EB 196: Were the Twenties the Best Years of Our Lives?

Before we get started, we wanna let you know that we got some tour dates, we wanna invite you to take it up and come see us for a night of unpredictable comedy and harmonious music. How’s that sound, Rhett? – That sounded really good. I might go to the show. – We’re gonna be singing and talking to each other and who knows what else is gonna happen but sometimes it involves weird get-ups. – Well every show’s different. We never know what’s gonna happen. – [Link] We’re gonna be in Las Vegas June 21st, Salt Lake City June 22nd, Denver, Colorado June 23rd, Milwaukee, Wisconsin June 25th, Indianapolis, Indiana June 26th, Detroit June 27th, Omaha, that’s in Nebraska June 29th, Minneapolis, Minnesota June 30th. – And then later in the year we’re gonna be in Houston, Texas on September 4th, New Orleans September 5th, Birmingham on September 6th, Jacksonville, Florida on September 7th, Tampa, Florida September 8th, Albuquerque, New Mexico November 20th, Phoenix, Arizona November 21st, Sacramento, California November 22nd, and Valley Center, California on November 23rd. Again, these are all the dates for the rest of 2019 and most likely for quite some time. – So if you wanna see us, now’s the time to take it up. RhettAndLinkLive.com. Now on with the biscuit. (upbeat electronic music) Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I’m Link. – And I’m Rhett. This week at the round table of dim lighting we are exploring the question were the 20s the best years of our lives? – Now we didn’t live during the 1920s. It was like when we were in– – The Roaring ’20s? – When we were in our 20s, was that the ♪ Best time of our lives ♪ – Have we peaked? Did we peak long ago turns out. – That’s a different question. Was it I think best and peaked are two totally different questions and– – Oh well sounds like you’re already answering the question. – I have lots of thoughts on best. And I think it has lots of implications for how, well I don’t wanna spoil it. – What about your best peaks? – Are we gonna get back into which kinda peak you’re talking about again? (Rhett chuckles) I do need to acknowledge that my voice is otherworldly. It’s very, is it very DJ-esque? – I feel like it’s, yeah, so Link’s still a little under the weather but I actually, maybe I’ve adapted to your voice. Maybe this is the new you. I don’t hear it anymore. – I know it’s like I’m still having this head cold thing. Is this permanent Link? – Well you know what I’ve been– – Is it my permalink? – (chuckles) I’ve been in a constant state of feeling like I’m getting what you have. I’ve done things like I haven’t been going to work out– – Of course. – I canceled everything. – You’re in a constant state of getting everything. That’s called being a hypochondriac. – No, no, but I have physical symptoms. I have slight headaches– – That physical senses manifest from– – Slight sore throat– – Hypochondriatism. – Very slight things happening. But you know I think I’m gonna be okay. – Well when we were riding in the car, if I encounter anybody I’m like don’t touch me. Don’t touch me, it’s for your own good. And then we’re in the car and I’m like don’t touch me but I’m touching stuff in your car and then I notice that I finished my coffee and I put the coffee down and then you adjusted the temperature gauge on your car, whatever it’s called, your temperature dial. You wanted it to be cooler, my friend. And I couldn’t help but notice and I did point out that as you were touching the temperature dial, your finger was rubbing up against my coffee lid where my mouth goes. – Yeah ’cause you had this big, Thermos you take everywhere. Like why does it have to be so big? Why do you need so much coffee? – Why’s it gotta be my Thermos’s fault? It’s your fault for putting your finger– – The Thermos is so big. – On the– – That it was blocking the temperature controls. – It’s tall, man. – There was no way to adjust the temperature without touching your mouth hole on your Thermos. – Everything’s bigger with the Linkster. (chuckles) I’m like Texas. I’m like Texas, man. – I think you’re just compensating for something. – Yeah I like to drink coffee, homey. And listen, I was the gracious, you never would have even known that your finger was touching my mouth place on my coffee mug. – Don’t say mouth place, just don’t use that terminology. – And then you, did you sanitize? – I have since sanitized. – I wonder what you touched on yourself after you touched my mouth place. – I’m actually, I don’t know if anybody’s got video evidence of this but I feel like I’ve gotten better at not touching my face. – So you don’t know if people have video evidence of you not doing something. Like that’s not how evidence works. – No no you don’t understand. – I’m gonna present reams of video and in none of this video for the next two weeks– – You’re misunderstanding. I think everyone’s following along. – You are not gonna see me touch myself. – So if you have approximately a decade and more specifically about seven years of a daily show of a person being themselves in their natural environment, that natural environment being a desk that he shares with another man– – That natural environment Rhett is a set. How do you reconcile that? – I’m there so much that it’s my natural environment. – Okay it’s not really a basement. – And I’m saying my theory is, listen, don’t do this ’cause I don’t want anybody to do this but my theory is that my frequency of touching my own face has decreased over time. – Sure. – Because I just feel like I’ve become more conscious, and I’ll touch the hair. – You’ll touch the top of the head. – This isn’t the face, in fact– – The face begins where the hair ends. – They call this, I heard somebody call this the golden triangle or something. – He’s pointing at his mustache. – I don’t know if it’s your eyes, your mouth– – And if you can’t hear him, he’s calling it a golden triangle. – Your eyes, your mouth and your nose but it’s basically an ungodly high percentage of the crap that will make you sick goes in through this place. – Yeah. – It’s not like you get a cut somewhere and get a cold. I mean it does happen but it’s going in through the golden triangle. I don’t know if that’s the term. – What is the constellation that forms this golden triangle? Your two eyes and your mouth? – It might be your two nostrils and your mouth. That’s not really a triangle though, that’s more of a trapezoid. But your eyes have holes. Your eyes are holes. Your eyes get stuff too. Don’t touch your face. – Hey let’s not forget eyes, they get stuff too, guys. – I believe that I touched my face less. ♪ I touch my face when I think about germs ♪ – Have I touched my face yet? How often do you touch your face? – A lot, man. I’m sick, dude. – No no, you’re not sick. – Lily gave me this and I don’t think she was touching my face. I don’t know, sometimes I’m doing that dad thing where wouldn’t it be funny if I acted like I was poking you in the eye. I probably poked my daughter in the eye for the fun of it. – That’s not a dad thing. No other dads do that. Just speaking for– – I’m a dad. I’m speaking for one dad. – All other dads, hey I’m gonna poke you in the eye, that’s not a thing that dads do. – Just like– – What do you mean? – Graze it. I don’t know, man, I don’t remember doing it. I’m just saying it seems weird for me to say, oh I– – I just touched my face. – I touched my daughter’s face. – I just touched my face, I’m very conscious of it. – Yeah you did. – I touched my beard. Is that part of the triangle? I think that’s just outside of the triangle. – Below the triangle. He went over the mouth. – Can bacteria go up these hairs and get into the mouth? – What is happening? Did we both just, are we really caffeinated? This is a different Ear Biscuit. You never know what you’re gonna get. – Well we’ve had an interesting day. We’ve traveled, we traveled to the west side. – It’s been weird, yeah. – It’s always a little bit exciting to see the other side of Los Angeles. – We ate brunch out. Oh yeah so tell them about the lobby and then tell them about the brunch. – Yeah we had quite a day. So this was the two of us and Stevie going to a meeting. We’re always meeting with people. – Tell them what the meeting’s about. – The meeting is about making something awesome into something even better. (chuckles) – But different, on another meeting. – It’s about something we really wanna happen, we really want you to see– – Because we wrote it and we knew we want it to be on television. I mean I don’t know why we can’t talk about this. But let’s not– – I haven’t thought about it but you just talked about it. I don’t think there’s any reason not to talk about it. – If we think about it there might be reason not to talk about it but I think that’s stupid. You know what we’re talking about. – But in this particular place, see, this is the reason that I didn’t wanna say what the meeting was about because now I’m gonna give characteristics of the lobby of the place that we were and now people are gonna know where it is. – When you tell the people, when you tell the listener what it is we experienced, then it will be clear to everyone involved that the people who made the decision for the thing to be there wanted us to talk about it. So we are exonerated. – That’s not exactly what I was getting at but that’s cool. They have a koi pond in their lobby. And for all, in every other way, it’s a pretty nondescript lobby. There’s not anything– – It’s not big. – Sometimes you go into like, I don’t know if you’ve ever been into the lobby of CAA, the agency, the talent agency. – It’s not our agency. – Not our agent but I have been in the lobby. – Not a sponsor. – I do visit other lobbies. I’m kind of a lobby connoisseur. – Now if you visit other agents, our agents are gonna start shakin’ in their boots. – No no I just went to look at the lobby. And also I’m also a foyer connoisseur. Any sort of, the beginning of going into a building, whether it’s a home or a building, I’m really into. – None of this makes you a douche, go ahead. – But this lobby was rather unimpressive except for the fact that they had a koi pond. – Now I will say when you hear Rhett say they have a koi pond, I would venture to guess that you picture like a foliage-draped environment with a dark water with some sort of sediment at the bottom like a pond and you would be wrong. But I wouldn’t blame you for it because that’s what I would picture. Matter of fact even when he said koi pond just then, I still pictured it even though I was there and that’s not what it was. – It’s pretty much just sort of a rectangle in the middle of the floor. – It was like the tile that made up the floor, then if you went down a foot and a half and then you laid more of that same tile. It was very modern. – But you think the koi need more than that? – I immediately felt sorry for the koi. – Well what brings a koi joy? Do you know? Koi joy. – Rhett you got me. I don’t know. – I believe that koi joy is found in just being coy. – Let’s come back to that. So it’s a square area with approximately 420 gallons of water. – But of course things like koi ponds in lobbies usually aren’t the kinda thing that we cannot experience and then not begin asking questions to whoever’s closest which happened to be the woman who was manning the desk. – We had a good meeting. – She was womanning the desk. – We had good meetings. After the meeting we’re kinda flying high and Stevie went to the bathroom so we’re just mulling around. – I’m like hey– – We’re two old men with their hands in their pockets looking at koi. – And I’m like hey receptionist. I didn’t call her that, I just was like hey, you responsible for these koi? (chuckles) And she said, “Well, yeah. “If one of ’em jumps out.” You go what, if one of ’em jumps out? – Okay don’t get paranoid, lady. – She was like, well, I said, “Does that happen?” She said, “Yes it happens and they’re very slippery,” and then she picks up the mail little tray. The tray, the cage kind of mail tray and she’s like– – Like a basket, like a wire basket. – A mail basket. – That you hold letters. – She’s like I just put that on top of the koi and I push the koi back into the koi pond. So it’s not a mail tray, it’s a koi pusher. They got koi pushers. – Koi catcher. – It’s a koi catcher. – It’s a koi catcher that brings me joy. The weird thing she said was, “Yeah, so sometimes big trucks “will go by and then they’ll get kinda agitated “and they’ll jump out.” – Wouldn’t you? – What? (chuckles) I don’t know. As if I didn’t feel sorry enough for these koi. – But think about it, you’re just a koi, you don’t know. Think about, that’s why they’re jumping out. They wanna see what the heck is driving by. It’s like– – I don’t think they want. – You don’t think they have wants? – I don’t think they have wants or joys. – Why do you have so much of a clear idea of what a koi needs? Do you own one? – Well we had friends who house sat for a couple that had a bunch of koi, you know this, Rhett. – Yeah and all the koi died because somebody did something stupid with the water. – And who was sad? – Well none of the koi were ’cause they all died. – Bingo. How much, he had to pay like– – 75 grand. – $75,000. – Koi are very expensive fish, especially if they’re old and rare. – They can live like 111 years. – Yeah something like that, sometimes koi will be left in someone’s will. – Yeah. – ‘Cause koi outlive the boys. After the koi pond– – Pushing a little too hard. – The koi pond excursion. – Trying to make a t-shirt. – We had a little bit of time before our next appointment. Lots of appointments today and so we got a little brunch and we needed a quick bite but we wanted to be a little bit fancy and so for the first time– – I’m on Yelp. – First time ever, we go to, well okay, I’m not gonna say the name of it because that’s really what makes this story funny. So we decide on this place that is a chain restaurant that serves breakfast and coffee. – Well it’s like Panera but it’s– – A little fancier. – You should spell it. It’s French. – It’s French. In French it’s the pickle bread or something like that. – Q-U-O, no, L-E space– – P-A– – P-A– – I-N– – I-N, which is, that’s bread in French. And then another word Q-U-O-T-E-D-I-E-N-E. Q-U-O-T-I-D-I-E-N, I was close enough, Jacob. I just got two letters wrong. (Rhett laughs) – So there’s a parking garage underneath this particular establish ’cause there’s multiple stores or restaurants so we go downstairs and the woman, the parking attendant stops us, she says– – You’re driving. – She says, “Where are you going?” And I froze because I don’t know how to say this place and of course Link leans over and says, “Le Pain Quentidon.” (laughs loudly) – Just like that. – Le Pain Quentidon and I was like what language was that? – Well I was just so enthusiastic because I was like, ooh ooh I know the answer to this! Le Pain Quentidon. – No you did not say it in a French accent. You said it in some other accent. – Le Pain Quentidon. (Rhett laughs) – (chuckles) And I wasn’t being funny. – But it was funny. – I knew the answer. And we needed to park. – And I then said, we all started to laugh, well me and Stevie started laughing and you laughed and the parking attendant woman sort of smiled and I said, “You know, “they really need a new name for that place,” and she said, “LPQ.” – LPQ. – And that’s what they call it there, they call it LPQ so they don’t have to say Le Pain Quotidon. (both laughing) – Oh man, it feels good to say it. – Yeah. – It gives the koi joy. (chuckles) Le Pain Quentidon. – So we have had quite a day. – The menu was very promising and the Yelp reviews were like, there were over 700 Yelp reviews of this place and it had over four stars like almost four and a half stars. – Well it wasn’t bad it’s just– – And then it wasn’t good. – Well it wasn’t bad. The menu made me get really excited and then, I just didn’t feel like it completely delivered on the menu. Also the coffee mug had no handle. – I looked over– – So I had to– – This chick was over there drinking her coffee and she was holding it like a treasured bowl that you would– – Serve the king. – Oh yes, the monarch needs to drink of this or something the Pope would use ceremoniously. That’s how she was bringing it to her lips. – And then you look over at me– – And I was like why is she doing that? – And I was doing the same thing. – And you were doing the same thing. – ‘Cause you don’t feel like you– – I think that’s what a quentidon is. – You feel like you can grab it with one hand. – What is a quentidon? – You said it was pickles. – I know and you fell for it. (laughs) Gotcha! I got you, the whole day you been thinking a quentidon is a pickle. – Yeah I know but here’s the thing. – ‘Cause it was on his plate. – You, that’s not the kinda thing you joke about. Just honestly, that’s the kinda thing I joke about. – Just because you fell for it. – (chuckles) No, you usually– – Oh this is your type of joke. – No no, you don’t normally do purposely deceptive humor. That’s the kinda thing I tell my kids is like, you know the quontidien means pickles, and so, you typically know French ’cause you– – I typically do, yeah. – It’s funny, we both took three years of French but you retained a significantly higher portion than me. – Well (speaks in foreign language). – French for the daily bread. The daily bread. Quotidien means day, daily. – Okay. – Okay. – You shall not live by bread alone. – It doesn’t mean the bread and pickles, sorry. – And if you were to rewind and re-experience this Ear Biscuit, you would hear at the top, Rhett gave a shout-out to pickles. (tape rewinds) – The pickle bread or something like that. – ‘Cause he was fallin’ for my joke and that really gave me koi joy. That’s why you do it. – It’s quite a long play. – Exactly. – Okay so I feel like I could still recommend the restaurant just personally, I would say that I think you should try it but I do think that you should say LPQ just to not embarrass yourself. Unless you’re French. – When you go to a French restaurant, do you order by initials? Give it a shot. – No, CPK. – California Pizza Kitchen? – Yeah. That’s French, right? – (chuckles) Yes. – Okay we’re gonna answer your questions but first, we’re gonna let you know that you can look just as tie-dyed as us. We just look like we just took regular shirts into a washing machine. – Tie-dyed in the wool. You got your hi daddies creepy creepy Cotton Candy Randy. – He’s busting out of my chest. – And you can call him and he’ll answer your question and respond to your call as part of the Mythical Society content that’s being cooked up and released over the summer every Thursday. – Yes he will. – I got this Mythical tie-dye. Describe it. – That’s a Randler with a third eye. The all-seeing eye of the Randler put into– – You know what, don’t describe it. It takes away the mystique. They can see it. – See it with your third eye. You know what, you can see both shirts that we’re wearing with your third eye is the ironic thing. But you can only buy them at Mythical.store. Can’t buy things with your third eye. – Would you rather have a third eye or a third leg? (sputters) – Well if the third leg is a euphemism for penis, I already have one. – Noted. – So I think I’d go with eye. – Okay, that was still technically part of the ad. (Rhett chuckles) So that’s Mythical.store. That’s what you get for watching the video version. – Right, you get extra stuff. Let’s start with a question from Annie. Known as @CelestialLink. I guess that’s in reference to you, Link, on Twitter. – Yeah if I weren’t me, I would still devote my entire Twitter experience to me. – If you could go– – And that would be my choice as well. – If you could go back in time and bring one current invention with you, which you would be credited for inventing, what would you bring and why? So you go back in time, you can take something with you and you will be credited with inventing it. – Is there a size limitation on this time traveling device? Let’s say no. – I would say no. – I have a specific answer that then leads to a more general and powerful answer. You know what I’m gonna do it in reverse. I have a general answer but then I have a more specific. Can I just, you wanna go first? – No I’m interested, I do have an answer but now I’m very intrigued. – I would take back in time, I would take an Aerobie. You remember the Aerobie? – I do, fondly. – When we were in college, we could not be satisfied with a normal spinning, flying projectile that you could throw and catch in the little grass patch beside your apartment. No, we had to get the world’s longest flying device that could be thrown from hand to hand. We had to get the Aerobie. – It’s quite an amazing– – A-E-R-O– – Flying disk. – B-I-E. For those of you Googling this. The flying ring. – I think a boomerang version as well. They made two different sizes, maybe three different sizes. – It actually comes back to you. But they do not float. They will fly a long way. – They will sink in water. – And they will sink in water because we’ve lost a few Aerobies in some ponds. – And not just ponds, they fly so far, sometimes they would just go into the woods and we would never ever find ’em again. – Let me tell you, some of the most exhilarating experiences I think we ever had were just getting so far from each other that we were questioning whether we were still looking at our friend. – Yeah. – And chucking this Aerobie and then just seeing it soar and then the thrill of seeing that person catch it. I gotta hand it to us, man, we were good at throwing an Aerobie. – We weren’t great at catching them though. – Well it’s not hard to catch it. We were good at catching it. If you don’t catch it, it’s pointless. It’s like a fail. – It catches the wind and sort of hovers and whoa! – You’d think you were about to catch it and you’d be right here with your hands like splayed out in front of your face and then all of a sudden, when it was like five feet out and rapidly approaching, it would catch a breeze like a hawk going over a canyon. Like catching– – A thermal. – A thermal, and it would just, it would take off and it would go another 400 yards it felt like. – It felt like. – It’d go another 38 yards. I would take one of those back in time. – And there’s no place in Los Angeles to throw one of these. There’s no open space large enough. – The reason why this is top of mine is because Lando, we had some unstructured time where we were hangin’ out a couple weekends ago and I was like, whatever you wanna do bud, let’s do it. And his answer immediately was I wanna go buy a tether ball. That was his answer. – Yeah. This is a child that is used to not having a lot of space. – So he went– – He needs a ball tied to a pole. – Right. – That’s its idea of fun. – They play tether ball at school and he fancied himself a semi-pro. – Now you didn’t buy him one did you? – Hell yeah I bought him one. – Okay. – I ask him whatever he wanted, I’ll do it, so I called the Big 5 and I was like do you have tether balls and they were like yeah. – Of course they do. That’s pretty much what they’re known for. – Tether Balls R Us I think is what they used to be called. They were like yeah we got those so we go over there, I’m like whoa, they only have one left. I was like this woman was risking a lot in just that snap answer. – Well it’s probably been there for weeks. – She should have said we only got one left. Better get over here right now. I was like Lando, we’re just, snatch it, buddy. – You’re buying the one tether ball people have bought in 2019. Like okay now call the factory, we gotta get another tether ball because they’re comin’ in to get it. – As we were leaving with that tether ball, I saw a guy walk in and I was like, I looked at Lando, I was like, he’s gonna be disappointed. I could tell he wanted a tether ball. Before we checked out I went past and they had an Aerobie and I was like Lando, look at this and I told him the story that I just told you. – Way better than a tether ball. – And we also bought a $10 Aerobie. – They don’t have the big ones though. – Yeah they do, yep. – Okay you got a big one? – Yeah. – Where you gonna throw that? – Well we went to the park and they had a tether ball pole. That’s why he knew he wanted to buy a tether ball ’cause– – Oh you didn’t buy the pole and the base, you just bought the ball and the string. – Right. – Find your own pole. – A legit pole at the nearby playground. – Bring your own ball and tether. – There was no ball or tether there, it was just a pole. – Wow what is the world coming to? – I know man, you can’t leave a tether ball hanging around. Someone’s gonna take that. – Oh yeah. Just like rims. – Taking the rims off a souped up Civic. – Interesting that you would take an Aerobie back. So you think that would gain you fame and fortune? ‘Cause that was kinda how I approached this. – No. Because I think it would be cool and people would think I was awesome but then as I was making the rounds, selling tickets for my exhibitions of throwing the Aerobie and whatnot and I would also educate the people about the aerodynamic design which would then lead to the invention of the airplane wing. Because I would go back that far in time. – Oh. – ‘Cause you know, even on the Aerobie packaging it talks about how it achieves lift like a wing because of the way the lip is designed, I believe. So I would actually go back in time, I was gonna just say I was gonna take a wing of a plane with me. – Yeah but then the Wright brothers would have invented a giant Frisbee and we still wouldn’t be flying. You’d probably screw the whole thing up. It’s like, no, Orville! Trash the plans! – I can tell by your– – There’s a man with a flying disk. – I can tell by your ridicule that you are tracking with my statement. – So would you take it to the Wright brothers? – But I do disagree with it. I would pre-live the Wright brothers. I would be there in the late 1800s. – Why don’t you just skip the Aerobie and go for a plane? – I already answered that. – Okay. – The wow factor. Two for one. – I think the wow factor of inventing aviation ’cause who invented the Aerobie in this universe. – That’s ’cause the plane already existed. – Do you know his name? No, you don’t. – Well if the plane didn’t exist then, you would know his name and that’s why I’m going back in time with an Aerobie to invent flight! – I took a different tack. I would, this is the difficult thing to take back, I admit that. I would take Public Storage back. (chuckles) – What, oh. You greedy. I see where you’re going with this. – The guy who invented Public Storage is a guy named Brad Hughes. He is worth $2.2 billion. – Good gosh. – In 1980– – All he did was nothing. – No, the story goes like this, my friend. He needed to store some stuff and he had a warehouse and it was completely full and he was like, what am I gonna do? And he came up with the idea for what he called private storage which actually makes a lot more sense. – Yeah it does. – But then when he took it to market, he had changed it to Public Storage. – For marketing reasons? – He’s like 85 years old. The dude’s worth over two billion dollars because he just came up with the idea that there should be little cubby holes for adults out in the world that you can just pay for. And no one thought of this until the ’80s. I mean, take that, Aerobie. You know what I’m saying? You just go back, I would go back with, in fact, my time machine would probably be the storage bin. And then I would just unsheathe it and come out and be like, this is not only a time machine, that’s not really what’s important. Put your stuff in here. Pay a monthly fee. Hand me your money. Now, here’s the other thing. ‘Cause I also was thinking about the time period. You gonna go back to the late 1800s? – Okay okay okay. – Before antibiotics? I’m going back to 1980, brother. You know what I’m saying? – Tom Cruise movies. – You basically have all the luxuries of modern times. There’s less channels first of all. I take all my storage money and I just cruise around in a boat. You could come your your Aerobie and we could toss it, I mean, my boat would be so big that you could throw a full-size Aerobie on it. – But flight wouldn’t exist ’cause I wouldn’t have gone back in time. – Okay. So they’re not mutually exclusive. You could also– – I think Public Storage is like the one thing that the majority of people on earth when polled could agree upon as being abhorrent. Like there’s just something about it. – Yeah but here’s the thing– – That’s like– – You don’t need to– – You know what, I’m having a negative response to just you saying Public Storage. – Okay how ’bout this? Beanie Babies, that guy’s worth $1.9 billion. – Oh is this your runner up? – All you have to do is take a Beanie Baby back and you can take that back to 1986 ’cause that’s when he invented that. – That guy’s a chump, man. – But it’s a lot easier to travel with a Beanie Baby– – Stuffed animal– – Through time. – [Link] With beads in it. – You know? So maybe I just, you know what– – At least that fits your brand to talk about beans. – I’d take a storage bin full of Beanie Babies back. And I’d be like I got two ideas for you fools. – Be like well I gotta get a lot of Beanie Babies before I can justify this Public Storage thing. – I think we’ve answered that. – Sean-na Brown asks, is it better to be knowledgeable or better to be ignorant? In other words, is ignorance truly bliss or is it better to have knowledge of something even if it means it can cause pain or chaos? I’d say a corollary question which we gleaned from Facebook. From Megan Elizabeth Taylor, yes. That Megan Elizabeth Taylor. Would you rather be a worried genius or a joyful simpleton? Is ignorance truly bliss? And how did you approach this question? In your brain. I don’t know your answer of course. – Well I took it, would I rather be the kind of, my state of being as a person would be someone who is knowledgeable about everything including the things that might potentially bring me anxiety and trouble. Or someone who is just unawares of things that might bring worry. And so as someone who is at least somewhat knowledgeable about enough things to bring myself anxiety and trouble– – Uh-huh. – I would say that my knee-jerk reaction is to say that I… Me personally in the current state, I wanna know things. When we talked about the– – The simulation, I mean, all of that stuff, yeah. You’re always opting for knowledge. – And we talked about the– – Are you going the other way? – No no, I’m saying me, this version of me wants to know things, including, we talked about this on 23andMe. Maybe we talked about this but you can basically check, yes I want to know if I’ve got– – Predisposition to Parkinson’s disease. – Right, do I have the specific genetic markers to these illnesses? – I actually don’t know if that’s one specifically. – I don’t know what they are but I checked all of those and looked at all the information. As soon as I had the opportunity to, my instinct was just to look. – Right but in the way this is framed– – But that’s not how I approach this. – You’re saying if you could snap your fingers and just be a different person like different brain, personality makeup, you would opt to check your intelligence at the door and walk in, anticipating that what, you would be a happier person. – Well let me just say that I don’t think that I’m unhappy. I don’t think that I’m currently unhappy. But if I had to choose between the way that the second question was phrased, worried genius or joyful simpleton, like if you’re actually saying the state of the genius is that they’re worried or the state of the simpleton is that they’re joyful, I would definitely choose joyful simpleton. And I wouldn’t know what I was unaware of. And so I’m– – Yeah you wouldn’t know what you’re doing though. – I’m all about that, man. I would definitely choose that if I had the choice. – I’m surprised by that. I just feel like that’s really incongruent. I still don’t get it. I just think… I’m just trying to understand what you’re saying. You’re saying– – I’m saying that me right now, if there’s something to be known– – If you’d rather be– – In this version of me. – It’s basically would you rather be happy instead of knowledgeable. Burdened with some sort of knowledge or freed to just be happy. – Yeah and I understand that this seems inconsistent with my answer about the simulation and the matrix but the way I was thinking about that was is that I actually knew that there was a possibility that there was something else and I could experience it by unplugging myself in the matrix and then experiencing the real world. – Yeah. This you’re so ignorant– – This is like, I’m literally– – You do not know. – My mind in this sense would not be able to comprehend anything that would bring me worry, then I’m saying if the alternative is being able to comprehend those things and then bringing grief, that i would choose the joyful simpleton, if you’re giving me these two choices. – And I thought that’s what I would choose too but the way that I immediately thought about it, I’m like, what are situations that I would opt to not know about in order to, ’cause when people talk about ignorance is bliss they’re usually talking about a specific subset of knowledge related to something, but then I tried to come up with what would be that thing that’s burdensome that I would be happier if I didn’t know about it. But then I’m like well climate change. Well no. Obviously I would rather know about that so that I could be engaged in being part of the solution. Even though it weighs heavily on the mind. It’s actually creeping up constantly in the back of my mind. I’m sure you would agree that’s a good thing. We need more of that, more of that– – Concern, yeah. – Yeah just like a discomfort associated with the seething of our planet. – But what if it was more personal? – Okay so I have a personal example. – Okay. – If you have a relative who they’ve got some indication that something’s wrong with them and then they have tests done and then they’re waiting on the tests to come back. And especially being across the country, it’s not like you talk to ’em every day or you see ’em and you know, where were you yesterday? Oh I went into the doctor, it’s like, they kinda have to volunteer this information. And yes this has happened and I think, maybe we’ve talked about this but there’s an inclination to say I’m gonna spare you the knowledge that I’m awaiting a test because we think something’s wrong and it may be bad news. I’m gonna wait until I get the results back and then I’m gonna give those to you. Then I’m like well, yeah, I understand that instinct. I too have that instinct. I don’t wanna burden my mom with something that’s happening when I don’t really have answers or there’s nothing actionable. Just as an example. But I second-guess that, as another example, then I’m like I actually don’t think that works because you’re denying their ability to love you through the unknown and that happens in life and no one should go through the unknown where they can only wring their own hands. You wanna be able to hold hands with somebody so to speak. So that was my personal example, that didn’t work either. So I’m actually unable to come up with anything that I would rather not know when I approach it from that way. – Yeah but, I guess what I’m saying is is that you’re approaching it from this point in time– – Sure. – With these life circumstances. So yeah now that– – Can you think of one? Can you think of a practical example within that way of approaching the problem that’s like, actually it’s better not to know. – No and I think we’ve talked about this before, it’s like, my tendency is to believe that knowledge about something like data related to anything is ultimately better. – Knowledge is power. – Than not having, than not knowing something, ’cause you’re gonna be able to do something. Even if it’s knowing when you’re gonna die. I don’t know if we’ve specifically talked about that situation. But I think I would wanna know, I think I would wanna know. – Right but so skipping back to the other way, do you feel like you know or have known people who are more of the, they’re in more of an ignorant and blissful zone? I think I know people that way. – Of course. Well okay– – Do you wish you were one of those people ’cause I think that brings it into focus. – No because I’m not unhappy. What I’m saying is this is how I interpret the question. Let’s just say I’m in the ether, my soul is in the ether before I inhabit my next body. – Okay. – Not saying I believe that this is how the world works, but let’s just say– – You obviously do. – That this is how the world works. – You wouldn’t say it if it wasn’t true. – And whoever makes the decision about what body you end up in says, Rhett, I, of course they voice of Morgan Freeman which I can’t do. – That wasn’t it. – An impersonation of him. But this is my voice so I’ll use that. He says, I’m gonna give you a choice in this lifetime. Would you like to be a worried genius or a, what is it, joyful simpleton? And I’m like those are my choices? If I choose genius I’m gonna be a worried, tortured genius? You know, like Nietzsche. Or– – Le Pain Quentidon. – Or you’re going to be a joyful simpleton, meaning you’re gonna be somebody who know one knows about. You’re not gonna make any history, you’re not going to accomplish anything that’s great– – Ooh. – In the eyes of humans. – I’ve seen Forrest Gump. Ha! – But no Forrest Gump was tortured. He was knowledgeable enough to be tortured about Jen-nay. So I’m talking about somebody who is just happy but may need other people to take care of them. I don’t know what they might need. I would choose that scenario if presented with those two options. But if it was just like would you rather be ignorant or knowledgeable, I would choose knowledgeable. – Okay. – Okay (sighs). – I’m gonna choose to be burdened and knowledgeable. – Let’s answer the question that we started this whole thing off with. – Let’s pay off that title. – This is from Hanna– – Unless it sucks and then we change it. – Hanna Brooks asks, your 20s are the best years of your life. In quotes as if someone told her this. Do you agree with this? What were the best years of your life, and why? – [Link] The 20s is, it’s interesting because I usually think of it in terms of middle school, high school, college, out of college, married, married with, that’s how I divide up my life. Married, then married with children. – Yeah. – And then I can also think about it in terms of our career and I can start to put different strata in there. But like the 20s, that’s the end of, that’s the tail end of college, right? Yeah. – The end of college, getting married, and mostly everything that we did before we really became full-time YouTubers, I mean, you know what I’m saying? It was before we had really found our calling. – Boy. – To what we kind of have settled into now. So it was a bit of a strange time. – It was– – Of figuring things out. – Yeah and there was a lot of, it was high stake peril. It was like okay, what are we gonna do? Why are we gonna, the heck is going on? ‘Cause I feel like I’m tempted to say the best days of my life, I’d be tempted to hone in on the college years ’cause those were some great years. – Mm-hmm, yeah. – You got this budding freedom. You’ve got this blossoming self-discovery. It’s almost falling on you like a dump truck. Self-discovery is being dumped on, you’re just getting buried in it. – Yeah. – That’s exhilarating. You know, you hold your breath and then you’re trying to breathe and get out from underneath it. – And I think the reason that adults will often say to young folk, you don’t really enjoy this time. These are the best years of your life and they may be talking about high school or college or whatever. I think what they’re actually saying is if I with my knowledge and life experience and wisdom that I have garnered in the years that I’ve lived were able to go back– – Yeah. – To high school, or go back to college, oh man I would just be able to do it right this time. But when you’re in the midst of it, you don’t really understand, and this is every stage of life. – Okay so just to unpack that a little bit, yeah, ’cause basically you’re not saying when I look back, that was the best strata of my life that I’ve experienced– – I do think, well– – It was youth is wasted on the young is what you’re saying. You’re saying that if I could go back and re-do it, I could most definitely make it the best time of my life, that decade. – Well and listen I’m not saying that I didn’t take advantage of it and that I didn’t take advantage of that freedom. I specifically remember that first week of college of just comin’ back to my dorm room whenever I wanted to and thinking this is awesome. Having responsibility for just myself is really awesome. Now at the same time, I was really, not as much as you now that, I didn’t even know at the time ’cause you didn’t really talk about it. I was really concerned about my academics. Especially in freshman, sophomore year, I was like super committed to studying and making good grades and I do recommend making good grades but I think I placed a little too much importance on that, honestly. I kinda got into a little bit better groove in my junior and senior year but… I do think they were the best years of my life in one sense. – Oh you’re not talking about 20s though, you’re talking about college. – Yeah. – Okay. – Considering the nature of the discovery, the nature of the fact that– – I do think it’s a candidate. – Sit out and have these philosophical conversations that you had never really had in high school and really meaningful friendships that went beyond sort of the typical high school friendship. True friends and independent living and independent experience with being able to go off and say we’re gonna take a trip to somewhere. We’re gonna go camping together us four guys or whatever. Those were things that there were so many firsts without any parental supervision that it was awesome. – And not just… Our lives were different because right out of college, we got married but when we were talking to Stevie on the way to that meeting, she was like, what was the show she asked us if we saw? It was like… Dead? – Dead to Me? – She was like have you seen Dead to Me? No I never even heard of it. She’s like well it’s a good concept. I don’t how well it was executed but it’s binge-worthy. And I’m thinking, I’m not in my 20s, I don’t sit around and just look for stuff that’s borderline binge-worthy. I’ve got, I didn’t jump down Stevie’s throat, this was all in my brain but I’m like I’ve got children and I’ve got all the stuff that I’m doing– – There is no bingeing. – Within my own parameters. – The only bingeing– – I got a bed time! – The only bingeing that has taken place for me is those two days that I was on my back after the vasectomy. – Right. – And you can really only get a vasectomy once. I might get my vasectomy reversed just so I can get it again just so I can binge-watch television. (Link chuckles) That’s literally the only binge-watching I’ve done in 15 years. – Stevie’s still in her 20s isn’t she? – No she’s 31, man. – (chuckles) Whoops. Not in my mind. Sorry Stevie. (Rhett laughs) I just mean everybody here is in their 20s in my mind. – Okay, thanks for clarifying. – Whoops. (Rhett laughs) But you know what I’m saying. – So what’s your point? – My point is, what is my point? My point is the 20s are the time for a lot of people where it’s like, they just got time to do stuff but for us, the 20s were oh, we’ve thrust ourselves into marriage. – And thrust is probably not the better word. – We thrust, we’ve been catapulted out of college and out from under any sort of financial support that our families or whatever offer, and now we’re trying to make this happen. This was like a scrappy time. It was nerve-racking. – Mm-hmm. – I was talking about, we both had our engineering jobs and we were hatin’ ’em and I wasn’t realize I was hating them until you kept insisting on how much I should be hating it, then I was like yeah man, you’re right, let’s figure out something else. Let’s get together one night a week and come up with comedy. – Yeah comedy nights. – You know, come up with comedy. Then get up the next morning and get to the spreadsheets. And Christy was teaching, she had a math degree and she taught high school math. She taught geometry and junk like that. And she was going crazy, going nuts just trying to figure out how to teach high schoolers and she was only four and a half years older than some of her students. – Mm-hmm. – She laid down the law the first day, she was sending people out right and left. It was carnage. – Paddling them? – (sputters) Yeah. – She was a paddler. – Spank me, Miss Neal. That doesn’t work. She didn’t fall for that one. But so we’re both putting our heads together and trying to figure out how we survive. – Right but I mean– – I’m house-sitting for this couple who was out of the country and we’re taking care of a full-grown Weimaraner. – Yeah but you look back on those times with nostalgia. – No I don’t. – I do. – I do, well– – Any time that there’s– – That period was difficult. – That scrappy period. – First year of marriage. I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy. – Well let me just tell you the way that– – And Christy would say the same thing, you skip that. – Well you can’t, I process this in this way. Okay, I’m 41 and… Especially related to personal health, physical and emotional health are things that it isn’t that I haven’t cared about those things but I have in the past decade or so, especially probably the past half decade, just getting older has sort of forced me to be like, I’ve gotta get on top of this and I’ll use my back as an example of something that has sort of applied to a lot of different areas of my life. – Talk about your back problems. – So (chuckles), I never did anything about my back when I was in high school, when I was in college. Never did anything in my 20s. Didn’t really do anything about them in my early 30s but when it became like okay this is gonna be a problem, if I don’t do something about this, I’m going to have, I’ll be in a wheelchair someday. I will have life-long, I will be disabled. I’m not kidding, my back problems were that bad that if I didn’t do something about them, I was going to be disabled. And I started to do the things that I started to do and continue to do and now it’s like my back is healthier than it was when I was in high school in terms of the way that it feels and how often I have pain, right? And it’s a daily struggle to continue to do the things that I need to do. But what I think a lot of times, I’m like man, when I was 22 years old, I had a 22 year old’s spine. You know what I’m saying? Like now I’ve got probably like a 60 year old spine because I didn’t do anything all that time and so the way I kinda process it is yes, those were good times but I’ve actually had, and again, the back is just an example of other things like again, I started going to therapy last year so I, it wasn’t like there was some necessarily some acute problem, there were some things that kinda came up that led me to finally say, okay yeah, I do need to go to therapy. But there was a lot of years where I just– – You don’t think going blind was an acute problem? – Yeah I’m saying that was one of the things that– – Okay. – Wasn’t going blind, you can listen to that podcast, but there was an acute problem that kinda sent me over the edge. All that to say though is that I feel like now, the thing that I can’t line up is caring about yourself and taking actual steps to care for yourself and set that on top of youth. That would be an incredible thing and maybe, maybe that doesn’t happen because when you’re young, you just don’t feel a need to address these things in the same way. You’re like I’ve got all my life. – Youth is wasted on the young but to answer the question, are you saying that the 20s, or maybe you’re saying college, either one, was the best decade of your life? I’m not talking retro-fitted, I’m talking about just for what it was. – I think and maybe this is just the futuristic, optimistic part of me, I still always have a sense that I am entering into the best years of my life. You know what I’m saying, I’m saying– – That’s weird. – It didn’t get much better. – That seems weird to me in a good way. – It doesn’t get that much better than what I experienced in my 20s and in college and all those cool memories or whatever, but there were things about me, the way I thought, the way I approached life in relationships, et cetera, that I’m glad I don’t still think and do the things that I did at the time. I like the me that I am now more than the me that I was then. And I would hope that that is a progression that continues. I hope when I’m 50, I look back at 41 year old Rhett and I like the me now more than I like the me then. What else is life about, right? Now there’s this sort of sinking feeling that eventually age will become an insurmountable problem and that no matter what you do, you’re gonna die of something, you’re gonna have chronic pain or whatever, maybe there’s nothing they can do about my back 20 years from now, who knows. Not looking forward to that and answering those questions but I’m just saying that and I told this to Jessie, I was like I think my 40s are gonna be the best years of my life and then I think when I enter into my 50s, I’m hoping that my perspective will be I think my 50s are gonna be the best years of my life. – Yeah I– – That’s my attitude. – I’ve already ruled out the 20s and I told you why. – Okay. – So I think for me, I think the nows, ’cause I’m 40. I don’t think it was the 30s. I think I agree, I feel like we’re on the, I’m in year one, you’re in year two of the best decade. I think the 50s won’t be as good. (Rhett laughs) Hey, what about grandkids? – Why man? – I don’t think that’s gonna help enough. I think– – Our kids are gonna be like 50 before they have children. That’s up to them. – I am the best, I feel like I’m the best version of myself that I’ve ever been and I want to be an even better version of myself and I think I’m on that journey, semi-aggressively and I think that’s a big part of… Well, that’s a big part of what makes me satisfied is that I feel like I’m growing and knowing more about myself. Discovering more of myself and who I can be, self-realization I guess you’d call that. – And I actually think that there’s, and I think we grew up with this, sorry to interrupt but to add to what you’re saying. I think that we kind of had this, and I feel like there’s a little bit of an American ideal here to be like stay the same. He’s the guy that he was when he was, I’m still the same man that I was when I was 20 years old. I’m still the same, you know what I’m saying, I’m like– – Don’t confuse it with a southern accent. (both chuckle) – I’m saying that I’m from the south. In many different ways that mentality was around me. – Okay. – And so that’s how I’m characterizing it. – All right that’s fine. – I’m not making a judgment about the south, I’m making a judgment about who I was and where I come from. And what I’m saying is that I believe that constant growth and constant change is actually a sign of health. Not stagnation. – Well I mean, if it’s the right kind of change of course. – Yeah of course. – Of course. – A change in the right direction but I’m like what is life if it isn’t change in the right direction? If you’re not evolving in a certain direction– – You’re only dying ’cause you are dying. You might as well be growing and living at the same time. – And the idea of settling into a way of thinking and a way of doing, as soon as I reach my adulthood and then just being that way forever, now maybe you were enlightened at age 21 and you just stayed the same. I’m not anywhere near enlightened but I’m just trying to move in that direction and so to me that’s what life has become for me is being like oh, this is what it’s about. It’s about right here, it’s about this moment, it’s about moving in the right direction. – Yeah, let me put it this way. There’s the phrase live your best life and I’m saying that to people constantly. Stranger in the malls. – You and Joel Osteen? – Live your best life. Did he come up with that? – I think he has a book called Live Your Best Life Now. – Oh well he added now. Well crap, I’m freakin’ deriving a Joel Osteen novel, not novel. – Is it Olsteen or Osteen? – Who cares? I don’t care. Osteen. – Osteen. Well you’re talking about Olsteen. – Ironically– – You’re not talking about Olsteen. – I didn’t realize that his book was exactly what I’m saying which is life your best life is something that you’re constantly doing now. (laughs) I totally agree with this guy. – And this is when Joel Osteen walks in. Fellas, I’m so glad– – That you finally figured it out. – You finally figured it out. Come to my big ol’ church. (chuckles) We’ve got 700,000 people every Sunday. – It’s making a decision to say, you tend to focus on the future and you put it in terms of in the future I want the future to be my best, but I want this week or maybe, I think it’s unfair to say this day. Depending on what you’re going through, it might be this week or this month. – Just say now like Joel. – But I think having a mentality of… If I know that I don’t have plans this weekend and I can either say I’m gonna do nothing. I’m gonna let it come to me. I feel like for me personally, more often than not, that’s a mistake because it sets me up for not living my best life– – Now. (Link chuckles) – But instead just kinda waiting for it, it’s like livin’ for the weekend, it’s like what about Wednesday? What’s my best Wednesday? – Now. – Or if I am on the precipice of the weekend or if I’m thinking about it, it’s like what’s something that I can do that sets up as we’ve talked about before in the context of the kids, what are some things that we could set up loosely, not gripped too tightly like the song goes, that will create the opportunity for an experience that could be the best of that. The best experience I could have this day and that may be sitting on the couch and binge-watching whatever Dead to Me is that I’m never gonna watch, by the way. – It’s dead to you. – But you know what I’m getting at? It’s like I do feel like– – You talkin’ about living your best life now? (chuckles) – If you have a mentality of all right, I’ve got this. I’m gonna find some enjoyment or some fill in the blank that brings some bestness to it. – Yeah you talkin’ about gratitude and mindfulness. Yeah and that is a challenge for me because I am so future-oriented and so I was– – And a lot of people are past-oriented, they’re like man, those were the good ol’ days. – Yeah. – And I look back, I think you looked back and I do the same thing and that’s like, well if I would have known that I had the back of a 20 year old, I would have done things differently. And again, that’s a revisionist thing– – And I can’t do anything about it. – Can’t do anything about it. – I don’t have, if I sounded this way, I didn’t mean to. I don’t have regrets about it necessarily, I’m just happy that my wife made me go to a certain physical therapist who finally gave me the right information. One thing led to another and I’m doing things that are helping my back live its best life now. – Are we just doing pop psychology, like vapid, empty pop psychology here? Or is it just that simple? – I honestly don’t care if we are. If we are, who cares. Is it effective? Does it make it– – All we need is love. – Does it make a difference? – Just throw that in there. – Because we’re pretty complex creatures, us humans, and our brains and, we’ve got like we’ve said before many times and somebody else said it before me, we’ve got Stone Age hardware and we’re running modern-day software on it and it leads to a lot of different problems. And I think that you can live a life where you’re constantly stressed out and there’s a bunch of cortisol in your blood at all times. – Yeah. – Or you can find some simple coping mechanisms that help you get out of your own head and get out of your own way, separate yourself from your thoughts and realize that you are not your thoughts and find some joy in the moment and also look to the future with optimism. And I’m not saying that we have done this or are experts at it by any means. I think just what I’m saying is that we spent a lot of time, we’re so focused on accomplishing things and succeeding at things that I think a good portion of the last couple of decades of our lives have just been completely consumed with trying to succeed. We’ve had no time to stop and think about things like personal health and growth in many ways because we’ve been so focused on our career and just trying to keep up with things and trying to be good dads and good husbands and the things, and the responsibilities that we feel like the world has put on us but I feel like sort of the one addition that has happened to me in the past few years in therapy has been the most tangible catalyst for this is just this sense of working on myself and it has made me, the thing I told Jessie, it was like, I feel just a lot more excited about the next chapter of my life. If I’m dividing my life into two halves, and I’m kinda entering into the second half, I am approaching it with a lot more excitement and not just sense of regret about what I didn’t do but more about what I’m gonna get to do and of course, it can all fall apart and I could face incredible disappointment and tragedy and whatever it might be but what I’m trying to do is get to a place where the external circumstances and the outcomes don’t affect my well-being as much. – I think a factor for me in being in this point is the fact that we’ve experienced the success we have. I feel like in my brain and my heart, it’s given me the space to then explore things that I didn’t give myself permission to do and I’m not proud of that. I think that’s a lesson learned that I don’t like turning this into something prescriptive. I just like sharing our own experience, so I’ll keep this on myself and say to my past self, in terms of more self-discovery and allowing myself that time for myself, even though I was chasing after things and the reason why the 20s were such a perilous time was because we were scrappily trying to make things happen and it was… There’s an art to living your best life now in the midst of those things, right? We just happen to be at a point where, I mean everything’s not going great. It’s not but there’s an art to that, whatever life throws at you, there’s still a… There’s still space for there to be some bestness and you deserve to have some bestness. – Yeah. – So I’ll leave it at that, but I think it’s, I’m gonna say not the 20s, the 40s. – The 40s. – The 40s. – The 40s. – The 40s and beyond are the best years of our lives. And with that– ♪ Those were the best years of our lives ♪ – I’m gonna leave you with a rec. ♪ Rec baby rec baby ♪ ♪ One two three four ♪ ♪ Rec baby rec baby ♪ ♪ One two ♪ – It’s a book that’s made a big difference in my life. – A book. – Joel Osteen’s– (Link chuckles) Live Your Best Life Now. – What a coincidence. – Yeah I planned on recommending this. No, I can’t say that I would recommend that book. I don’t know Joel, haven’t read the book. Good for you if you’ve read it and you got something out of it but what I, I actually was planning on recommending something else but I am gonna recommend something I recommended before but I’m gonna say it again. Therapy. – Did you just change your answer? – Yeah. – Oh. – I actually had something else but I can save it ’cause it was completely unrelated and I can use it for another time. I’ve talked about it before but I know that I thought that there was a stigma attached to therapy ’cause I thought that you had to have an acute mental issue in order to go to therapy but to me, if you wanna use the analogy of a car, I think that the idea of I don’t take my car in, man, until I got a problem. (chuckles) You know what I’m saying, man? But I think if you want your car to continue to run clean, you want it to be trouble free, you take it in for the scheduled maintenance, man. And the scheduled maintenance– – You can watch my daughter on The View or whatever she’s on. – In the scheduled maintenance of your body, there’s an interesting dichotomy that somehow in our culture we have this huge mind-body split and like yeah, I got a problem with my knee. That’s something I can talk to my boys about. I know that I’m characterizing everyone who’s ignorant as with a southern accent and I’m just doing it because that’s where I’m from– – I just think that was George Bush specifically. – Those are the kinds of accents that I do. But trust me I’m a redneck at heart, so I’ve got nothing against that. But the idea that you can talk freely about your physical problems but when you get to talking about mental problems that suddenly, this isn’t something you can share with a friend. This is something that you’re gonna be judged for, that’s an unfortunate side effect of something that’s gone wrong with this particular society. – When you say mental you mean emotionally. – Mental and emotional. – All types of– – And I think that I wish I had discovered it earlier and I highly recommend it and I know that for a lot of people, cost is an issue and I don’t know what the solution is for that. I know at one point we recommended Better Help but then you couldn’t recommend Better Help because there was some controversy around the people that I don’t know even what the deal was but they’re not a sponsor anymore. But I don’t know what the alternatives are for sort of low-cost mental health help, but I’ll just say that– – I think they have clarified their, the qualifications of the people and that cleared some things up and they also refined what types of issues that they’re tackling. – Okay so do your own research in that– – I’m not gonna say that it is a legitimate recourse. I would encourage people to check that out on their own. – Yeah so I’m just saying that do your own research to find out where affordable, you can get some affordable therapy but I would just say that I believe that it’s a priority and there’s probably some things that you’re spending money on that may not be as important and so, do what you can to find that help. – All right. – It’s important. – It wasn’t a book, it wasn’t an album but that was pretty good. – Yeah, pretty good. – All right #EarBiscuits, keep talkin’ at us. And we always enjoy hearing your feedback and also, we enjoy hearing if you introduce other people to these conversations. Hey you should check out Ear Biscuits. These guys are fill in the blank with whatever you think will resonate with them. Make it up if– – Lie to them if you need to. – Just fabricate– – All marketing– – The entire thing. – All marketing is lying, so just lean into it. – Yeah, yeah. Just, we need it. – If you think– – Oh we’re in your ears. – If you think your friend would be more into two women, just say it’s two women and they’re really funny. – But whatever. – It’ll take a few episodes for them to figure it out but hopefully they’ll be hooked by then. – [Link] To watch more Ear Biscuits, click on the playlist on the right. – [Rhett] To watch the previous episode of Ear Biscuits, click on the playlist to the left. – [Link] And don’t forget to click on the circular icon to subscribe. – [Rhett] If you prefer to listen to this podcast, it’s available on all your favorite podcast platforms. Thanks for being your Mythical best. (electronic music)

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