Life Unmastered

Daddy Has A "Tiny Brain"

October 31, 2023 Season 1 Episode 19
Daddy Has A "Tiny Brain"
Life Unmastered
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Life Unmastered
Daddy Has A "Tiny Brain"
Oct 31, 2023 Season 1 Episode 19

Buckle up for a roller coaster ride of laughter and nostalgia in this week's episode of Life Unmastered. We're sharing funny stories, wild things our kids have shared, and reminiscing about past mishaps that have become the stuff of family legend.

Find out why Mike has a "tiny brain", what the "Pillow of Separation" is, how Mike failed a little old lady and why he also stiff-armed a stranger.  You'll be in stitches as we recount the hilarious, awkward, and questionable stories of our recent past. So grab your headphones and get ready to laugh!

Support the Show.

Thanks for joining us for your weekly dose of confidently unqualified advice!
Let's keep the conversation going! Connect with us below!

Instagram: www.instagram.com/lifeunmasteredpodcast
Email: lifeunmasteredpodcast@gmail.com
Website: www.lifeunmasteredpodcast.com

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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Buckle up for a roller coaster ride of laughter and nostalgia in this week's episode of Life Unmastered. We're sharing funny stories, wild things our kids have shared, and reminiscing about past mishaps that have become the stuff of family legend.

Find out why Mike has a "tiny brain", what the "Pillow of Separation" is, how Mike failed a little old lady and why he also stiff-armed a stranger.  You'll be in stitches as we recount the hilarious, awkward, and questionable stories of our recent past. So grab your headphones and get ready to laugh!

Support the Show.

Thanks for joining us for your weekly dose of confidently unqualified advice!
Let's keep the conversation going! Connect with us below!

Instagram: www.instagram.com/lifeunmasteredpodcast
Email: lifeunmasteredpodcast@gmail.com
Website: www.lifeunmasteredpodcast.com

Speaker 1:

Hey guys, welcome back to Life Unmastered. So we are back for our first episode after last week's guest episode Guest episode.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there was more than us just in some dark room talking to each other.

Speaker 1:

It was very exciting to have somebody else in here. I wanted like just do it again and again.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean it's definitely fun having that little interview process and obviously Christian did well.

Speaker 1:

He did so professional.

Speaker 2:

He was, he got, he got into it when he once he got his ear goggles on.

Speaker 1:

Who calls them ear goggles?

Speaker 2:

The Beastie Boys.

Speaker 1:

I've, you are so old.

Speaker 2:

Headphones, they're ear goggles, they're not. You're such a weirdo, but it did pop them up. He got like way professional afterwards.

Speaker 1:

He did, he really did. He's like oh, I like this.

Speaker 2:

And it was good that he was okay with you and I sharing the equipment, which was a little awkward.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we definitely have some technical things to figure out if we're going to have guests on again. We did some pre-planning when we got our equipment so our, like, main hub can handle more mics and headphones.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, which you never have too many mics.

Speaker 1:

I should have seen that coming, you guys. Every time, every single time, I'm like where are my keys?

Speaker 2:

In the background. You hear right here.

Speaker 1:

Oh so, and you know, the first few times you said that it took me a while. I'm like what are you talking about? And you're like Mikey.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm like, oh my gosh, it's great that's. That's one that I got to grow up with.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and now, 10 years later, I still hear it regularly.

Speaker 2:

So does everybody else yeah.

Speaker 1:

Anyway, there's still room for more microphones and headphones. However, we have not gotten the mics and the headphones.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we have an upgraded, so Sean and I shared our mic.

Speaker 1:

We did, but it worked out. There was a little bit of a learning curve in the beginning.

Speaker 2:

Well, Christian kept pushing me away when I tried to share with him.

Speaker 1:

So You're invading his bubble, but anyways, yeah, so we'll figure that out. But I definitely want to have more guests on because I just think that was so fun. He brought so much valuable information, and so I just I think it'd be great to just keep bringing people on and Who'd be a good next guest. I don't know who would be a good one.

Speaker 2:

Who can we build an episode around?

Speaker 1:

It depends Like. Are we building an episode around you know?

Speaker 2:

a topic.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Like you're my dad, he did volunteer to be the next guest.

Speaker 2:

That would be tough. We would have a very formidable match of dad jokes.

Speaker 1:

That was his. That was his suggestion is to have a full podcast of just dad jokes, and I'm not against it.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I kicked this one off with one.

Speaker 1:

You were getting very good at dad jokes. But anyway, if you guys have, you know, any suggestions on topics for a guest, we will go on the hunt for our next guest. That, will you know, kind of fill that topic. I'm up for the challenge. Yeah, sounds fun. So this week, though, we have had some funny things happening with the kids.

Speaker 2:

I think we're still adapting to the fact that we send our kids out into the world now. Definitely we had, especially with Jace's speech, delay.

Speaker 1:

We had this we had a really long time more than the average parent of not having to really watch what we're saying. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

He wasn't repeating things till, he was like five, and not that like we are running around swearing or anything like that but certain things get said or done in the privacy of your own home that you don't exactly think is going to make it to the outside world.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's lots of things that you and I joke about that are probably, you know, that are okay for us to joke about, but they're probably inappropriate or things that you wouldn't necessarily want your kid's teacher knowing, right, yeah.

Speaker 2:

And the best example of this is something that happened very recently in. Anybody that knows me knows that I grew up on movies and TV basically, and Shauna, it's at the point of her relationship where any like Joke or phrase that I say she knows she's like okay, what movie is that from? What show is that from?

Speaker 1:

in the beginning of a relationship, I was giving you way more credit.

Speaker 2:

You thought I was hilarious. I thought you were original the funniest person. I know, I just have a steel trap mind where I remember everything that I hear.

Speaker 1:

Yes, and now that your memory is getting, you know, not as great, you don't remember anything I say, but you still have no problem picking up on all the quotes and memes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I gotta hang on to those the important stuff. Where the dishes go and don't care.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes.

Speaker 2:

So a good example of that is early on in our relationship. When we would be joking, I would quote the movie anchorman, where Will Ferrell will be in a debate with Christina Applegate and Talks about how she has a tiny brain because she's a woman and it's science.

Speaker 1:

And so you know he would always tell me that I had a small brain. You know, when I do something funny or silly and it's not anything I ever have been offended by, because I know you're joking- yes but Eventually I was like you know when he would start doing dumb things. I'd be like you've got a tiny brain, it's science.

Speaker 2:

Yep would always throw it right back at me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so it's just become this running thing that we say to each other not common enough.

Speaker 2:

Like it's not like a weekly thing, like it might come up every couple of months or something that we would say to each other. It's not like, oh, every week, where the kids are hearing it all the time. Yes, that's correct.

Speaker 1:

So it is something that's been going on for years and years but, like like you said, it's not something that comes up often. But we were getting the kids ready for school the other day and I had gotten Carter's hair wet and then Switched her over to you to kind of finish up, jace, and for some reason you hung the towel up and her hair was still soaking wet. So her clothes got wet so by the time I got over to her, her shirt was Soaked and I didn't think twice about it.

Speaker 2:

Like wet hair on clothes. That's what mom did, don't worry about it.

Speaker 1:

And so Carter was like mom, why did dad do this? And I was like you know what, I don't know? Baby daddy's got a tiny brain and so sometimes things like this just happen. And she goes why? And I said Because it's science. She just like walked me into it as, talking to her so serious, you know, like I wasn't even giving her yet like the idea that I was joking, and so she just kind of absorbed that information and we moved on with our day. I didn't think anything twice of it, like again, I didn't think of it again.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was just a funny Ha. Ha, I got you right.

Speaker 1:

So then we send her off to school and I go to pick her up and her teacher Goes. I have to tell you real quick the funniest thing that happened today.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And I was like, okay, and she goes. So it's community workers week, and Today we had a neurosurgeon. I don't know exactly who it was.

Speaker 2:

That's one heck of a community worker, by the way, like I'm a neurosurgeon. Yeah, as I said, I don't know exactly.

Speaker 1:

But she does something with the brain and so she brought in this like School that opens at the top and you can see the brain.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, what are the odds that? So the day you start making fun of daddy's brain, somebody happens to be a guest speaker at Carter school Explaining the brain to the kids.

Speaker 1:

No, literally. What are the chances?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

We have. We have been doing this for years and we have never once brought the kids in on our little joke, and so, anyway, she continues telling me the story and she goes. So you know she opened up the brain, the the doctor did and was telling the kids, and so Carter raised her hand and goes. My mommy said that my daddy has a tiny brain because science gave it to him.

Speaker 2:

Not in front of just her class, in front of four other random classes at the school who they were doing like an assembly for. So basically the whole kindergarten and under section of the school, I believe, knows that daddy has a tiny brain.

Speaker 1:

I honestly don't know all the classes are, I know is more than her class, but they all seem to, you know, find it funny, and all of the female teachers, you know, because she was concerned that everybody was laughing at her Carter was, and so they all quickly assured her that they're not laughing at her and they also believe that their husbands have tiny brains.

Speaker 2:

I'm very concerned about the amount of teachers. That told Carter my husband has a tiny brain too.

Speaker 1:

They were just making sure that she knew she was right oh that's horrible. Oh my goodness. So she's telling me this story and I'm just like I'm cracking up, but I'm also like just dumbfounded, like I just cannot get over how crazy those chances are that I would say this to her and then that same day somebody comes to school for that. So then, I don't know, maybe like a week later, it is a very short amount of time.

Speaker 2:

A few days later, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I had to have been the same week because I had somebody else come in for that same community workers type thing.

Speaker 2:

That's right.

Speaker 1:

So I go to check her in at school and I walk into her teacher telling one of the other teachers this story, like retelling the story.

Speaker 2:

Which is never good. No, it just this means, it was so funny, no if teachers are talking about your kid as you're walking in, that's a little weird.

Speaker 1:

It was in totally like a loving, playful way, like she was not, she was, just it was so funny to her that she was retelling it. And so as I walk up and she goes, oh, I was just telling her this story and I was like my husband, I cannot get over this. Like it's so funny. And she's like, well, I have to tell you what happened yesterday. I'm like, oh great. So she tells me that there's some guy he works with the athletics at a college.

Speaker 1:

And so I don't know what they were talking about. But for some reason Carter felt the need to raise her hand and let this guy know and all the other classes that her daddy puts a pillow on the couch and it's called the pillow of separation, and if me or my brother crosses it, then we get hot sauce.

Speaker 2:

I think he was explaining to the kids like it looked like he was teaching them about football and like gaining separation, because the pictures they posted he had a football in his hand or something like that. The pillow of separation is a critical tool in this house. Is anybody who has toddlers know? They touch each other constantly, they pick at each other constantly and they're just annoying each other constantly.

Speaker 2:

On purpose yes, and so to resolve the issue, I put them on opposite sides of the couch, put a giant pillow well, a large pillow that we have in between them, and deemed it the pillow of separation. And it stuck, it did.

Speaker 1:

It carried to school. But you know. So these things like the pillow of separation, when you and I say it it doesn't really sound that funny. But when you hear a four-year-old say it in their little four-year-old voice, it's so funny.

Speaker 2:

Carter is just a real life version of that Arnold Schwarzenegger movie. Like Kim McGartney Cop, like he's literally just standing up spouting random fun facts in inappropriate times.

Speaker 1:

Yes, this is so true. Yeah, but she's also like a parent she will hear whatever you're saying and repeat it and remember it. Yeah, and so I immediately came home and I told you. I was like we need to be careful about everything that we say we need to before it's about to come out of our mouth. We need to, you know, double think and make sure everything's good, because she's repeating everything.

Speaker 2:

And once we like started talking about it, we realized that it's not just us. Like, she's picking up what other people around her, other adults around her, are saying as well, well, yeah.

Speaker 1:

And I think that's very common for kids 100%, and I think this goes back to the whole Jase thing, where we for so long were used to just being able to talk about whatever we wanted and he wasn't going to repeat it, and so it's almost like we're getting this first dose of it, you know, and so, yeah, but we're definitely having to be careful about it, but so are our friends and family. Yeah, that's what I was saying.

Speaker 2:

Like I realized that there's a bad influence in their life.

Speaker 1:

Somebody who got reprimanded at dinner the other night, you guys always you make it sound like I'm constantly reprimanding him.

Speaker 2:

So the kids grandparent, my dad, very early on taught the kids they were like I'm my dad. Very early on taught the kids that you could hold your finger up to your nose and wiggle your fingers and call the other person a loser, but not just a loser, like, oh, you're a loser. He does it like you're a loser, which the kids? That sounds like him. I grew up listening to it. Yes, yes, but which was fine when I was growing up. But times are different, so I don't need Jace or Carter which they have done tell other kids that they are losers.

Speaker 1:

Yes, and so then I heard it again. Like David, stop it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Because, yeah, our kids really haven't quite mastered or understand that some things we just leave at home.

Speaker 2:

Well, it's hard to explain it to them, because when it's funny for us, they think it's funny and they want to show it off Right. And it's not all, dad. Obviously I have taught the kids Plenty Some bad things to say, one of which was kind of fun because I kind of did it on purpose.

Speaker 1:

And I wouldn't necessarily say that this was bad.

Speaker 2:

It's bad how it played out, so I've never seen the movie, but I know it's a meme to your point. If it's a good meme then I probably know it.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

Was the movie with, like the Swahili pirates or whatever, the Captain Phillips or something like that Tom Hanks movie.

Speaker 1:

You really think that I'm about to give you a answer? Well, that's what it was.

Speaker 2:

But I'm pretty sure there's again. I've never seen it, but I'm pretty sure there's a scene in the movie where they like take over the ship and the one dude looks at Tom Hanks and he goes look at me, I'm the captain now. And so I just started wrestling with the kids one day, paused everything, Did like the finger-to-eyes thing and would tell them I'm the captain now. So, the kids associated it with fun and play right.

Speaker 1:

For weeks this went on and they got really good at it. Yeah and they would literally they'd be like Random, I think, jason big hey, hey, look at me. And then you'd look at him. He'd be like I'm the captain now. Yeah, like he got his old, good at it to where, like it didn't even see it coming.

Speaker 2:

One day after church we went to pick up Jace from his class and he was saw us at the door, basically so we went to go pick him up and, basically, instead of like waiting for the teacher to like release him, kind of, he just kind of got up and like with his little color, we started to leave and the teachers like, oh, jace, wait, wait, wait. And he turned and looked at her and went look at me, I'm the captain now. And just kept walking.

Speaker 2:

I Remember this happening and you and I, our heads whipped towards each other so fast and it took everything in us to not just Burst into like laughter and she had no idea where it was from or anything, just kind of like oh okay, and like yeah, and we were just mortified.

Speaker 1:

I Was like all right, jace, come on, let's go. But we didn't say anything to him either. We weren't like hey, don't do that. We're just like this is hilarious.

Speaker 2:

It was funny.

Speaker 1:

It was super funny and maybe we should have like I'm now nervous like his teacher's gonna write me a message one day, like that would be the like Least of our worries after the messages we've gotten from his teacher. This is true, don't remind me Work in progress, but he's doing better anyway. So all of you know these stories that have been happening recently had you and I like cracking up, and it had us kind of reminiscing about the funny things that have happened over the years.

Speaker 1:

Yeah and there was a few Favorites that kind of popped out to us, one that I think is gonna forever be my all-time favorite, which is the lady at the grocery store.

Speaker 2:

You mean that old lady that I helped so much?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you're super helpful.

Speaker 2:

So I think Shawna had the kids at a different part of the store and I was like guarding the cart by the large water jugs and there were like three rows of them and the middle one was like completely empty and this little old lady came over and wheeled over and asked me if I could help her reach the large water jugs on the shelf above.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she was old and she was short.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and so me Eager beaver did like do this great Good deed, reached up and grabbed two water jugs off the top shelf and moved them to the middle shelf where she could reach them, said, there you go, have a good day, and left. I felt so good about myself for doing this good deed.

Speaker 1:

You did so much so that you came and found me to brag about it to let me know what happened.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and I explained it to you and I remember you not being as excited about my good deed as I was.

Speaker 1:

I mean, yeah, I wasn't not excited for you, but I was just like, oh good job. And we literally finished our shopping and walked out and as we are Leaving the store, headed to the car in the parking lot, it hits you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it kind of dawned on me that that little old lady was asking me to grab that water and put it in her cart, and I literally just moved it into a position where she could actually reach it.

Speaker 1:

And you're like I can't believe I didn't put it in her cart. Yeah, I'm like you could barely get the sentence out. You couldn't even believe it yourself.

Speaker 2:

But I did exactly what she asked me to do, word for word to be fair.

Speaker 1:

Uh, this also did not register in my mind as you told me the story. Like it's not like, I called you out on it right when you told me the story. So when you were telling me this in the parking lot, I was like, oh my gosh, you're right, you are terrible.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, this little lady probably thought I was the worst, like most obnoxious person in the world.

Speaker 1:

I know I do wonder what was going through her head. She was like probably like okay.

Speaker 2:

She probably still thinks about me, only you or she's, you know she's at her level not in a good way, yeah.

Speaker 1:

You're the story that she tells this generation is so so we're. It's ruined like we're both telling this story forever, but in very different ways.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

She's like this guy.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that poor lady. But stuff like that happens all the time to me. I mean, if you want something, you need to ask for it very specifically, and if you need it in your cart, you need to tell me it goes in your cart.

Speaker 1:

Yes, I know this. This is this is how you are, even when it comes to like arguments, or yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm a very literal person, very literal um.

Speaker 1:

So another thing I want to bring up really quick. This one's a very new and fresh one, but jace was in cross country. It's now finished. Oh yes but the weirdest thing happened at his last meet.

Speaker 2:

I am not good in pressure situations.

Speaker 1:

The whole thing was so weird that even still I, we, you will randomly talk about it like what do you think happened so? So we are sitting there, we park backwards, and then we lift up the tailgate of the car and sit in the back of the car and everybody else does that too. And so we're sitting there and we see this girl run up, you know, between the cars and she kind of hides between our car and the car next to us and then, like, takes off.

Speaker 2:

It's off, yeah, so didn't think anything else of it.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

It looked like she was playing hide and seek or something like that. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And so we didn't think anything else of it. We're still, the kids are warming up, we're waiting for the meat to start, and all of a sudden this girl the same one comes walking towards us.

Speaker 2:

Very slowly and like talking, yes, but we couldn't really make out what she was saying.

Speaker 1:

Because it wasn't super loud or anything. But like I recognized her from her crouching down between the cars and so I was thinking she's had family around us and that's where she was headed, except for she comes right up to you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And she starts calling him dad. She was like, she's like, dad, you can't be here.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was weird, it was so weird.

Speaker 1:

And then she starts to hug you. She tried, she did try, but she was like and Mike just stiff arms her, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I, that little girl, got stiff on right in the chest.

Speaker 1:

He, just like on instinct, she comes towards him with arms open, like to, and she, she leaned in like she.

Speaker 2:

You know, but it wasn't like a hug, like oh, I'm going to go hug my dad, Like it was in a way that if she wasn't as old as she was, I would have thought she was drunk.

Speaker 1:

I did. Yeah, Like my, that was my very first process. Like thought process is that oh, this girl's had too much of drink. Yeah, and then it's like you remember where we are and how old she is.

Speaker 2:

I'm like that might be a fourth grader. Yeah, I mean she was?

Speaker 1:

I mean, I would say, she was like what? Like 11 maybe?

Speaker 2:

Maybe yeah.

Speaker 1:

And but the whole thing was, and then. So like Mike kind of like pushes her, which his first instinct was, like you know.

Speaker 2:

Some woman was touching me that wasn't my wife. Whether she was an 11 year old or what, I wasn't sure but she wasn't my family.

Speaker 1:

So that kind of stunts her a little bit, but not enough, and so she kind of like stumbles back a little bit and she's like I know that you're not dad, but you still need to come, like you can't be here.

Speaker 2:

She was trying to like take me somewhere else and I just said excuse me no, and so I'm just like watching this.

Speaker 1:

I did nothing. Carter is sitting next to me, she's watching it too, and we're all. And then she, like she, turns and runs away.

Speaker 2:

Yep. So my best guess, like thinking about the situation, is being a young, possibly teenage, girl, or something like that. It was like a dare from a friend to like walk up to someone random and try to hug him, or something like that. Yeah, I guess I I mean little did she know she was about to.

Speaker 1:

Well, it's so funny cause, like I remember, she walked, you know she ran away and we were all just like what just happened and so, like we were sitting there talking through just then, like trying to figure out what it was, it happened very fast. It did happen very fast and at first, you know, we went through the whole drunk thing and we're like, no, that's not right.

Speaker 2:

Or she ate the wrong type of gummy bear and didn't mean to.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, maybe that's true, yeah, Um, but then you know, we were like going through scenarios and then I was like what did you just push her Like?

Speaker 2:

once the like assault took place and we're like processing. It's like well, jace's race is first. We'll just load up the car and get out.

Speaker 1:

I was just like you know, like, pardon me, it's like all right, I'm glad that if anybody tries to touch you, you're on high alert. But if I did that to a child, imagine what I would do to some but I feel like part of you was like you know you're around all these other parents and you're like I'm not about to get in trouble, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I don't know yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then I think the other part was just like you were just like freaked out, Like you didn't know what was going on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that little girl got stiff arm and chest.

Speaker 1:

Oh, my goodness, that was so funny and but still I'm just like what on earth happened? I I think you're probably right the whole dare thing has to be something like that. The most, but she also. It also felt like she was too young to be doing that. But again, you and I are like at an age now where everybody just looks so young.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's my dad used to tell me all the time. Like you'll know, you're old when all the like children look the same age, like either you're like 25 or you're seven.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but the other thing too is that I have to keep reminding myself that I'd be like oh, I didn't do that at that age or I wasn't like that at that age. But I feel like kids are growing up so much faster now.

Speaker 2:

I don't feel like you have the right to say that. Why? Because you were not unlike every other person I knew growing up.

Speaker 1:

But that is all I know of what a childhood is like.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but you, you would say that about kids, Like when you were a child. You would say that about other kids your age Like I never did that.

Speaker 1:

It was. It's not that I like, it's not like. Oh, I'm better than you. I never did that.

Speaker 2:

No, I get that, but like your childhood is so different from like what an average kids childhood is.

Speaker 1:

My childhood was definitely different than your childhood.

Speaker 2:

Well, there were a lot less extracurricular activities, a lot fewer stiff arms to the chest.

Speaker 1:

Even your stories make me uncomfortable. Still I'm just like, oh, I'm going to get in trouble just listening to you.

Speaker 2:

What's funny is, I think, like we have almost been. We've been together for 10 years.

Speaker 1:

Together for 10 years. Okay.

Speaker 2:

So, like even after being together for 10 years and all of that, I still have not run out of stories to tell you.

Speaker 1:

You haven't.

Speaker 2:

And I think you're still just as like uncomfortable with them. I am.

Speaker 1:

And I only have one story to tell, and so I tell it all the time, and so I just feel like you're like I gotta come up with. I gotta tell her another story. I also gotta hear her story again, Am I right?

Speaker 2:

No, it's not that I mean yeah, but part of it is is like the longer we're together, the more comfortable you are with who. I am now that, like you're ready to handle some more stories, there's just another level of like. Oh, and then I did this.

Speaker 1:

I do. I wonder if it's that or if it's more just like there's so much that happened that you don't even remember everything.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and so randomly, something will happen and it'll spark my memory of like, oh, like, yeah, that's true, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Because sometimes I'm like how did I not know this? And you'll even be like I don't know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and that's one of my favorite stories to tell, yeah.

Speaker 1:

But still, you know we've talked about this before, but your stories. When we first started dating, I was like this dude is crazy and you're still crazy, but in a very different way.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, just like a weird, like punny way.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, now you're just dad crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Stiff-Armen children. All right. Well, this was fun kind of you know, sharing some fun funny stories. There wasn't any point to this except for just to share how crazy our kids are and how crazy you are.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it made us laugh and so we wanted to share it with everyone else.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I hope you guys enjoy our funny stories. We've got more to share so we can do this again if you guys enjoyed it. But thank you guys for listening each week. We love you guys. We appreciate your support. If you guys could do us a favor and subscribe and give us a five star rating and review, we would very much appreciate it. Again, if you guys have suggestions for topic ideas or a guess that we should have on the show, let us know. You can send us an email at lifeunmasteredpodcast, at gmailcom, or reach out over on Instagram at lifeunmasteredpodcast. But until next week, bye, bye, bye.

Reflections
Daddy has a "Tiny Brain"
The "Pillow of Seperation"
Misunderstandings and Strange Encounters
Sharing Funny Stories and Gratitude