MIDDLE AGEish

Sofa Talk - From Glasses to Bras and Everything in Between

Ashley Bedosky, Lisa Kelly, Dr. Pam Wright, and Trisha Kennedy Roman Season 1 Episode 31

Ever had one of those moments where you realize you're not as young as you used to be? Yeah, us too. Join us for a hilarious, candid exploration of everything middle-age-ish, from the sudden realization that you need glasses to discovering that the practical bra clasp was invented by none other than Mark Twain. We'll even take a nostalgic walk down memory lane with the classic movie, Beaches. We might even make you laugh with our musings on making a quick buck with old underwear, or a hilarious escape attempt gone wrong. Don't miss out on this fun ride through the wild and wonderful peculiarities of life.


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Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Middle-Age-ish podcast, authentically and unapologetically, keeping it real, discussing all things middle-age-ish, a time when metabolism slows and confidence grows. Join fashion and fitness entrepreneur Ashley Badosky, former Celtic woman and founder of the Lisa Kelly Voice Academy, lisa Kelly, licensed psychologist and mental health expert, dr Pam Wright, and highly sought-after cosmetic injector and board certified nurse practitioner, trisha Kennedy-Roman. Join your hosts on the journey of Middle-Age-ish.

Speaker 2:

Hello everyone and welcome back to another episode of Middle-Age-ish podcast. I'm Trisha Kennedy-Roman and I'm joined here today with my co-host, ashley Badosky, lisa Kelly and Dr Pam Wright, and you are joining us now for our sofa talks, one of our favorite times we love this yes, I know it's so nice to see you.

Speaker 3:

It's changed, it's cold I'm so happy. It's so fabulous so good it's just amazing.

Speaker 4:

It's fabulous.

Speaker 2:

Lisa is looking fabulous in her glasses. Now she's hit the Middle-Age-ish milestone Middle.

Speaker 3:

I see how it is. I see how it is. I see how it comes to Middle-Age.

Speaker 4:

I mean, it doesn't give you a lot of options.

Speaker 3:

No, but like it was overnight, it was like, oh, you can't see, oh, okay, great, you're right when I started holding my phone, like you know, at arm's length.

Speaker 4:

It really does seem like it happens overnight.

Speaker 3:

No, no, it definitely did happen?

Speaker 4:

Well, yeah, for you.

Speaker 3:

I convinced it happened overnight. I literally woke up after my 46th birthday and went oh, I can't read my phone anymore. And then it, just over the last couple of months, got progressively worse.

Speaker 2:

But you look good in the glasses Thank you, and they college your wrinkles a little bit more.

Speaker 3:

It's kind of reading glasses.

Speaker 4:

Ashley, I don't think I've got honey. Okay, Now I need my glasses.

Speaker 4:

No my eyesight went like overnight when I turned 40. Oh wow, so I had to get readers but I could still, you know, I mean just anything like really close. And then over my 40s it has gotten so progressively worse it's terrible. And then I, when I turned 50, I'm like, do I need contacts? Because I can't do LASIK, because there is absolutely no way that I could lay still and have that thing coming at my eye Like there's apt, there is not enough.

Speaker 3:

So I'm a seizure.

Speaker 1:

I'm a seizure.

Speaker 4:

There is not enough ever, and so I really am thinking about, at 41 or 51, getting contacts.

Speaker 3:

I love contacts. Oh yeah, I don't love you too, the contacts?

Speaker 4:

Oh yeah, I love them. I have them in my 20s.

Speaker 3:

So you can never have them. Just put them in and then you're done.

Speaker 4:

That's I know. And it's gotten to that point now where I just I can see all of this. I can read that, but anything any closer than that poster that Trisha has on her, you know, in her area. It gets a little blurry.

Speaker 3:

Wow.

Speaker 2:

So you know, the one thing I just like wearing more than my glasses is we all know I hate wearing a bra. Oh yeah, I have a fun fact for you. So we've always talked about men invented this or whatever, but do you guys know who invented the bra?

Speaker 1:

The man or woman.

Speaker 3:

Well, that was the man.

Speaker 2:

So it was actually a woman who invented the modern bra, but I found this out, that this is really interesting. So you know, I'm from Hannibal, missouri, which is hometown of Mark Twain.

Speaker 4:

Right, mark Twain, yes, you.

Speaker 2:

So Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn, he's actually the one that invented the modern day clasp. He did it for suspenders.

Speaker 1:

I just found that little month back at Zubin Really so he wasn't trying to invent it for the bra.

Speaker 2:

He was trying to find a way because he didn't, you know, was suspenders. But that's now our modern day bra clasp. Was invented by Mark Twain.

Speaker 3:

Mark Twain. Wow, I'm kind of disappointed on it Because I thought in the Beaches movie when she sings about Otto Titzling, I thought that was true. Do you remember this?

Speaker 4:

No, oh my gosh, I loved Beaches.

Speaker 3:

Ok, so you know when she gets her first major role and she's in this opera and she's singing about Otto Titzling, inventor and kraut had nothing to get very worked up about.

Speaker 2:

I have no idea where you're talking about. I don't, I don't.

Speaker 3:

The Over the Shoulder Boulder holder.

Speaker 4:

OK, I do know that.

Speaker 3:

Yes, I do know that one and I thought that was a real song Beaches.

Speaker 4:

Oh, it was my favorite movie ever but. I had to always watch it by myself because I can't cry in front of people. I get literally nauseous.

Speaker 3:

I watched it when my best friend Shanaid we watched it and she always comments on our middle-aged thing, shanaid, so she'll be listening to this and this was our movie. And every time it's on in Ireland, or any time it's on here, we text each other Beaches. Oh my gosh, it's such a good movie. It is.

Speaker 4:

It's the best when Beneath my Wings was my dad. Daughter dance at our wedding. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's my favorite, one of my other songs.

Speaker 4:

I would have to bring up the VHS recorder. Big mammoth thing Up to my bedroom, plug it into my TV, watch it by myself, go through like four rolls of toilet paper. Ok, Not wrong. It's so sad. I know I mean yeah.

Speaker 2:

So, so sad, but we loved, you know we loved it, we loved it. We were watching like a Dateline type thing, 2020 type thing, and it was an older one and they were talking it was a murder that happened in like 1998. And the investigator said that it was when he walked through. He said he was surprised he saw a computer in the house and it was one of the first crime scenes he'd been at where there was a computer in the house oh really.

Speaker 4:

It was 1998.

Speaker 2:

I was like that was so weird.

Speaker 4:

Wow, it is amazing to think about, like because you know, I know my grandmother would always would tell me because she was born in 1912. You know, ashley, like we went to town in a buggy. And I was like that's so crazy because now we have cars. But now looking at our life from birth to now and what has been, developed.

Speaker 3:

Oh the change yeah.

Speaker 4:

Like now. I completely understand how fast, because, like when I was younger and my grandparents would tell us about the buggy and the horses and that's how they got around and all of that stuff, I was like, well, you are the only people on the planet that did that granny and I'm so sorry for you. And now I'm like, oh my gosh, it really does happen.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, it's much. Now you can tell your Tesla where you want to go. I have a take you. I don't think I could do that.

Speaker 4:

I just well, first of all, we all know that I'm kind of a little bit of a control freak, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I can do it. I do, though I don't think I could just be like. I would love it.

Speaker 4:

Would you pick me up, me too.

Speaker 2:

I just I almost to Uber to work today. I was so tired.

Speaker 4:

I was so tired you should have. I almost did, but I was like if I Uber it would take a while. I'll probably be late by almost.

Speaker 2:

Uber you should have, so I wouldn't mind the Tesla thing.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you could do that.

Speaker 3:

That's my next car, I think, or just a chauffeur. I was like no, I mean, I want that too. Yeah, I get a car service. Car service, yeah A car.

Speaker 4:

That I mean because think about technology now Like think about the computers on our phone. They're always grew up Always.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4:

But if a car screws up, you're heading to the fresh market and you end up at the ocean, in the ocean, in a lake, somewhere, you know. I mean a car messing up, although I guess airlines do it, I guess I mean I guess the planes A lot of polish yeah, I was like, I guess that Plains basically find themselves from what I understand. Yeah, that's scary, you'd have to stay awake.

Speaker 2:

I don't think I could just be in a car with it driving with me.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I would just. Yeah, you know, I like driving too much. I don't know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I love driving me, yeah, I always love driving.

Speaker 3:

Driving is. That's why I couldn't imagine living in New York.

Speaker 1:

No, oh, no, oh yeah.

Speaker 3:

And I can like I didn't drive when we lived in New York. I never drove Scotch over all the time. He was great, but I no interest in driving in New York because you're not driving, you're stopping and starting. I'm beeping your horn like people are just pissed all the time. But you can't there, no. And even when you get out, like on the freeway heading towards you know the, the, what's the place? Hamptons, I thought kind of way. When you go right the Queen's way, it's crazy. People are like cutting in in front of you the whole time.

Speaker 4:

My housewives. You are absolutely right. Yes, it's madness, madness. Yeah, they always went to the Hamptons.

Speaker 3:

Oh, the Hamptons, lovely it took like three hours. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

If you won the lottery now, what would be the one thing you would buy? A chef, the dude buy I would go by. I would buy, or if you'd have like a driver.

Speaker 4:

I would love. I would love a chef Love a chef no, I like cooking.

Speaker 3:

I would have cleaner all the time, every single day, and somebody to walk the doodles and somebody to train the doodles, or just a house for the doodles themselves.

Speaker 4:

Love the pictures of the doodles.

Speaker 3:

Oh, there's so many, but they're so bold, I mean, they're just so.

Speaker 4:

I have no controller for them.

Speaker 3:

What so ever, it's not good they're so cute they're so cute that they're gorgeous yeah please, this fall dad, my fourth. No, it's your fault. I have the doodles.

Speaker 4:

I love. Why haven't met Lisa's doodles all? I've seen tons of pictures and I hear amazing stories.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 4:

Love the stories of the doodles. Your doodles, trisha, are freaking, precious.

Speaker 2:

They're gorgeous, I would have taken one home with me if I could have. There's just a lot of them but, I, Too many?

Speaker 4:

I really don't. Oh yes, I don't think so. I don't think so. It's kind of like cats you can definitely have. Oh, I'm not a cat person.

Speaker 3:

I do think, though, it's like children, that part of your brain you think you can never have too many children, and then eventually, oh no, I know that.

Speaker 4:

Off your brain.

Speaker 3:

that's dogs have done that to me now I'm like no more when you hit it, that's done.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I'm not there yet.

Speaker 3:

Like with the dogs.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, children to absolutely done tubes tied. Nope, I always told Michael because he wanted five or six, he wanted an offensive line.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, that's my number two.

Speaker 3:

Tell her I said hey, dogs. How many do you have? Three three. She's up there with us, okay. So you travel though a lot, so what do you do?

Speaker 4:

So they either go to the play and stay. The rescue that we adopted two of them. It's the tender heart play and stay. Oh here in noon in okay, and so she has the rescue, but she also does the play and stay and she's absolutely Amazing. Or we have someone come and they stay at our house.

Speaker 3:

Yeah well, we're gone, so we kind of do both.

Speaker 4:

Yeah right that makes sense. Yeah, so it does and then the person who comes to the house is amazing, because she also feeds my dear.

Speaker 3:

I'm so. You have a lot of furry children. I do.

Speaker 4:

I do, yeah, so, yeah. So I love it when she comes and stays at the house, because she comes and that's nice.

Speaker 3:

You know, it's nice to know the other well after I know, yeah, and the deer, but I would.

Speaker 4:

I would do a doodle and a heartbeat. I'm cute, I would have taken the one that I would. What was her name? Like the big, the big black one, max.

Speaker 2:

I think max. Max is the one. Max is when you really like. Okay, I only want to go around.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, okay, so I would have cute.

Speaker 2:

Oh my gosh, he's pretty sweet he's like a big bear rug, so precious he's the burn a doodle. No, he is the new fee poo new fee Poo.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'm gonna do it all.

Speaker 2:

Frankie's the stupid little how he's the lab or doodle. I'm doodled out. I've hit every doodle.

Speaker 4:

I know you have hit every.

Speaker 2:

I went, if I got one more which I'm not going to know would be a saint Bernard like so.

Speaker 4:

Yes there's a Great your knees doodle.

Speaker 2:

Yes, he's a guy.

Speaker 4:

You know, Cyrus is my great piernies.

Speaker 3:

Oh my gosh, they're cute. Does he run away all the time?

Speaker 4:

Is he a bit of a runner? No, Well, he's got a bum hip, so oh, so you can't. She's like no.

Speaker 3:

It's good because there's two of these streets that are always ice.

Speaker 4:

It was the best $8,000 we spent. Oh wow, because he does not. He doesn't wander.

Speaker 3:

Uh-uh, uh-uh, $8,000 for his hip. Okay, so.

Speaker 4:

Well, I mean he did yeah, we had a hip surgery, but it really was. Because I do know like that's one thing that I've learned from the rescue in Linda, because I've gotten to know her so well over the years is like a lot of those great piernies like you can not contain them and that would cause me to have a heart attack.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 4:

Because I freak out anyway about if, like, the dogs get out.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, me too, and I was terrified.

Speaker 4:

Oh my God, like I just lose my mind. And so if I had like, if he, if I couldn't contain him and he was constantly getting out, I just think I would like have a panic attack.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

So that's why I said it. I mean I hate that he had to have it.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, yeah, but it's great.

Speaker 4:

Because he, totally because he, yeah, he dislocated, he dislocated. So nobody hate me out there, okay, um, so it was horrible. However, it he is not able to climb over the Happy days.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, how old is he?

Speaker 4:

He is five.

Speaker 3:

Oh, okay, so he's, yeah, middle-aged. Yeah, so we adopted.

Speaker 4:

Middle-aged? I know he is. Yeah, and he dislocated his hip, so crazy oh my God. The things we do for our gods oh yeah, yeah, I know it's, it's madness, yeah. But hey, shout out to Auburn, that school.

Speaker 2:

Hospital. They're so good. Uga too, and absolutely. Yeah, sorry, I have to plug. No, no, no, no that was.

Speaker 4:

it was either Auburn or UGA and, to be honest, where I live it's it's so much easier to get to Auburn because it's just right down.

Speaker 3:

I know they are amazing and get up to Georgia.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I mean you have to go through the city, I know, but they were just so so good.

Speaker 3:

They're so good and a lot of my clients have used them and they're amazing. They're amazing, no.

Speaker 2:

Speaking of dogs and vets and vet bills public service announcements. Do you guys know xylitol? Like how horrible it is for dogs? What is that?

Speaker 3:

No, so it's In the chewing gum yeah.

Speaker 2:

So my vet bill was right at yours and because our dog ate a big 40 pack of gum. Oh my gosh, that had xylitol and just I think it was. One piece can kill like a 10 or 20-odd dog so yeah, oh my gosh, you're kidding. I mean kids. Let them have any. It's a sugar substitute. Won't let them have anything. It has xylitol at the house because that is very poison.

Speaker 1:

I'm not a human. I'm not a human, but it's a dog.

Speaker 2:

I haven't either.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, well, my seven thousand dollars later. I'm well aware of that. Now, is it anything other than chewing gum? So is it like a sugar substitute for like chocolate, or no, I think it's just gum, isn't it?

Speaker 3:

I feel like it's sugar-free gum, but I'm not 100% sure about that yeah, but yeah that's.

Speaker 2:

I had no idea, but when he cheated out those it almost killed him, and that's the big one.

Speaker 3:

Max. Oh Well, Faith came up to me this morning and she went. You know the way, Alfie, we have a little Yorkie as well. He's on like seven pounds.

Speaker 4:

I know that's all of your dogs, so cute.

Speaker 3:

Alfie ran down the stairs, so if he sees the basement door open at all, he'll run straight down to Faith, because she's the only one who'll allow him to sleep with her. So he darted down the other morning. She said she could hear him and she couldn't hear his feet going around so she said he went out and he ran about.

Speaker 3:

He went back out into the sitting room, ran about again. She came back and she said he literally hopped up into the bed and she said within about like 30 seconds he collapsed. And she was like he was past it, which is really unlike him. You can't get him to, can't get him to sleep. So there, he is past it. So she got up and she was cleaning around and she looked on the floor to see what it was. It was a melatonin gummy. Oh my.

Speaker 4:

God, oh, no, no wonder.

Speaker 3:

He didn't maybe at least one because there was two on the floor so he'd obviously eaten one. It was like a past stage. Stay, it's going to be out for a while. The gummies, oh, the melatonin.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Melatonin, happy days Melatonin. Yes, good old melatonin. Oh my God.

Speaker 4:

The gummies, it works. Oh, I know I hate it Okay, so why cleaning? Oh yeah, sorry. Okay, let's get back to the point. You said you have a cleaner. Oh, you have a cleaner, oh sorry.

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Everything else, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I have somebody who, like, changed the sheets.

Speaker 4:

I do love clean sheets.

Speaker 3:

I love clean sheets and I hate doing it. I hate doing it. I have a cleaner in my hair and I like my hair. I無lo. It's just like my hair is clean and I really have tried so hard to organize my pantry but I haven't done it. I do love the organizer.

Speaker 4:

Maybe, a professional organizer because I'll keep us clean. Yeah, oh my gosh, a good organized closet and pantry.

Speaker 3:

And a hairdresser.

Speaker 2:

That's what I wanted, See.

Speaker 4:

I wanted that before. Yes, I have been. Yeah, 100% yeah. Hair dryer that I have yeah, I would have done that one too.

Speaker 3:

So I just feel good when my hair is good. Yes, always. Yeah, I'll send my daughter over to you. She's got. I mean, her organizational skills are insane. I'm like go in that pantry and I'll go in there.

Speaker 4:

Why don't I have a child like?

Speaker 1:

us.

Speaker 3:

Like why it was gotten. I really organized. Why don't we have children Like they're the opposite?

Speaker 2:

Really yes, I challenge you.

Speaker 3:

Ellie has a friend though, Alexa Ellie's off.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 3:

I love when she comes in. She can come in and like fix my head.

Speaker 4:

She's crazy.

Speaker 3:

There must be something, dan, in your neighborhood. Yeah, must be a weird organization. Yeah, you think for her like Hang on on. But it's a main thing with the closet anyway, I don't like really the pantry You're upset. She's like, yeah, I can't do it. She'll like I mean every cereal.

Speaker 4:

Like, I make my order and every can and I'm like Are you on a CD?

Speaker 3:

Like if I miss something.

Speaker 2:

Oh, it looks amazing.

Speaker 4:

I'd love a child like this. I love a closet yeah.

Speaker 3:

It takes forever, though Takes forever. I know you have to throw out stuff, but we've established I'm good at throwing it except underwear. Yes, they should be Nannies.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I know Celebrity Bay, it just depends their worth of fortune Exactly in the video machine.

Speaker 3:

We should take a bet on if you sold your underwear on eBay, how much would it get? Oh, oh, my god, we don't even have to take a bet. I don't think you do it on eBay. I think there's a difference. It's on the dark web.

Speaker 4:

It's on the deep dark dirty web.

Speaker 3:

I don't know that one, so I heard about it.

Speaker 4:

It would be funny On my shows.

Speaker 3:

That would be funny, I'd be so mad though Imagine, you did make loads of money by doing it. I've had all this underwear for 20 years sitting there and I didn't know I could make a fortune on this.

Speaker 4:

You're kind of fun. You're like a 401K Scott. I just made $50,000. For those dirty underwear.

Speaker 3:

I bought forever 21, 20 years ago oh my god. Well, you should make money off of it.

Speaker 4:

I just can't, I can't, I can't, nope, I know.

Speaker 3:

Do you remember that show? That was on forever ago? It was Antique's Roadshow.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, oh yeah, I mean, that's in English and you would look at something and you'd be like, oh, this is worth a million dollars and you're like wait what yeah, Like what is that it goes through everything in your head.

Speaker 4:

And who's that Exactly? You go to your grandparents Like Granny, I'm coming through your house.

Speaker 3:

I know that's so weird, it's so random, yeah, yeah, smart, I know. I know that would never happen to any of us, though.

Speaker 4:

No, nope, nope no.

Speaker 3:

We're going to have to rely on the dirty undies. I think, I think, Lisa, I think your dirty undies could probably go for immense.

Speaker 4:

I'm going to be surprised. I'm starting to feel a little nauseous. I feel pretty money.

Speaker 3:

I kind of form in Starbucks.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, exactly, we're going to know that Lisa has gone to that point when she comes in and she's like.

Speaker 3:

you know what? I didn't have to change my sheets today.

Speaker 4:

I heard like my girl did it for me Exactly. I've been on eBay, scott.

Speaker 3:

Yes, oh, funny. Did any of you see? I was cracking up laughing before I came here today? There's this lady. As I've said before, I love these rails because they're short and they're sweet and they're funny.

Speaker 4:

OK, I'm going down that rabbit hole. Oh my god, I've got to stop.

Speaker 3:

Have you seen the lady who came out of her house? Oh, she comes out of her house and she's all dressed up, she looks gorgeous, and she's in all her running gear and everything. And she's like oh my god, you guys, I am so embarrassed right now. And she's talking about how vulnerable she is. And she's saying that she went out in her morning walk and she met her neighbor. So she was talking to her neighbor and she said I got really distracted about the things I usually do. So she said I have my bottle of water in my hand and I have my vitamins in my pocket. So I said I was like Trying to get away from my neighbor so I could take my vitamins.

Speaker 3:

So she's walking away from the neighbor. She takes her, puts her hand in, puts her vitamins in her mouth, drinks her water and chokes. She's like oh my god, can't breathe, can't breathe. So she'll, I'm coughing on the side of the road. So the man across the street is gonna you okay. And she's like yeah, no, no, I'm good, I'm good. So she's like choked back the water and I'm fine and I go to walk again. She said that I'm walking along the street and I realized I haven't got my airpods. I'll put my hand in my pocket, take out my airpods. She takes out her vitamins. She swallowed her airpods. I was like I wonder if they still connect like.

Speaker 4:

Many reasons. I love you Information. That is your question. Like, yeah, they still connect? And if they do, oh my god, I have a block it.

Speaker 3:

If the music is coming from, like it's not here then, or if she's vibrating inside, like I, would they. So I have so many questions. I'm like 9-1-1. No, she's breaking her heart, laughing, doing her Facebook real. I'm like this is the funniest thing.

Speaker 4:

You just imagine you go, you get rolls into the ER and it's playing Beyonce from inside your intestines.

Speaker 3:

Small enough. I'm sure you pass it like.

Speaker 4:

I don't think okay, think about now. Thank God, nope, knock on wood that I haven't had a kidney stone, but those are like Minuscule you pee then that's a different. That's different. But it's still going through your intestines right.

Speaker 2:

No, no, no, no okay.

Speaker 4:

Well, that's why I'm not a doctor, everybody just FYI.

Speaker 3:

Yes, the air, the iPod though being pee dead of you would hurt. I'm sure it would hurt the other way too, but still that's the reason I am in fashion and fitness. Oh yeah, yes, yes, if you have swallowed your air pod, please don't wait to pass it, let's just go to.

Speaker 4:

Oh, I mean seriously since you guys have talked about it like it is literally like you go down the rabbit hole and then, like four hours later, I know I'm like I could have watched a whole movie or two. Yeah, you've learned nothing.

Speaker 3:

I've learned lots.

Speaker 4:

I love the one where it's the the guy that does the voiceovers for the animals.

Speaker 3:

Oh, the dogs.

Speaker 4:

Oh my god, he's so hilarious. Yeah, I just I mean, but yeah, you turn around and it is four hours later and you have done absolutely nothing.

Speaker 3:

They're funny they're all. Yeah, love them.

Speaker 4:

Oh, yes, the things we learned things you know there was another one with a boy.

Speaker 3:

They were talking about you know the stupid things your college kids have done. They were saying, like the list of things, yeah, but this boy apparently went into the DMV to get his his license and they said to him what's your social? And he hands them his Instagram handle.

Speaker 4:

Oh, it's probably not the only child that I know, I know. My god, it's so funny. They're hilarious, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

So what comes? Are your reels? Mostly dogs. No, no, my reels are mostly at the moment.

Speaker 3:

They're office bloopers, so whatever you watch, that it's office bloopers and still Matt Reif, who I'm going to see next Saturday night. I'm very, very excited. And Matt Reif, and oh the last USA, See you next time. Have you watched him? Oh, he's this really clean comedian from Tennessee and he has this really slow kind of southern draw. He's always like talking about his life, but he's he does not crack a smile when he's talking. He's uh, he's really really funny. And that's not how you pronounce his name either it's Brigette, Brigette. Yeah, he's a huge, huge. Oh, he's really really funny, very funny, very southern, very clean, clean humor. But nothing like Matt Rife, You're like.

Speaker 4:

I'm so going.

Speaker 3:

Yes, oh yeah. I can't wait so excited. Where is he coming? He's playing in Savannah.

Speaker 4:

Oh yes. Yes, I love Savannah too.

Speaker 3:

I know, so myself and Jack are going to see it because Jack's huge fan. Yeah, I can't wait, can't wait, oh, I love Savannah. Yeah, I love Savannah too. So much fun, so much fun. Yeah, so that's next week. That's next week, yes.

Speaker 2:

I'm excited for our guest, our next guest is pretty amazing. She really is she's going to be really motivational, so, jen.

Speaker 1:

Drummond next week.

Speaker 4:

Yes, do it, I'm excited.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so mom a business woman and seven kids. Seven kids.

Speaker 3:

Seven kids.

Speaker 4:

God bless her.

Speaker 3:

Oh wow I hope she doesn't have seven dogs as well. Oh my.

Speaker 4:

God, I would totally have seven dogs. Seven children, seven dogs, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So, you have joined in. Next time for Jen.

Speaker 4:

Drummond.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all right, cheers, everybody Cheers.

Speaker 1:

Thank you for joining the ladies of the Middle Age-ish podcast as they journey through the ups and downs of this not young but definitely not old season of life. To hear past episodes or make suggestions for future episodes, visit wwwmiddleage-ishcom. That's wwwmiddleage-ishcom. You can follow along on social media at middle age-ish Also, if you have a moment, to leave a review rate and subscribe. That helps others find this show and we greatly appreciate it. Once again, thank you so much for joining us and we'll catch you in the next episode of the Middle Age-ish podcast.

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