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hi I'm Mike hey I'm Kelsey we're into telling you stories sometimes funny sometimes awkward sometimes creepy or sad but who knows every month it's different but no matter what you'll be asking yourself okay WTF Welcome Friends hi oh hello hey you how you doing Kelsey do you want the honest answer sure I want everything honest well not doing so great to be honest I mean okay well before I get into my not doing so great what I will say is this is an episode an interjection episode yeah we should
explain that I guess starting that this be like your normal episode with two deeply investigated and professionally profoundly lifechanging stories with uh beautiful Source material and art imagery imagery this is gonna be a little different um we're changing it up for the holiday season a holiday special if you will yes yeah and so we're going to be bringing to you something totally different essentially it's h a spin on I was today years old when so we're it's a
light-hearted there's going to be no presentation associated with it just a good little conversation a nice little holiday break episode um and then coming back in January in the new year we'll be back to the normal episodes but um so that takes me to I'm not doing great um and I mean you know in the US the Thanksgiving holiday just happened and um that was really nice and and then uh we had a very unexpected loss in my family the next day my Uncle Kevin who
was just the force of a human like just an incredible person so I am so grateful to you Mike for one letting me talk about a little bit today and also dedicating this episode to him and his just enormity and humanness of course I I've met him um a few times yeah and from what I met of him I can tell that um you carry his spark forward so happy to be here with you and I was happy to know him and I'm happy to learn more about him through you ah I love it and I I mean yeah um
I'm so I'm constantly so grateful for the amount of time I had with him and my aunt M um and still get to have with my aunt M um and I'm so grateful for the number of friends he was able to meet and impact as well I've had numerous people reach out to me about him he was like very musically inclined a master Craftsman um just hilarious such a funny person with the most unique humor so yeah it's it's an enormous loss uh but I will also say that I am so grateful that
two years ago I purchased him a story worth not sponsored subscription and that he did it um sometimes reluctantly but he did it and I will never not be happy that I did that because now I have that to cherish and I'm able to give that to family and friends um now and just has so much of who he is in those pages and um his humor comes through and even one of the the things he talked about in that book was his favorite music yeah um and his favorite music is very eclectic it's all
over the place um music was just such a big part of him and uh so my partner Patrick put together from that list in the book put together a Spotify playlist called Uncle Kev um maybe we can add it to the notes I was about to say we should share it soone can listen yeah I agree it's a great mix I mean I I'm not able as of this recording to listen to it but because I just I need to be in a different head space too but I will but just knowing the songs that are on there
oh my gosh so great so I hope people listen and even if you didn't know him just you know think about someone you do know and love share the playlist um enjoy it EXP band your music taste he would love that for you because that's what he did and yeah um should I share my thing on work yeah I think that would be or his thing on okay before we kick this off um I mean I'm constantly thinking about my relationship with work and I feel like we all are in this interesting world we live in where so
much of our life is focused on work and you know I I just I don't want to be a slave to work for my whole life um and I know that most people don't not in not in that way um not I do Chelsea no you don't you liar oh whoops I got confused um but one of the many things I loved about him was how he just lived his life and how he navigated like essentially a very corporate run um capitalistic Society um and he was able to kind of take control of what he wanted to do I mean very much
supported by my aunt mem in that regard um but when I opened the book The Story worth book I got I opened to the very end and it made me laugh so hard because it was the question was what is your best advice when it comes to work and his response I will read word for word but it made me laugh so hard and it also is just like such so full of like advice behind the humor that um you know I hope it helps someone uh so he said my best advice about work don't do it if you have to do
it do as little of it as damn possible if you have to do more than a little do something you like because it doesn't get better with age it gets harder don't just do something for the money because it will kill you and your spirit dead there you go short and sweet now go get a damn job you love and stop whining oh Uncle Kevin we'll just kind of leave that there and for now um thank you for letting me share and dedicating this to him um and I hope people listen to the
music but I I think he would like this episode I I feel like it's full of just quirky things at this point um you know I chose five I was today years old one you chose five I did uh so we're just going to go back and forth like you know tennis here just like popping them off to each other sharing them um so do you want to start I feel like I always start sure I'll start this one oh let's see which one should I start with oh they're all over the place um okay I will start with
this I was today years old when I found out that there are two states in the United States that have official state toys what yeah no other states 48 out of 50 said absolutely not um and the two that chose to have them uh Kansas okay has the ETA sketch oh and Mississippi this is a weird one claimed the teddy bear oh and I was kind of thinking Mississippi like is there any like Theodore Roosevelt things with because that's like came from I feel like that's not I don't know I feel like Washington
State or like California like Vermont or Vermont the Burlington bear factory or whatever yeah would be the teddy bear so then I started thinking like well what if I had to guess for the other states what would they be what would they be and I thought we could have a discussion about that oh man okay what about main mik oh man it's got to be like a moose of some kind like a stuffed moose or like a I'm trying to think like a steak toy um um for m a lobster yeah an animal like um or maybe
it would I say toy toy H I know like ver maybe would be like um like a Lego Bridge oh yeah you know how they have all like the bridges and stuff I'm focused on New England because this is where we hail from but well it's where we're familiar with yeah like a Lego Covered Bridge yeah or something like that that would be cool New Hampshire would maybe be like the wubbles I guess yeah yeah maybe just because it's like knitting crocheting like quilting it's all like that's very New Hampshire um
wubbles yeah live for your woble um Massachusetts oh man what would we be like a I think it would be like something very it would be like a marble run or something like very technical Tech kind of thing with like CH Globe but I think I kind of feel like you're right like a marble run would be really interesting think about like MIT yeah yeah exactly or the museum of science is the the big marble run that's in there yeah huh it's so interesting yeah so I that's one of the
things that's one of the things no idea and I would love to hear from other audience members like where you're from where do you think what do you think your state should be and why yeah you agree with Kansas having the ETA sketch weird and Mississippi having the teddy bear that seems wrong to me I I think yeah I think Mississippi was like oh Kansas chose one so I'm gonna pick a really good one uh was there no details at all on like what why they chose it that's so weird huh so many questions so
many questions no answers oh wait a minute yeah can Massachusetts be a light break ooh how come I don't know it's very bright it's the spirit of Massachusetts it's the spirit of America okay that's legit kind of thing okay I can get down with that like that and plus that's a cool toy yeah it is a cool toy I want one oh my gosh so cool huh now I'm like all thinking about it but M would be a cabbage kid oh my gosh I think you're right of course it would Maine would be that's so funny or
like yeah yeah the only other thing I think about Maine is LL Bean so you know oh man wild absolutely Wild Well I have want to share with you okay I was today years old when I realized or learned that a jiffy is an actual unit of time it's equivalent to one 100th of a second that's really quick I know and I have some details for you tell me so the term Jiffy um it's kind of got an interesting I guess interesting history a little bit but um it was coined for
physics so it denoted initially the time it it took for light to travel one centimeter into a vacuum so which um I have as 33.3 564 P seconds or Pika seconds which is like really quick um and then of course it became colloquially used well I guess the a physicist named Gilbert Newton Lewis in the early 20th century coined Jiffy but then now of course we just use it colloquially as meaning really fast like we'll be there in a jiffy you know like a really quick period of time but I
thought it was just like like something to do with peanut butter just like or just like I don't know just a stupid term silly term that we you know whatever but now because it's used so casually but I had no idea that it was actually a scientific thing yeah no that's pretty like it's reminds me of um a butt load is actually a unit of measurement yes yes a butt is isn't it for wine or something yeah I think it is like the exact amounts or something like a butload yeah a buttload of
wine it's a lot of wine it is a lot of wine can't get through that in a jiffy M coming in high a sentence nice job thank you oh what you got for me okay this one is weird uh okay perfect it is it doesn't have anything to do with the Roman Empire We're not gonna do this whole thing okay it does have to do with like ancient Italian provinces like Pompei and areas uh it is an ancient charm and I'm going to try and pronounce it correctly it's tin tabulam um ulum tin tabulam and
uh it was it's it is because they're in museums now um it's usually like made out of bronze or some kind of metal and uh it's basically just this little guy sometimes this little guy but with the biggest package you've ever seen um and there's just a CRA anatomical package oh no not like not to scale like the package is bigger than the man oh my God I'm sorry I thought you were referencing like his package and like I thought you were visually trying to say his and so
anyway ignore me I mean his his penis is phus um you weren't talking about that yeah okay and it's just covered in bells and basically people would hang them up uh in pom other areas around like very very ancient Italy to ward off evil spirits uh there are some there are some that I saw and if you want to Google this you know uh safe search whatever you got to do not safe for work kind of things but there are some that are just like the penises the peni but like with wings on either side like
Cupids away and they're just like there's like chains hanging with just a crap ton of bells uh you got to look up a picture it is it's phenomenal like I know where it comes from like not so much the fing but like Chimes historically in yeah yeah yeah ward off evil from many many different cultures um and I guess for some reason someone was like you know what this means more menly manness so oh man literally uh so feel free that's my Christmas present or my holiday present what a present to you
thank you so much I will definitely safe search that not on my work computer correct oh fascinating that is I not sure that I would decorate with that but I mean you know to each their own it would be a centerpiece for sure like there's no way your eye would not catch her yes absolutely oh my goodness I have one that has nothing to do with human anatomy okay but more like Earth Anatomy uh soy or yeah kinda um I was today years old or recent years old when I learned that the world's largest
desert is not the Sahara no it's Antarctica yes you knew this yes and you didn't tell me I'm sorry um obviously it seems counterintuitive I'm looking I am so lucky to have a photo shown to me right now of the imagery that Mike was just talking about uh that will be now burned in my brain it's so aggressive it's such an aggressive statue oh the blur is ruin there some much better uh I apologize no please don't apologize I'm just like I I won't unsee it now that's for sure um so be
aware if you do decide to look for that uh you will you will be um overtaken by it and this is in memory of your uncle we love your Uncle Kevin he would laugh so hard at this so so Antarctica yes um largest desert counter in you know you usually think about a desert as hot arid Etc but I didn't know this but a desert is actually based on low precipitation rather than high temperatures so obviously um Antarctica gets I guess it gets less than 10 inches of rain a year so very low
precipitation it has a cold climate which typically we think about the desert we think heat but it's more about dryness than temperature so so obviously very dry and the because of it's so cold the air holds like really little moisture so um also there are two types of deserts there's subtropical and polar um so we usually think Sandy hot yeah but of course polar deserts can also meet that criteria so Antarctica Falls is the largest polar desert um and it's just unique I guess that's part of it
too is like it's one of the harshest climates on the planet and um because it's so arid and it's got such an interesting landscape it's also classified as a desert so I thought that was fascinating it's so cool I'm upset you didn't tell me I'm sure many people knew about this but no you know it's it was one of those things I think I read it in a book somewhere where it's like did you know like you're gonna know my next one too I'm nervous prob not I'm nervous I hear I'll do an
apertif with this one uh okay did you know Kelsey know you worked on a farm at your master's degree area yes um did they have goats no it was an organic um fruit and vegetable farm okay well if they did have goats yeah you might have heard that researchers almost a decade ago found that uh kids baby goats that were raised together in the same pen develop accents similar to their peers so they start out they start out with their own like accent and then they hear their
yeah they hear their their peers bleeding and they Chang their bleet to match theirs so like this was done in I think it was in England and they measured like all across the UK and even in like America they're like oh that goat accent is way different than what that go accent and I just I don't know I guess I kind of I would have never thought to think about that but um my niece actually who's about to be done with college she just recently did um a study about how birds have like
vernacular um and so I kind of went down a rabbit hole of do other animals have it and I found this goat one I found it fantastic that's interesting uh and speaking of birds there's a really did I tell you about the substack called Screech of the week yes oh my gosh it's so fun anyway I won't derail us with that but yeah animals are super interesting in that regard like communication style people really just don't give them enough credit exactly really wild well my next
one you're probably gonna know this oh man the anatomy of the of language here um do you know what the Little Dot over the I and J is called yeah you know I've heard it um yeah I can't remember it off the tip of my tongue it's like on the tip of my tongue well I was today years old Mike when I discovered the dot over an IJ is called a tit yes that's it that's it yep and essentially what it means is a small distinguishing Mark like and it's associated with you know writing systems and um
it came about uh with Latin predominantly the Latin alphabet but um it just means like the the word title itself like atmology wise comes from Old English Middle English and it just means a small stroke or a point in writing and so it's been used as a diacritical mark essentially um or small Mark in lots of languages but um I just think it's it's funny it is hysterical uh here's a bonus point off of off of that point I learned last weekend um that there are actual names
for so we're doing this on Google meet next to the hangup button you see the three dots that are vertical MH oh yeah the don't tell me the um Kebab Kebab yes and there's another it's like a burger H the hamburger so when I worked at McDonald's how challenging was it to label the quote unquote hamburger menu when you were a hamburger company because it would also confuse someone who's using a screen reader to think that that was the actual hamburger so you had to not name it that oh my God
what did you have to name it it was just menu um but I honestly don't remember um but I just things like that that I think about where I'm like oh my gosh yes they have names it's amazing I never knew that I just used to call them ellipses because that's yeah an upside down ellips yeah there's another name for it too the hamburger man need the Kebab um and then there's another one if it comes to me I will I will say it but oh my gosh in the middle of night you'll just
scream it out yeah and pass going to be like uh oh what now Kelsey H what a journey what a journey it's been a week for him I feel so bad but now I'm GNA be screaming out food in the middle of the night referencing technology you know nothing makes sense nothing's real nothing's real um that sounds like fun to me but what do I matter I'll just scream eggnog in the middle of the night so you can feel better cheers EG my wine glass of right here accompanying me on this
episode today my kff of Diet Coke it's actually just but I want to be fancy you are fancy okay so that was three each and a bonus one so back to me volley it's bad back to me the birdie I hit the ball right back to all right on yep on your side here's another animal one oh no oh my God the last the last three are animal ones okay this is about ants okay so when we think about farming agriculture animal husbandry we think you know human um 12,000 is years ago
but did you know Kelsey that ants have been developing farming and animal husbandry techniques for around six million years uh I did not know that so you have you ever heard of a a leaf cutter ant have you ever heard of them no okay so they uh these are primarily uh dealing with ants that are in South America so in the rainforest and stuff like that maybe some in Africa too um but they they chop up like little pieces of leaf and a lot of people think that they just take the leaf back to their
their commune and they home uh so people just thought that that was like their food no what they do is they they have developed and co-evolved with a specific type of fungus and each ant colony each ant colony has a different strain of this fungus where they feed the leaf bits to the fungus and what the ants actually eat is the like the residue from the Fungus so they but the fungus itself can't survive without the ants bringing them because they have been so far
removed from their environment they're in like a closed almost like um where this is the only place this type of fungus can evolve and it's kind of like you know how um families will share like sourdough starter um yeah so when a new Queen is born she takes a bit of that fungus and goes to another colony and like forms her own colony using a piece of that fungus and bro um but you don't have to go terrible you don't to go to South America to see ants doing stuff like this so animal
husbandry uh you can see it in your own backyard if you have a problem in your flowers or plants with aphids um a lot of times you'll see ants like corralling them around and basically moving them to certain areas for better feeding because they sip on honeydew which is a little like droplets that come out of the aphid's basically butt um so amazing and drink butt juice okay but apparently so uh but I didn't know it was 60 million years ago they that they started co-evolving and developing these
Technologies um so animals are incredible insects are incredible they really are that's that's really weird and I love that they're just like shrooming out though yeah pretty much oh my gosh wow I'm learning all the today years old I don't know the ones that you're telling and so I'm learning something but I would like to tell you unless you know this already which you probably do I was today years old when I found out that the shortest war in history was between Britain and Zanzibar did you
know this Michael is this the one where they basically stayed like just outside of their their firing range because Zanzibar couldn't send their missiles far enough away from where the British fleet was or was that a different one that I'm thinking about it it might be different because I didn't see that part of it or maybe that was part of it but the reason behind it was something I learned but it was essentially it happened in 1896 and the war itself lasted 38
minutes okay yes this yeah okay it's known as the Anglo Zanzibar War um August 27th 1896 between the UK and the Su sultanate of Zanzibar it basically like there is um how do I explain this Zanzibar wanted to well there's a succession dispute I guess we'll put it that way um and there's a pro British Sultan initially as part of Zanzibar who passed away and then the successor to the one who passed away refused to recognize you know any British supported candidates certain or British in general
and so it led to this conflict um and there was an ultimatum for this guy to step down uh the ultimatum passed they didn't comply the new Zanzibar person didn't step down and so the British obviously took action um so it was like 9:00 am I guess British warships showed up began bombarding the Sultan's Palace um and you know we there to confront zanzibar's forces uh but the fighting just was 38 minutes um because it was so brief um and the British forces over overwhelmed zanzibar's you
know at the time very poorly equipped and outnumbered Defender so um the khed the successor um took refuge in a consulate um and ultimately just ended the war because um Britain still reigned over Zanzibar which is is what it is um but it eventually did gain independence I mean much later so Zan uh the island itself uh in 1963 got independence but it was clearly like a a very strange historical event 38 minutes uh wild wild I had no idea I I I assume Wars last a long time yeah for something
this seemed to be declared a war seems like like months to a year or more yeah I feel like this would be AP like named like a conflict I'm not sure yeah yeah but I'd never heard about it before so I thought that was really interesting um yeah so the Anglo Zanzibar war of okay what was it 1896 very good you're welcome when I think of Zanzibar I can't help but think of Tenacious D um Tenacious D yeah I don't know tell me Jack Black um the actor he's in a band with Kyle gos the name is Tenacious D
there's a song uh that we can't play uh because it's explicit um but one of the lyrics is I'm not gonna cook it but I'll order it from Zanzibar oh that's all I can think about interesting what was it what were they trying to cook is it that it's okay no it's not bad um it's just about two people who love each other very much okay okay say no more together kind of thing and and the male partner uh or this partner is just very excited and is happy to do whatever if
that includes cooking or getting your favorite meal before anything happens okay okay he may they may or may not cook it but they definitely will order it from sansar thank you for that explanation M that very PG explanation yes yes they're just [Music] wrestling okay okay so for my last one I actually have to blame you okay I'm scared uh because it has to do with one of our previous episodes or it's like oh it's related to Yes uh so it's kind of like a vend diagram of a perfect storm for me uh
which is knowledge I just gained and also culture and folkloric things that happened together um so have you ever heard of a Welsh tradition called the Mari lyd um and it's a people don't know where it really got its start it became super popular in the 18th and 19th century um and it's really in southern Wales basically what happens is around this time of year so like um traditionally around like Christmas time New Year's Eve um the colder months uh for about a two or up to six week period
uh there are a group of men this sounds terrible uh but it's actually not that bad okay one dresses up very fancy like um one might dress up as a character named Judy uh might dress up as I forget what the other name of the character is but basically they're like we're little scamps and we're going to cause problems and then one person is dresssed up uh like covered in a sheet usually it's white and they have a they have a pole and on this pole is mounted a skull of a
horse and it's usually like with a veil uh and all the flowers flowers and it has the bells and streamers um y so it's a a was selling tradition uh so they go around to people's houses um and it's like a it's a really interesting call and response um kind of thing where um basically they go around and because of the Bells and the jingling and usually they're pretty drunk or rockus yeah um that's kind of the goal uh the people inside the house can hear them coming so they start singing a
particular verse being like oh no did you lock the door the windows because here they come I I'll share um a link to uh there's a BBC video of please do 1960s of a traditional one um and it's pretty tame but uh you apparently they get like really out of hand uh so it can go on for like hours of oh my gosh so the house will sing basically saying like you're not getting in here and then the group of men will be like will sing in response like give us food we want
drink and it's just like back and forth and back and forth and back and forth and then once the house has no more responses to sing then they have to open the doors and let them in give them food uh drink drink and when they're inside they do like this the horse which is the Mari Lloyd um does this like weird dance like throughout the house um the Judy character like uh puts out the fire and just like cleans the Hearth and it's some kind of like fertility dances
is of gets into but they're trying to like they scare the adults and the children but it's all in good fun kind of thing it's kind of like blessing the house um for the new year um and there is such there's a debate about like does this come from ancient like Celtic um uh Welsh Traditions or does this have anything to do with like the Virgin Mary because it's Mary Lloyd but both of them are kind of like no it's not no it's not so it's kind of like a pixture of both that came
together and it's really only in southern Wales and it follows um wherever there were mines like coal mines or or any other type of wherever those were that's where these Traditions pop up um but there are other traditions in throughout the UK uh not of Mary Lloyd that is a very Welsh tradition but there's one called um Obby o which is basically hobby horse but without the ages um and I it's uh in southeast England I want to say and they do basically the same thing but it's um
a goat instead of a horse and they go so I all I could think about was like these damn hobby horses yes it's basically that oh and the followup to that remember how I was like I know I had a hobby horse yeah okay its name was Buster my mom made it I did in fact have it it was exactly as described it lived in my house for a very long time but has no it no longer lives there which is so sad it is gone um but they're probably yes gone but not forgotten I remember it very vividly and
I know my mom is going to look for pictures anyway we interrupt you when I thought of it no when we get we need to update things oh yeah we will and rest in peace Buster rest in peace my mom worked really hard on that love you mom um but man yeah so that's wild though um does it still happen today or you saying like this oh W no it still happens there was like the biggest ever gathering in the year 2000 but it still happens to this day um I want to find I want yeah I want
to find more modern versions because apparently that's when like people like crazy the BBC One is like hello where Welsh and we're doing this very traditional thing of course of course oh uh please send that to me though and then we have to find out where this is happening and if it is so we we'll need to travel to uh South Wales I will I'll do an Airbnb and hopefully just then pray that they arrive perfect and I'll just be shouting things at them because I don't know what to say they will have
to accept it I don't know Welsh so I apologize if I mispronounced even Mar Lloyd but I I I was on like the how do you pronounce website and I watched like YouTube videos trying to absorb it um today this morning since I only found out about it last night um God I'd seen the term before but I didn't really know what it meant yeah and I'd seen like the face of the horse skull before yeah oh my gosh so wild well my last one is not as interesting and I 100% know you're going
to know this one Pat new this one I'll pretend um no don't pretend I'll I'll see right through you um it's just how much how little knowledge I have comparatively but here we are I was today or yesterday years old when I discovered that there are more possible iterations of a game of chess than there are atoms in the observable universe I did not know that you didn't know this okay I did not know that it's it's related to something called the Shannon number which um someone named Claude
Shannon uh estimated the complexity of Chess like essentially made a game tree estimate of the game of chess um and he himself was a mathematician and an electrical engineer um and uh I thought it was really interesting but he was known as the father of modern digital communication and information Theory which was fascinating but it's so the Shannon number which is named after him obviously represents the maximum number of possible chess games and it's an estimation based on a calculation of the
average branching factor or essentially the average number of legal moves per position on the chess board and an average of the game length itself so the exact value of this number is not fixed and it could be based on like you know subject to change based on um like new algorithms like if suddenly the averages changed or something like suddenly the game became X number of hours longer or something but um it's an astronomical figure so the I do not know how to say this number um because it's not
it's so big that it can't be said like a normal number it's like in like math yeah visuals so maybe we just post it but essentially it's uh Slash parentheses 10 to the fancy parentheses 120th and fancy parentheses slash and parentheses uh and that number is pretty big so it's basically impossible to compute or analyze every possible move and position within the game but I guess all I to say it's there are infinite vast possibilities for the game of chess um
and apparently more than the observable number of or number of atoms in the observable universe that's insane wild I know you didn't know this no I didn't know that now you do yeah yeah it was really fascinating I just I mean you gave us two extra ones I only had five you gave us they were bonus they were point they were slash parentheses point to the two millionth fancy bracket zero yeah what is the fancy bracket called I be today years old when I are you talking about
the uh Alfred Hitchcock bracket or the is that the one I was talking about the one with like the little yeah that's I call them Alfred Hitchcock but they're probably not correct I mean why do you call it that uh so Alfred Hitchcock movies in the beginning they usually show like a silhouette of his face he's got a very like noticeable silhouette and it kind of follows the curvature ofets interesting I love that another I was two years old when but yeah it's fine well I mean this was a
fun episode to do nice little holiday Adventure here very very fun festive holiday Adventure festive we need to do something different maybe we'll do mini episodes focused on I was today or as old one because I feel like I'm constantly learning just bizarre things um yeah it happens in the course of us doing our regular shows yeah like I'm G to keep falling down this rabbit hole and then yeah and I don't know what to do with that information I just put it all to the side like I'll get to there
eventually someday I'll come back to this or need this and here's here's when Mike yeah but I mean if you liked this tell us tell us where though Mike where can people find us uh people could find us if they're going to like social media they could find us at WTF podcast um at all of the major social media networks except for Threads and X Twitter um because why no Facebook no Facebook for us so basically Instagram YouTube and Tik Tok right yeah so that's what I said that's more
condensed than what I said they could also go to www.ok wtfpod.com and find out some information there sweet our RSS feed is there if you're not a podcast on a traditional platform so you can find that and you can also just tell us you were today years old when submit something to us let us know send us an email at hello WCF podcast.com um and we're just so grateful that you're listening and we hope that you have happy healthy holiday season or that if you are having a grief filled
holiday season that you are surrounded by people and things and whatever that you love and that you go outside and stand in the sun hog a human look at a plant pet a cat whatever feels good um but I'm just lucky to have amazing friends like Mike and Amber and all the people so um thank you Mike for this joyous moment in time we are happy to be here and thank you for being in our lives and thank you Uncle Kevin we love you yeah until next time we'll see you around lady are you
crying the tears belong to me did you think our time together was all [Music] gone [Music] lady you've been dreaming I'm as close as I can be and I swear to you our time has [Music] begun close your eyes and rest your [Music] weary I promise I will stay right here beside [Music] you today our lives were joined became [Music] andwin I wish that you could know how much I love you lady are you happy do you feel the way I do are there meanings that you've never seen before lady my sweet lady
I just can't believe that's true and it's like I've never ever before close your eyes and rest your weary [Music] mind I promise I will stay right here beside [Music] you today our lives were joined came inwin I wish that you could know how much I love [Music] you are you [Music] crying do the tears belong to me did you think our time together was all [Music] gone my sweet lady I'm as close as I can be and I swear to you [Music] our and I [Music] swear
