to learn that. Yes. I didn't give me that, that it was because I had to type in all the equations. And now it took forever. But anyway, so they do that to push you and to be able it's a different type of writing and especially for being in the math department.
00:40:55:02 - 00:41:08:06
Unknown
But they want to make sure that you are good, grasp on something else. They do that because if you if you understand it, you should be able to write and speak about it. Right? And if you don't understand the concept, you're going to struggle like the middle of the make. They grade the paper. He has to. It has to be at a certain level.
00:41:08:09 - 00:41:27:00
Unknown
Right. Something else they do for all first year that's specific for my major. But our first year, yeah, you have to take a course after writing. They want every everyone has to take it. And you have a submit a portfolio of papers at the end of the semester. And then a panel grades them and decides if this is college worthy, right?
00:41:27:02 - 00:41:46:08
Unknown
And if it's not, you take it again and you keep taking it until they decide. So in college we have California, right? So that first I did my first semester, my college advisor was like, get out of the way. So you have to worry about it. It'll be a very rigorous course and be very intense. A lot of deadlines.
00:41:46:10 - 00:42:11:03
Unknown
So I took it and when they gave us the syllabus, I had never seen that many papers before. Months. You wrote like ten papers, but I one of my favorite things about finishing was calling you even this hours every I just calling you and reading it to you. Yeah I'm like Lord and I and I'm like, W.
00:42:11:06 - 00:42:26:17
Unknown
So it was a good course. But some of the stuff that we wrote about, the first one was about anime. I really liked that one, and I thought it was an amazing essay. And then by the end of the course I would back in. I read it because we write like maybe to maybe not to maybe like I after like ten.
00:42:26:17 - 00:42:43:16
Unknown
Well, I mean even ten with all the other papers I wrote for my edits and stuff then. But, we submit your best three by the end of it. And so I was looking at the review. Yes. And I was looking at my first ones, which I knew in the moment. I was very proud of we. Oh, no, I can't lose this.
00:42:43:16 - 00:43:04:18
Unknown
No, I don't lose my last three. I don't like because they're looking better. I didn't I didn't realize until the end of it, but I was thin haters and calling you like the first time. The atom needs paper. That was a good one. I really enjoyed it because like I said, I've never been a rough draft person, a brainstorming person.
00:43:04:20 - 00:43:24:08
Unknown
Yeah. And then, you know, consensus in high school that usually works out. But I guess that rough draft is what it really is, still is. But words, which is also like, so I don't like symbols, AP classes. That's good. But so they wanted just your best version in 40 minutes. Just meeting like any time too. Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
00:43:24:10 - 00:43:44:21
Unknown
So so that one, we had two days to write it. Well, which is today, you know, so like I said, I love that teacher so much, but something that happened heavy was we had two timed essays and in a, in a well they weren't really time just that you have two days to write them. She won't release the prompt until the two days before, but all of them felt timed because most of them.
00:43:44:21 - 00:43:58:20
Unknown
I only had a couple days to write because sure, the prompt is out there, but we don't finish the content forward until two days before the paper date. And so I'm gonna go start right away till I have a reading. So all in one word tied. But what about that one, though, as I quit the first night, I'm going to get my rough.
00:43:58:20 - 00:44:19:07
Unknown
I'm a read everything, get my rough draft out. So the second day I spent all day revising it, and when I went to revise it, I actually move some things around, move paragraphs around, edit it, add transitions, sentences and everything. And when I was done, I was like, I actually worked on this. Like I divided it up, I had a plan and I really loved that paper.
00:44:19:13 - 00:44:36:18
Unknown
I remembered it was really good that we read, the diaries of Adam and Eve or something like that by Mark Twain and I. It was really long. And then high school, a lot of the times that are in those ones, we had readings and I never did them. I, I good notes, finding the notes on the cliff notes.
00:44:36:18 - 00:44:53:18
Unknown
Yes. And and I felt bad because at the end of it, I love that teacher. And I'm sure she gave us some really good books. This about semester, we did a lot of readings. We didn't read whole books, a lot of excerpts, but big, lengthy courses and be able to write about it. So I had a to to myself, like, I'm going to make up for it.
00:44:53:18 - 00:45:10:15
Unknown
Okay. I'm sorry. You're doing great. You better now. I'm going to do better. I'm gonna read about how that day I read them, it was like 200 pages, but I'm gonna do it one because I loved it. By the end of it, I was like, I don't like the idea. It was so good. And then the end was about, you know, oh, I love that paper.
00:45:10:15 - 00:45:31:10
Unknown
And I wrote more and one of them was a research. While I did it, we had to do our own research, find our own sources instead of her giving us some books to read. And I, I liked that one a lot. It was it was A67 page thing. It's a longer one. Yeah. What about Aphrodite? I don't know what else, but she's an incredible writer.
00:45:31:12 - 00:45:58:02
Unknown
She's been writing in some capacity. Like, really? Well, like, it's something that she's been doing since she was eight, and she wrote her first point, which was letters. Ever since then, she's she's improved. As you can imagine, the poem is about letters. But she has become an incredible writer and prolific as well. I did want to ask you to kind of follow up, follow back up on, the paper you wrote for Matt.
00:45:58:04 - 00:46:19:21
Unknown
What were the comments or was the feedback from the teacher? Yeah. Okay. Okay. Is this a math paper? This is not a literature paper. There's a lot of different criteria. Like the whole thing is different, but what it what we're like everything I've learned about writing has been like, oh, using a four is a being beautifully written. And what did I realize?
00:46:19:21 - 00:46:37:01
Unknown
Yeah, this was just this was very polite. Yeah. And it felt like actually this something that I tried putting in some flowery language just but give it some personality that's in I mean, it's, it was fun to read the textbook, so, you know, I could do something with it. So she was grading us on a or a junior rubric.
00:46:37:01 - 00:46:59:00
Unknown
So this the temperature I should I should be able to write by the time I'm a junior. She divided into so that into two on a soft due date. Yeah. And then the final due date. So that no one rushes the paper at the end because everyone's using this new software. Software. We're all first years. So we can be able she can give this comments for us to revise.
00:46:59:00 - 00:47:18:05
Unknown
So the last one isn't all that sort of good. And now this is the last thing before the end of this year. This is my approach to the first one. The comments I got back was at a 20. I got 18 in the hat. She, one of them, she highlighted a word. I said it wrong. I was talking about me and I said, okay, good.
00:47:18:05 - 00:47:36:18
Unknown
Fits that. And then I got that was a point off. No, I have to point off. And then I, the rest off because I realized there was a page when it got to the five page limit, I was at eight and I wasn't done because I'm the person you have to. I have so much to say.
00:47:36:20 - 00:47:59:01
Unknown
I didn't have to include my my conclusion. And I don't add on one more to the paragraph. I had to include those. Yeah. And I submitted it. And it's how 1.5 or whatever, how many points off. So Angel Lindsey who who in the worst part was whenever I was listening, I was like, let's make the line spaces wider because it looks better than the crayons.
00:47:59:06 - 00:48:15:15
Unknown
So when I see the guy that immediately, Deborah, that me as kind of as possible. So I met with her as a group as well. At some point I went back and revised it. So my equations were like, were this long? I was able to shorten them and make them wider, use this space more as I came.
00:48:15:20 - 00:48:41:03
Unknown
Amy Shorter and she helped me be you. And I said, is that everything else is good because she said she's only grading certain on certain criteria on that. Well, not the full rubric. Yeah. She was just making sure like the actual math made sense. But I was asking as for the rest of the the the paper that's of the directions that a passenger is going to grade the first time is that you have to look at the rest of paper.
00:48:41:03 - 00:48:54:02
Unknown
Good. Is that all the points I going off, or are you going to add new criteria that you weren't looking for previously? She was. No you're fine, I was it also I had to point out of the actual paper. Yeah. So I think that it it was never rich, never posted the greatest, never made a big deal about it because it was great.
00:48:54:02 - 00:49:14:16
Unknown
By the time we were out of classes in that second hands of the fix that I mean, and then I think in my conclusion, whatever the last paragraph, I had I thousand credits for that. So by the end of it, actually points the paper actually was, but I only had that it has eight figures. I only had that point and a half of them, which was just from the first half.
00:49:14:16 - 00:49:34:01
Unknown
I mean, there's only half she thought was perfect. And I know the reason is that I never realized that, until like a couple weeks I into into the summer, and go I don't know, I just, I think about it after fixing all on stakes. Good job. You know, really good job. Like my fall on paper. Let's I'm going to take.
00:49:34:04 - 00:49:55:05
Unknown
You know, there's a lot of frustration in because I couldn't figure out how to work since it's pretty interesting what kind of language to use because I was, I was I was asking what kind of language did these in math papers like, what perspective? I'm not allowed to say, I do. I say, you do. I say one word and I, what?
00:49:55:08 - 00:50:22:12
Unknown
Do you got the questions? Yes, yes. What did you end up writing in? I think I said you. Yeah, look at what she said. I, I think I made up goals. I think it makes sense when you do something, I would do this or blah, blah, blah. Any rate, it's time to wrap it up. I definitely wanted to say one more thing, which was about the the papers themselves, you that you wrote in the W or whatever.
00:50:22:14 - 00:50:39:21
Unknown
What was the final overview of that entire process and, the what came out of it, those papers that you were supposed to write to practice regular studies or these is that I get this is it. Okay. And and the final results that you had to try in to make sure that you you're right at the college level schools.
00:50:39:23 - 00:50:58:07
Unknown
Well, the the the recovery teacher is always really good because she we should give criticism. I should also leave comments like wow, beautiful phrasing. And when she was a beautiful phrasing of I would bounce like, well I love it. She thought it was great. Yeah. By the interview they graded on four different criteria that I don't remember what they are, but they also graded on revising.
00:50:58:12 - 00:51:18:21
Unknown
And validators were above 95 and that rated them. And I revise what she said like some grammar mistakes and being, some punctuation mistakes, you know, and then I submit them and I get it. Oh, thank you, thank you John, one of four, for being the best on each category. And at the end they sounded so weird. They sounded all up just it's like A24 in every other category.
00:51:18:23 - 00:51:40:19
Unknown
But revising I got a three is an education. Revise one more research about. That's really okay. I was happy with my friends. So I get calls of a really fantastic. Good job. Good. Proud of you. Thank you for coming on, I love you. If it's not obvious on the market, I look you. Thank you for coming.
00:51:40:19 - 00:51:59:20
Unknown
I swear to God, I did hit record. No. For college. Oh, I've never recorded that the last time. If you didn't watch it, go watch it. I put a link here below. Go watch it. Go. This, Go. Listen, because somewhere as we were talking, I realized that we weren't recording, and I, like, she loses it.
00:51:59:20 - 00:52:20:01
Unknown
She, like, I was doing such a good job. More so than now. So the camera's there. So I felt fine. Like the last night, I made sure to look at the. Cuz I was talking. I was doing a lot of facial expressions and trying to be good. Like picking up my face. And then was for what? But sounded amazing.
00:52:20:03 - 00:52:46:09
Unknown
You have incredible, speaking ability thing. Yeah. Please plan on coming on at least once every month or two over. Like recording. You can do that. We can do, with, Remote Recording podcast because. Oh, so we can still have a little conversation, you know, check in. It isn't, you know. Thank you, everyone, for tuning in.
00:52:46:09 - 00:53:06:17
Unknown
I appreciate you, appreciate all of you. If you found this beneficial, if there's anything that you would like to ask, what would you like me to ask or, ecstatic in the next audition series? Yes, there's a multiple series. I have a series with Chris. I have a series of setbacks. And a series of. Do you know what's funny?
00:53:06:18 - 00:53:27:00
Unknown
Just thought about this, and I'll wrap it up this every summer for the first six or maybe eight years after I, I divorced their mother, which was, at summers, at the end of the summer, we will sit down and do a year and, summer in the summer, some thinking. Summer recap. She's good with words.
00:53:27:02 - 00:53:53:22
Unknown
And those were. Those are always fun and cute. There's one meeting she's like, just doing some playing with her hair the whole time. It's fun to be a nerd since you want to be, which has, you know, like a pilot, a doctor and a nurse and a pilot. And that, along with so many things to me, I guess this, interview, this conversation is essentially the end of summer review, but just we want maybe I'll do another one with another kid.
00:53:54:00 - 00:54:22:19
Unknown
Yes. Her life. Yes. Yes. We have some for you. Stay tuned for a lot more podcast, a lot more conversations, a lot more life updates as this old man starts to grow older, becoming a grandfather. Do other things, explore other ideas and countries and surveys, and just share my journey in that path and hopefully in the process, help you learn a thing that you choose.
00:54:22:21 - 00:54:30:21
Unknown
So until next time. And my name is Teevee and sponsor. Thank you for tuning in to the Teevee Show Podcast. Till later. Bye bye.





