This is growth in progress The podcast so we have un unfiltered conversations about early adulthood, all the things we're thinking about but probably not having conversation about. Each week you'll be joined by me, Charlotte. I'm me Hell. If you're a millennial or maybe an older gen said and want honest and helpful conversations about wellness self development and the latest trend. With all of the other pressures to life rings
then you're in the right place. In this week's episode, we have an update on Hell Hen, which was Possibly 1 of my favorite weekends ever. We have a recommendation of something that I am very late to the party on but. Is still worth talking about, and then we're gonna chat about what happens when you've actually reached your goals and things you've been working towards phrases. What does that on uncertain space look like? As if we've not reported since Hen. I know.
I just... I literally, as I said that, I thought we've not reported since you're hen. So How are you? And how is your hen do? Oh, my god it. It was amazing. It was brilliant. It was it was exceeded all possible. Expectations. Somehow managed to be exactly what I wanted, but then also, I could never possibly have imagine what was actually planned. Give everyone some Did. Because I'm proud was, so it's A29 hen, and it was. It was Camp Brad. And we had camp orientation when we all
arrived. And we had games, which were, like sports games like, actual gains. Because we had camp kit, we had camp t shirts. We had camp bats, which are the best thing. I never had so many people compliment me on my hat. Like I love your baseball cup. Thanks. It's from Camp Brad. I don't know if you know don't if you heard of it. The cops oh my god the little tin mugs. Oh my gosh. Yeah, like proper, like camping style, 10 mugs, which... And all of this is branded, there's branding on all of the
food. Like the biz, The Crisp, the snacks, everything has camp stickers on it. Yep. Played gains. We did painting. We had a massage Oh, my, there was a massive that we've actually offer in. It was... Yeah. Fabulous. And we went on a walk. So steps, sports, massages. Oh, it was everything. It wasn't 1 for. Your time. I have 2 things I left. Number. 1 was being able to... Prize you because you were so adamant that you weren't
gonna have a hair. And then you were like, I'm not gonna do it or I'm gonna do it myself and I was basically like getting the bin. They kindly f off. So you've been able to spoil you, but also, like, I think it's really rare that as an adult, you meet a group of women who you bond with that quickly. And It was just, like, I feel like I got because it was us like the group was from Uni and then Hell 3 best friends from home. And literally the second way all getting in
the group chat together. It was like we'd always in each other. Me and like 1 of Kelly's childhood best friends are voice noting almost straightaway away. With... An updates on Emma's situation with the mole in her garden. We're getting, like, all sorts into this chat. Like, we are all invested in the same things. And we have asked at the wedding that all of our partners are on 1 table, so our girls can have a reunion.
Pretty please? Was a very fair request. Don't know what I can do about it, but I will see. Thanks. But, yeah. I I have forgot to mention that when I even talking about it because it just felt 1 it was such a shot to see, my 2 completely different groups of friends in 1 place, but then also, everyone got on so well. But, you know. I doesn't even feel like a talking point about the weekend because it just feels like the 1 was already fluent anyway. Yeah. It
was slow nice. Please. And, like, we're also texting 1 another. We're still using our other group chats. I know. I can tell. I feel, like, I'm not gonna lie. The phone still there. Quite annoying. Oops. And it was... Yeah. It was just the best week weekend, like, I felt. So I had proper camp blues on Sunday night. I got home when I was like, And Monday, the next set work I was like, No 1 else is at Camp Brad. No 1 else knows. No 1 else never. If you need tender inspiration, hit us up
because we've pulled off tube... Crack and hen now. I've got mine in November. I know, wild. Wild that we're gonna have 2... Is a bit wild. Which are gonna be so different as well. Yeah. It just could not be more different. We will discuss what my hinder is. In the future, closer to the time. But Recommendation from the last week or so... We've been off for a couple of weeks. So in the last couple of weeks. I feel like I should have more than I do. I said this before the call.
I feel like I'm in going into the cycle of payoffs. I had a very beautiful calm, couple of weeks with like the hen and felt so nice and everything was chill, and I feel Like I'm going into a chaotic time. So, like that was me. Like I'm gonna read some books. I wanna watch movies at on my list for ages. I've read 1 book. In the? No, and it's actually a book from 2018. And the reason I know how old it is is because I worked for publisher when I got this book and it's taking me
this long to read it. It's I. So late to the party on our recommendations this week. But and also, it is a real really niche recommendation, but it is a book for French sit by patrick, the surname, Patrick Do, been on my list of ages, it's basically a satire, like, comedy of Manners I book where it follows this hilariously dysfunctional like mother son relationship who live in New York, and the mom friend, so she basically 5
out that she's bankrupt. She's been living off her dead husband's money for years, and there's not a bit left. So her and her son ended up taking at 1 of her friend's offers to go to Michelle sell her house She has sell all of her belongings. She moved to her friend's apartment in Paris with her son, sells everything, they use it to fund their crews across the Atlantic, and settle into a new home. And Francis has been a subject of a lot of gossip around the death of her husband.
She's not a suspect, but it was a very bizarre scenario. And she basically attempted to try and undo some of the damage that she has done to her son and to their relationship. In all of the years that have gone before. There are so many characters, and it is almost like, it reminds me a lot of a play. Like a Satire kind of play where you've got all of these far characters coming in and yeah these different roles. It's
a lot of, like, underlying meanings. It's absolutely full, like like, dry humor and absolutely, like, absurd things that happen. And a lot of it takes place just in this powers apartment. Like, it would be a perfect. It would be a perfect player. I bet it's probably been made into a play by now. I should have looked something. Can I giggle at it? You're what. K Alright. Okay. Gig is later. Yeah. It's actually relating to a movie. You can watch it on channel 4. It's got a michelle F in it.
This isn't just a movie. This 8 it's got 5.9 on I. Oh, that's not gray. No. And the was extremely well reviewed. I mean, everything translates. Oh, I do remember seeing the... Like, they're poster for this. I mean, I might put it on the background. I think I'll probably read the book. Honestly, the book is not, like, there's nothing miraculous there. There's no, like, egg twist or like crazy storyline. I love the concept with a French exit.
And this book just has so many layers of French exits, crazy if you don't know what French is, it's basically when you, like, leave abruptly. So a lot of people say I'm gonna French exit a party, you just leave that saying goodbye. Also called an Irish accent. I learned recently, you can use the 2 interchangeably. Min? Although this is set in in Paris. So I feel like Frederick it a little bit more applicable.
I always thought as more well known. And then I had 2... I had 3 people correct me, whether they are all irish, so maybe it's like a biased thing. Maybe. Anyway, it's bizarre. It's funny, worth read if you're into that sort of thing. What is your recommendation? Why is completely around spectrum here. So I'm recommending the depth v heard documentary on Netflix. This is not new because I believe it came out around the time of the Johnny depp Amber trial a couple
of years ago. However, the reason I'm recommending it now is it's recently launched on onto Netflix. And it's a trial that I'll be honest at the time I did not follow. The noise around this trial was so intense. The opinions on social media to move them. Didn't wanna get into the freight to be perfectly honest. And my stance was always and continues to be. This is not a clear cut. Goody bad case. Like, and so it's... It is the epitome of bad people, bad decisions, nuance, all of these things.
But the reason I did want to go back and kind of absorb all of this content at some point is because tortoise media have done a podcast series called who controlled Amber, which specifically into the way in which the Internet very quickly and ferocious went after Amber heard? What was behind that? How did it happen? Because, yes, she does not come across well in this? Like, Alex and I were watching it, like, oh, really? Like,
babe. That's an angola. Her lawyer should have done more in my opinion. However, no 1 deserves the vicious and frankly, un hinge things that were said to her. And so it looks at the misogyny. So I wanted to watch the documentary so I could go back and listen to the tortoise media, series. I haven't... That might be a recommendation coming soon. Who knows. But the documentary itself was really well done. It jumps through the entire timeline from when they met. All the way up until the court case.
It covers what happened in terms of why they were only married for 19 months because they were together quite a few years. They were only married for 19 months, what led up to it, The infamous Amber apparently, allegedly taking your shit and enjoying your gets bed. And many other, like, kind of pop, what are now pop culture references, like the mega pine and these sorts of things. It looks into that, but what it also does is a layer on the...
Specifically the Youtube and Tiktok commentary that was going on that time and that was trending. So use... Because this is the first... Because they allowed all the cameras inside They had something obscene, like, 11000 hours of footage or something it would it would a mad amount of footage wild. And so everyone could live stream it obviously. And see her a constant update of people on the Internet deciding.
In some cases apparently, they had law expertise, that I'll leave that for you to decide. But analyzing the case, when I say analyze in case, what I mean is saying Dr depp is god and Amber is the worst fucking thing on earth. And mh I think what most balanced people would take from this? Is it the jury having an impossible job because there is no way. They could possibly have avoided every single comment because they were... Yeah. What's the word. Like they was to...
They weren't, like, put... They weren't put in a hotel. And held away from the public for 23 days. What? Oh my god. I'm really surprised that the letting media in, but they didn't keep them. They were told not to watch your... Consume anything. But from what or at least what they've said no retreat, they went home every night. Also that both of those people Am her and trinidad have had significant trauma in their lives, and it just reiterate
the hurt people hurt people, does not... It does not justify what either of them have done or said. But I would challenge anyone to watch it and not think there was also a campaign against neighborhood, I'm not saying she's an innocent part of a good human being, or any of those things, like, it's more nuanced than that. That she is not... Like Amber is not the perfect person. That doesn't excuse what happened to her, I also doesn't excuse what the media you said.
And it's just I actually really wanna listen to that podcast because I didn't really follow it at the time, but you also couldn't avoid it. Like, it was paul. Yeah. Absolutely everywhere. And I feel out because I didn't follow it. All I heard was that Donnie Depp absolutely lost all of his all of his contracts, all of his brand deals he'd, like, everything that he had, he lost because of this. And then all of a sudden, the trial happened, and Amber was yet the worst person on
the planet and everyone hates her. And I could never wrap my head around what had exactly happened because I didn't watch any of the footage. I couldn't comprehend how the internet could literally pivot from 1 person to another so vicious. I would be really to listen to that podcast. Wow Yeah. And I wanted to watch For the context. Is really interesting. I think it's had enough time to call off to be able to absorb it now. And it not be so loud.
So it was? It was so much. And then with that amount of footage, how do you ever? You can't because do ever kind of... Yeah. How do you ever judge? How do you ever understand all the nuance when there is. Like, there is so literally... There is too much out there. There is so much material and making a decision is impossible because you literally couldn't even wrap your head around. Quickly, it was coming out.
I'm also really interested to know whether had questions been never so slightly different and had... Documents that had been entered into evidence actually been shown in court whether the outcome would have been different. Yeah. But we'll never know. I would under. Of quite a tangent on that heard, but it is definitely worth catching up on. Shall we chat about? Basically where we are right now. What happens when you get there. Happens when
you've done it? Or how does that thing you've you're working towards for years and years and years or just any period of time. What happens next because it's an odd feeling. Like, I don't think like any stretch either us are done, and we don't have more goals, but I think last... Like, and we said it in our last couple of episodes before we took our break. We've had some really amazing things happen that we've worked for a really long time for.
And so to have those limited fruition has been amazing I am also so almost sitting here being like, so. And 1 hour. Yeah. I think I feel like it's quite a point. Because when we start talking about this episode, I immediately, like, my example that I thought, of, and maybe this is helpful if we go, like, share what like, specifically we're thinking about in our own context. But for me, I was
thinking about media thing. And how I've spent 5 years with my blog, like, working towards this massive massive goal that would be, like, very, then Potentially life changing career changing. Once I hit it, and then this time last year, I it just felt like so far off and then I random not randomly, but all of a sudden, everything came to fruition in March, and it was, like, Oh, my god. These years of s. And how this has happened. And it is quite dis to then get to that point and you're like,
what's next. Like, yeah. When I think that is a sign of if you are a very motivated person, a very driven person, or instantly thinking about what is the best step. If it's only you worked for for so long. You've not even thought about what happens after you get there. No.
It's like that double thing of... I've not even thought about what happens after I get there, but also, we've reached appointment where we know that we should enjoy the moments a bit more, and when we achieve the things we wanted to achieve, like, we should give ourselves the time space to embrace that. Right. And like, I've finally got a job I wanted to be years years, and I worked really
really hard for. And similarly, like 6 months ago, oh my god, like, I just couldn't even imagine doing it, and I couldn't... I think if me tenth of January this year, could see me now or the tenth of February, who could see me on the tenth of July. I think should be shocked. And so it's very dis is totally the right word to be there and suddenly go. Oh, because I think by our society's obsessed with the up concept of an overnight success, but, like, with you a media brian it's the
perfect example, there is no overnight success. Like, when it actually ticks from having not enough page views use 2 enough page views. That does happen overnight. But the lead up to it, the years and years of work, The years of work that I've put in to get the right experience and make the right contacts and build the skill set. That hasn't happened overnight. Yes. On the Thursday I didn't have the job on the Friday. I had the job, but
it's odd. You kind of cross the finish line, and you do almost go, oh, because the other part is, I just wanna do it well, I always don't wanna think about what's next. So Just wanna be in it and be in the moment and do this part well. I think there's, like, there's 2 sides up because us... People that like to plan. Like, we've obviously planned and planned as planned as much as we possibly can how to get there. You've not made a plan for people once you
get there as such. It's just something that's why it's so important to recognize the hard work you've have done to get to that point because it... Yeah. To the outside world, maybe it does it like an open overnight success because you've you've got this job or you've reaches milestone. But that does diminish all of the hard work in the years beforehand. And I think this is where, and again,
maybe this isn't an age thing. We're reflecting on that feels a lot easier than it would have been perhaps, like, 5 or 10 years ago. And don't know. Part of me is like, what's next but also part of me is, like, okay. How do I use this to, like, reflect on what work to understand how I got there. And that's still my brain thinking, oh, there. Because then I can use this information to inform what the
next step is Yeah. Now, Might not necessarily know what the next step is, but I do think that's the way that my brain works that it it wouldn't have done 10 years ago, which is a reflection of progression anyway. I also think it's that 5 or 10 years ago, yes. We heard done our exams and with that studied for a degree, but 2... I think maybe universities is a different example there, but in terms of the exams we did at school that was very much set out for
us, like that was very. Mh. We didn't really consider whether or not we were gonna do that. So, yes. There was a lot of work put in and then the reward came later, but it wasn't that same feeling because it wasn't completely optional whereas, both of us have decided ourselves here after these career goals and other things as well or not, like personal lives. But we've we've made that decision, we've committed to it and we've done it from no 1 else. That no 1 else benefits from this.
So to then see the outcome of that is really like. Okay. Cool. That's that's impressive. I think that's a really good point about the... Because, yeah, The types of schools that we went to was like, you do these exams, and then you get these grades and then you go to Uni and then you you get a job And all of those years will basically kind of in a way laid out for us, like, the The the min show, not so much, but the the basic path whereas this feels more significant because we've chosen these
paths ourselves. Like their one's told us we're gonna be this person in this career in this industry. But then that's what feels all the more jarring. But, oh we set ourselves on this path. Oh, look, we actually did it. Yeah. In our me is done 2 things. 1 is god. What could we next then? Like, almost at the devil in me It's like, oh, hold on. Okay. And the other part of me is still thinking, like, okay call. What is that?
Like, I was think fitting. You know, you have a compass and use a compass, like, map out distances. I'm doing with my fingers that you put it in and you twist it. And I always think of myself kinda of doing that. So this is where I am now. What's my next rotation as it were? And then kinda like scoping out what it could be because I have no intention of making weeks. And, like, give me another 6 months to a year, and I, I was shoot out idea Wasn't it?
Because I'll live, like, a change reminder or whatever, but I think there's a part of it, which is your brain is going to always think about or where could this go x? Partly because it's how we're wired partly because it's habit, partly because it's kind of, I think part of the nature of being someone here is ambitious and driven. But I think the difference now is that we can also say, okay. Cool. But it's more like you're sitting there looking at and then... Okay. Cool. That might happen.
Cool. That could be good rather than, okay. Write What if we go right now. It's like, we're gonna do the thing we're doing now. And I'm gonna do that really well, But, like, just almost being aware rather than pursuing. Yeah. I think Yeah. You've got here. Now it's the maintaining it. Now it's the, like, proving or doing or, like, showing up and committing and or improving whatever it might be. And I think you're saying that it's all of those things kind of go into that instinct of what's next.
I also think it's really thing you have to be careful that it's also not the external influence of the classic, like quote unquote hustle culture. Well, yeah the idea that you have to keep pushing. You have to keep going has got to be something next. Like, there probably is something next, but that doesn't mean it's next week, next month or next year. It could be 5 years. It could be 10 years. That doesn't mean that you don't owe it to yourself because of all of this hard work to yeah.
Put the work in now and maintain and celebrate and, show up for the thing that you've worked for this hard. That's such a good point like, part of achieving something. And doing it successfully is also then continuing short once you've got it, and it not being the novelty of just saying you've done it. It's being like, I wanna I wanna hit this milestone and then almost continuing on that mile as it were and going,
I wanna do it well. Big part... She's ironic because you've already done that to get there. You've already shown up continuously. But you've just gotta do it in a different way. Yeah. It's almost like, Yes. What's next is doing it again and again and again. I always think, and this is such like a cliche and it's mildly cheesy and crunch, but I do actually think it's perfect example. It's something being a cliche for a reason is Mike Jordan and I think it was was interviewed something.
I don't know. It's been in food billion times. And someone like, best piece of advice and he had the best never get bored of the basics. That idea of always. Bringing it back to the kind of fundamentals of what you're doing and why you're doing it and always practicing them, And I think that's so true in, like, when you're thinking of your next big go, it's easy to can get sidetracked track by the fun shiny part of your achieving your goal.
And but actually, to make what is currently like the top of that mountain, the foundation of the next 1, you've gotta to really put the time in here. And Mh. I think that uncertainty comes because you're almost all familiar that you're in that habit. Of going up up is actually, as soon as you going us stay here for a while and, like, fill it out of the uncertainty starts to dissipate and it it's not so scary because, like, I I'm meant to do this for longer. And meant to be at this point. I
meant to be reflecting. I'm I meant to be finding different ways and what I enjoy and how I can embrace this this, like chapter of it. Yeah. There's definitely sitting there but not overcome hating. Those basic. Yeah. And not... Like, obviously, you've you've climbed up. You've climbed up. You've reached whatever goal or milestone, but is those foundational things that got you there in the first place. And I always think
about that with managers as well. My managers that still do to work with their team and don't just delegate and, like, watch over, like, yeah. If you became a manager because you worked your way that's because you know our team works and, what you were doing as an assistant or whatever. Yeah. Because those foundational things that are gonna keep giving you the knowledge of, like, how everything works at every stage. And I think it becomes easier to, I guess, to get that like the higher the
mountain you go. Yeah. And I feel like this is very career focused. But the same goes for, like, if you've got a really big fitness goal. And. Yes. You might hit your Pb on your on your sq. Great. But actually in order to maintain that you've got to still ensure you've got that really good form. We're training every other muscle, you've got the cardiovascular fitness, to be able to do it. Because you can't set yourself another goal that you don't have to constantly running for the
next 1. You can just say. I wanna really perfect it here, but Can you do the same... Like, same thing for creative stuff hobbies? Yeah. If you're a writer or a painter or whatever? Like, those fundamentals are always gonna serve you as long as you service them. Yeah. And like, they're always gonna be the foundation of your skill of your knowledge of, like, serve However,
of advanced you become. Mh. It is definitely applicable in more places than just career even though, yeah, this has become more of like a career I. Conversation of that. Don't you think though, it's very hard to find that fine line between, especially creative things, I think. Been going,
right. I'm here. I've done it. I've done that fitting, and then not but also not sitting in that space for too long that you don't do anything with it to say, like, you're a painter and your goal is sell your paintings. You practice and you practice and new practice. And then you get to point like, yep, I could sell these now, but then you never sell them. And not because you don't want to weeks certainly it could be better.
They get that kind of... It I that you're holding like a car clutch and you're like, you've got a time right to just go, and then you can actually enjoy it. Brian there's a lot of fear of like reaching thing you wanna reach. We spoke about this 8 ago on an episode. And I think about it all the time, but, like I is procrastination. Yeah. Perfectionism is just a form of procrastination, and it's an excuse for not going for something because you're like upset. It could be more perfect.
The reality is literally nothing's ever gonna be perfect. And if you don't if you don't go for it, you're just gonna find another reason not to go for it, not to go for it over and over again. By which point in I know how how many years time you're gonna be kicking a yourself that you didn't pick that first step earlier. Oh, yeah. Like, you're... What is it? Your fiftieth attempt won't be... Your fit... I kind of room... I can always remember it but I can't ever say it.
It's like your fiftieth attempt won't be great if you don't even if yourself a first attempt that your first attempt always gonna be shooting. I know what you mean, and I can't Is the expression the more I try and think of it, the more it's slipping through with a little cracks in my brain. What is it? I'm gonna have to try and Google that? It is true. Like, you your 50 the temp can't be amazing. But your fiftieth attempt isn't gonna be perfect. You
don't even do it the first time. There's a more version of that, but you understand the point. Yeah. And I think that procrastination thing. Like, just giving it a go. Like, you're never gonna think you'll the perfect candidate for the job. You're always gonna think, I'll, if I had a couple more months experience.
You're never gonna have that perfect first song or book or perfect first run or perfect first iron ironman competition or whatever it is, because you've never done it before, which is why it isn't perfect, but you can't get better unless you do it. There's that process that Think if you get comfortable with that process, that's why it's so dis when you actually get to the goal. Yeah. Because you spent that long getting accustomed to... I've just gotta do it. I've just gotta do it it.
I've just gotta do it, and then you actually do it. And I'm not saying that when you hit the goal, that like perfectionism more, but that that's obviously why you started in the first place and the place you started from was so far from where standard That's dis. That's also really disco disconcerting. I think if you are someone who's ever had that kind of impostor feeling, no. I'm not saying syndrome anymore now that we know. But like that feeling of being an impostor?
To then get to the goal? You're like, how have I not been found out yet? How you let me in charge of this budget? How you let me make that decision? And that isn't anything to do with the level of qualification? Or experience or anything. But I think it does add to that dis feeling. Because you know that version of you who had no bloody clue had no idea how they were gonna do it. How does anyone ever become Like? So is mad isn't it? Because, yeah. That's
exactly it. You know the version of you that was 10 years ago, 20 years ago, and you'd be like, But as if that's the same person who's just been put in charge of this entire team, this entire budget. No that's why it feels so critical. Like, it's so cool, but it just feels so wild the same time. But I will say think that's, like,
why? I mean, this is why people are so fascinated with interviewing at Ceos and business owners and, like, world record holding sports people, because it's how do you know a previous version of yourself that didn't have the... Assets to be the person you wanted to? And how did you join the dots? How did you get there? But I guess that's also, like, part of it. Because if you if you have... You need a certain level of arrogance, I think, or a certain level of naive to do anything,
have the confidence to it. But if you have any more than like that, tiny amount. I just think you probably aren't actually qualified enough to do it. You need to have a little bit of a... You need to know that you don't know. It doesn't you don't need to know what you don't know. You just don't know. I think that again, it all comes back
to the subtle awareness, please. Doesn't it? But That is just the peak of self awareness, the the the more the more you know, the more you realize that you don't know. The same. And I I had that conversation with someone today, and we were talking. And I was like, I have no problem sitting in a room going. I don't know.
But that is in part because I've reached a point where I know I know enough to say that and it not be let the way that I'm seeing as a whole, like, I'm confident enough in me and my abilities as a for being. You know, that not knowing 1 thing does not make or breaks the situation, which I think kinda goes back to that thing of, 05:10 years ago. We wouldn't have looked back on. Oh, wow. It's really quarter we achieved it. We would have just been going, what
sex what was next what's next? Because that was the only in we knew. I also wonder if it's such a big part of that 05:10 years ago was because we we were, like, at the bottom of the ladder kind of thing. Yeah. We have the front lobes. Yep. But we felt like we had to prove ourselves constantly. In so many different ways in careers in relationships as women, like, all of
these different angles where you... Because you don't have a confidence when you're in your early twenties that you don't have that, what don't even just mean like personal confidence, but you've not been in the work force for that long. About, you know, when you're 25. You you're... You're a 7 year old adult. Like, you're a young adult. Like, you don't you don't have that much knowledge. So, of course, you don't have that much confidence either because you can't possibly have that kind of
big picture perception of Okay. I say I don't know, it's not gonna change people's perception of me because they know that there's more and this 1 thing that I... I'm not sure on. But also, I think you then have that awareness if other people say I don't know. You don't hold... You don't judge that.
And you also start to see more people achieve what you've perceive with their goals or you motivate with their goals, and then they don't do what you think that they should do or would do next and year, oh, because that's the other part of this. Is it, like, it opens down like, okay hey, you got the thing you wanted, what you wanna do with that. I think it's exciting. Which goes back to your compass theory. A little Compass. I everyone. You've got that whole emotion.
That means you've got that whole late circumference of opportunity. It's not straight line. It's like when you go around in a circle and net ball, check like that reference? I paid attention. You can't move your foot more than 3 times. Something. Don't know. You can't move your landing foot at all 3 seconds. Oh, god. I know that it's 3 seconds. I just couldn't move... You couldn't do more than 3 steps like in a circle. Know it's spin around as much you want. But only for 3 seconds.
They are some quote rotations. Feel like we've gone some metaphors which are. Yeah. We've gone 2 Some the evenings that it is. Who knows England might be about to take the euros, so we should probably just go and to be aware of that happening? Should we... I don't know. I don't know. Honestly, I mean, that's a whole conversation another day, but I also have a very good book because I wanna get into bed and read. So I think we should wrap up here. We will be back next week. With another episode,
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