2 Generations 1 Mic

How can I miss you if you never go away?

ANDREINA & MARK LANDIS Season 1 Episode 7

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Have you ever wondered how couples who live and work together manage to maintain a healthy relationship? Join us as we share our personal experiences of navigating life without the conventional boundaries most couples experience. While many might find constant closeness daunting, we have found it to be a source of strength, especially during tough times like the COVID pandemic. We even discuss those rare moments of solo indulgence when travel separates us briefly, only to realize how much we miss the presence of the other.

Through amusing anecdotes, we highlight the importance of trust and understanding, especially when it comes to location tracking and maintaining healthy habits. Despite the hurdles, our shared journey reinforces the depth of our connection, proving that a little laughter and love can go a long way in overcoming obstacles.

We also critique the traditional corporate environment and champion a results-driven, flexible work structure that acknowledges employees as individuals. By sharing our experiences of balancing work and life from home, we aim to inspire a shift towards a more supportive workplace culture. From dream-induced frustrations to embracing each other's strengths in our daily tasks, we shed light on how a harmonious work-life balance can actually foster creativity and productivity. Join us in this candid exploration and maybe gain a few insights to apply in your own life.

Speaker 2:

Welcome to Two Generations. One, mic, helps with the algorithms, and we have a brand new episode that drops every Tuesday at 6 am Central Standard Time. So look forward to that. We'll keep these episodes going and if you'd like to keep our journey with us, then like, subscribe and follow.

Speaker 1:

So this episode is called how Can I Miss you If you Never Go Away?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the reason we came up with that is that people always say that you guys are always together. We see you social media. You're always on the pictures together. We work together since we own our own business and we don't have offices that we waste money on. We just work wherever we are. We have places around the world. We live in US, also in Madrid, Spain. We go back and forth and so wherever we are, we're working and we're always together 24-7.

Speaker 1:

Except I mean sometimes when you go to the gym by yourself. But we work out together, we eat together, we usually do everything together and for some people that can be a little bit daunting.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because most couples, like you know, even if they're married, whatever for a long time, you know, one of them has a job or both of them have jobs and they go off and they do their thing, interact with other people all day long, and then they come back and see their spouse or their significant other and that's the time gap that they have there and then they miss the person.

Speaker 1:

and but if you're with your person all the time, yeah, that's why, when COVID happened, we didn't have any issues. A lot of people got divorced because they couldn't stand being 24-7 with the other person, but for us it was just like any other normal part of our life, right? Together like stuck together. We have this thing like we are always together and it might be a little bit codependency we have on each other, but I'm fine with that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and I have friends that actually tell me they say all the time they're like you know, don't you like get like your space, like your private time, your space. And I said, well, you know, there are some times where she has to travel separately from me or whatever for meetings or whatever, and she may be gone, or she has to run back to Madrid or something. If we're in the US and I'm actually, I start looking forward to that. I'm going oh, this is going to be great, this is going to be so good. She's not going to tell me what to do, she's not going to tell me what to eat. She says it's going to be good, she's good, she. And then go, I drop her off at the airport, airport, and and you know, sometimes I don't even, I didn't even stop, I don't even slow down, I just kind of opened the door.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like go bitch.

Speaker 2:

Off you go and she's like what, are you in a hurry to get rid of me? No, no, it's, I'm caught up on all my work stuff. I'm just going to go in the house. I got the puppies and everything, but I'm going to take care of them. But then I'm going to sit on the couch. I've got my bottle of Bacardi. I'm going to make myself a big drink of Bacardi and Coke Zero and I'm going to get Taco Bell, since I don't ever eat fast food hardly, I Don't ever eat fast food hardly I'm going to get Taco Bell.

Speaker 1:

But there's a reason for that. You get sick every single time.

Speaker 2:

I don't care, it's worth it.

Speaker 1:

He swears, he swears he can eat Taco Bell.

Speaker 2:

You get sick every single time, but I'm going to get me some Taco Bell and I'm going to put it there and I'm going to eat it. And I'm going to turn on my Call of Duty games or one of my games I love to play Elite Sniper. I'm going to play something and no one's going to be bothering me and I'm going to eat my Taco Bell. I'm going to drink my drink and I'm just going to be there by myself and it's going to be awesome. And I forget sometimes that we have a Furbo camera so she can know where she's at. She can just log in and look at me and all of a sudden I'll be playing and I'll. What are you eating?

Speaker 1:

I know and you think all that is great, right, I don't do that anymore.

Speaker 2:

I think this is going to be fantastic and I love it and it is great for about three hours. And then I realize, okay, now I got to go to bed and she's not in bed. And the puppies are like where's mommy? And you know well, she's not here. And then we have to get in bed. And then I realized, okay, she's not in bed. Or then I wake up in the morning and she's not there, or I wake up in the middle of the night and go to touch her and she's not there. So that's when it gets really like oh, I get sad about it. Okay, that that little fantasy I had about the Taco Bell and the video games was great for a few hours.

Speaker 1:

But then I get back to reality and it's like, okay, we are codependent on each other and I mean not that I don't let you have your Taco Bell, you can eat whatever you want, but I always tell you, make good choices, right, eat better, eat healthier, because again you always have, since your hiatal hernia surgery, you can't handle a lot of foods.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

And I always tell him that's going to make you sick. Oh, leave me alone. You just want to control what I eat. No, you're going to get sick. Yeah, he gets sick. He's throwing up, he has diarrhea. It's just a bunch of problems that you get.

Speaker 2:

It's all part of the Taco Bell experience. Just letting you know that.

Speaker 1:

Well, maybe I they don't call it running from the border for nothing.

Speaker 2:

So that's the experience that you're getting there.

Speaker 1:

So you're saying I'm a Taco Bell away to be on my perfect weight.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, I don't tell you not to eat that because I want to control you. I tell you that because I care about you and about the Bacardi. I mean you can drink a lot of it and sometimes it's not like water. He doesn't get hangovers.

Speaker 2:

I don't get super drunk either.

Speaker 1:

I know His body can process it. But again, it's not good for you, babe, and I worry about you.

Speaker 2:

I know that and even, like I said before, you secretly hope that my blood work comes back and I'll please let this be the time that his liver enzymes are high, so he'll listen to me and get off the Bacardi. But then it comes back and she says how is this asshole just having perfect liver?

Speaker 1:

I know, I have like two glasses of wine and then I get super horrible hangovers and then my liver enzymes are through the roof and I have high cholesterol and how are you fine?

Speaker 2:

I don't know. You think I pay off the lab people to make sure the numbers stay correct.

Speaker 1:

Maybe you do. Now that you're saying that, maybe you do, maybe I get some results and you get some other results.

Speaker 1:

Right, but again now that you're saying that maybe you do, maybe I get some results and you get some other reasons, right, uh, but again, I don't try to control you, I'm just trying to make you live longer. Yes, because I love you and I again, maybe we are codependent on each other and it there was a point where every time we were not together, we were fighting, like I didn't like that feeling of you not being with me. I think it has gotten better over the time, but I again, because you were eating the wrong foods, you were drinking your all your Bacardi and then you were not working out and I was just like why can't you just behave when I'm not there? But it has gotten better. I don't watch the photo camera a lot anymore when I'm gone. Actually, I can track his phone.

Speaker 1:

That's not too stalkerish I can track his phone, know where he's at, and I don't do that anymore. I used to, but I don't do that anymore.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I can remember you would send me a text why are you at so-and-so? Why are you at so-and-so? I'm like how do you know I'm at so-and-so, I know, but I don't do that anymore.

Speaker 1:

I am better than that now. I trust you're going to do good choices and if you don't, your body will tell you. And now you're like, oh, I call you. If I'm in Spain, I call you. Like, oh, I'm like, what's wrong? Nothing. I'm like you have a tummy ache. No, I'm fine. You just had Taco Bell, Maybe. Or you just ate the biggest. You loved your Tex-Mex food, but your body can't process it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, not anymore. Not anymore. I just can't. I used to. I grew up in Houston and Texas in general, so I was a huge Tex-Mex fan for so long. But I can't, my body just can't process anymore. So I do have to have my fix. So we'll go to a restaurant or something, but I literally get the smallest kind of sampler plate I can get. So I taste this, taste that, taste that, but there's otherwise I and I still feel a little nauseated when I finished. But it definitely my body can't. There's so much like bad fats and carbohydrates in that that it just it makes me nauseated. I can't eat it.

Speaker 1:

Exactly so. That's why I know. I know exactly when when you're, when you're eating, when you're not supposed to be eating, and your body tells you that. Yeah, but you also have a little. Every time I go away, he gets sick. Yeah, every time I go away, he just falls sick, and I don't know why, besides the stomach problems, there was this time that I don't remember where I went and you were in LA.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think you were back in Spain. You went back to Spain.

Speaker 1:

No in LA, no because we moved from LA to Spain.

Speaker 2:

I don't know where you were.

Speaker 1:

I don't know where I was. Oh, I think I went to Mexico City with my mom.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, maybe.

Speaker 1:

Oh and Tiffany. Yeah, I took Tiffany and my mom to Mexico City and I remember you were like telling me how sick you were. I was telling them this morning he was fine and Tiffany said maybe he's having like andy withdrawal and maybe it was a thing, because I even remember you recorded this video in case you didn't make it through the night yeah, I mean I may have been a little dramatic and you only had a fever like you're like um, I have the chills, I can't stop shaking, and I saw the video later and you're like baby, this is it.

Speaker 1:

I love you. Take care of the puppies.

Speaker 2:

It was a little. I had a little drama episode.

Speaker 1:

I know it was only because I was away and I love you for that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, when you're away. But you know you also do some stuff. That's like I think I remember you got mad that you were at some I think you were, I think you were with Tiffany somewhere and on our corporate like our credit cards and stuff.

Speaker 1:

Oh, my God.

Speaker 2:

When we used, like one of our cards, american Express, it pops up on the other person's our phone like so-and-so spent this much money at a restaurant and I had gone to this Italian. We were living in Manhattan and there was this Italian restaurant that we liked and I would go sit sometime at the bar and get the thing. But I didn't think it through and the guy's like, oh, what are you going to get tonight? I said, oh, I don't know, maybe I get this, and it was like a steak or something.

Speaker 1:

So I went to see Tiffany down in Corpus Christi and I remember we were having dinner. It's Tiffany, her boyfriend, husband aka Justin, and Justin's friend that this is the first time I meet this guy. His name was Drew, he is Drew and we're here having dinner at the table and suddenly and I keep telling him what are you going to do tonight? Please make good choices, don't go out. Don't go out and spend a lot of money. Don't go out and drink too much. You're by yourself, take care of the puppies. And he's like yeah, yeah, no, I'm fine, I puppies. And he's like yeah, yeah, no, I'm fine, I'm fine. And suddenly we are having dinner. I put my phone down and I see a charge on American Express for like $400. In my head I thought, oh my God, he is with somebody. Who are you with? Who are you with? Who are you buying dinner for? It's impossible that this man is going to spend $400 on himself. That's what I thought.

Speaker 2:

I bet you used the term who's that bitch?

Speaker 1:

I know who's that bitch you're with. Who are you buying dinner for? Are you drunk? And you decided to buy dinner for somebody. And I literally remember we were at dinner and I was like this motherfucker. I was like Tiffany's like what? I'm like I'm going to kill your dad. And this guy drew again. He doesn't know the dynamic, he doesn't know who I am, why am I there? And he doesn't know what's happening. I'm threatening to kill Tiffany's dad and she's like what did he do? I'm like I don't know. He's probably with somebody buying them dinner. And she's like, oh, call him. I'm like, no, I'm gonna let him call me and I'm gonna be making sure he knows I am mad. And he calls me. And now tell us a story. Why? Why were you spending four hundred dollars on a dinner by yourself?

Speaker 2:

because I went to the bar and I sit at the bar and they know it's there and the guy usually was like, make suggestions and things. And he was like, oh, you should try this so-and-so, the Wagyu. It was like a Wagyu steak or something like that and dummy me didn't say, oh, how much is that? I just thought, okay, that sounds good, give me that. And it was this giant like Wagyu steak or something. And it was this giant like Wagyu steak or something. And it was unbelievably expensive.

Speaker 2:

And I was like when I got the bill I was like, oh my God, and I was like what am I going to say? Okay, I just felt I was more embarrassed than anything else, like how did I do that to myself, that I bought that expensive, because you know me, I don't even eat that much stuff. I was like usually we go to really we only really eat high end steakhouses and kind of things, but I'm still, when we go, I get like a six ounce filet, maybe the eight ounce we're sharing, or something like that. That's what I was thinking. I get the six ounce filet. It's $40, $50.

Speaker 1:

Because I know how much you eat. And then some side dishes.

Speaker 2:

I don't eat that much food, so it's like I usually, just I generally don't eat. You know, that expensive of a meal, exactly. That's what I thought you were with somebody. I was more embarrassed that I did that to myself. I'm like how did I let myself do that? That was stupid. Oh my God. I hope she doesn't find out about this. I'll never hear the end of this.

Speaker 1:

And I didn like hey, I'm like, what are you doing? I don't know, what are you doing? You're like I just had dinner? Yeah, of course you did. Why are you spending so much money? Who were you with? You're like, what are you talking about? And then you were really embarrassed about that and you story yeah, or so.

Speaker 2:

He says yeah, that was absolutely it.

Speaker 1:

So he says, yeah, so here I am in New York walking back in the rain no umbrella.

Speaker 2:

Walking back in the streets in the rain.

Speaker 1:

Miserable and a pale.

Speaker 2:

Regretting my life choices. It was appropriate that I'm walking in the dark, in the rain and miserable with my life choices that I just made and a bag of $200 steak in my hand. Puppies, you're going to eat good tonight, oh.

Speaker 1:

I know and anyway, I mean that happened, that's funny. Well, now it's funny, but I was really really mad at you that time, yes, or the time that this guy I swear, every time I leave this guy's like, oh, I'm going to go have dinner with a friend, like you're, I don't know, you wouldn't have dinner with somebody. And again like I'm somewhere, and then I see $600 dinner. I'm like what? Oh, we went to Nobu. I'm like, and why do I have to leave town? And then you just go to these fancy places.

Speaker 2:

And just spend all this money. I take you to Nobu all the time.

Speaker 1:

We would go to Nobu all the time. In New York we don't spend that much money.

Speaker 2:

In New York. We did In New York every time we went to.

Speaker 1:

Nobu, it was expensive. No, it wasn't that much.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's $500, $600 for dinner every time in Nobu. You, I'm in Nobu, you didn't see the check so you have no idea what it costs. But in Nobu, in New York, it's $500, $600 for dinner.

Speaker 1:

I know, but, man, I don't know why every time I leave you have to just be a naughty boy.

Speaker 2:

I like my food. I like good food, yes, but you have to pace yourself bro, I know, well, I did, but you know you have to calm down. Yes.

Speaker 1:

I tell you all the time, eat at home.

Speaker 2:

And then suddenly, and I do now I eat a lot at home now Every time I go now I make a lot of dinner at home. I can't stay If you're gone for a week. I'm not going to stay every single night at home, I just get bored. So I got to go do something. But most of the time now I just snack at the bar or have some drinks there and then watch a little sports or something and then go home and I don't go too far from the house now.

Speaker 1:

Well, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I stay pretty close to where we live and when I'm doing that, but it's fine, you know. I think I'm interested to know what couples out there and again, please like, subscribe, comment I'm really interested to know if you are a couple and you have this issue where you work together too and you see each other all the time, what is that dynamic like for you? How do you break apart that and get some time apart so that you can miss the other person? Again? I've said before in other episodes we don't really do a thing where you say I'm going out with the girls tonight or I'm going out with my buddies tonight. We don't. That's not a thing we do, you're my buddy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we just go out together and go watch. You know a lot of time that we go to the daytime. We go to sports bars, watch games or we have we found some recently a great sports bar that lets puppies come to here. So we take the puppies with us and we do that kind of thing. That's really we kind of it's a family thing and that's our family thing. That we do is take the puppies and go to sports but we really like.

Speaker 1:

don't get tired of each other. I never get tired of. Well, sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night and I see you and I'm like I could really kill you right now. But then I remember I love you so.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's because I did something in your dream wrong. Yeah, that's because I did something in your dream wrong. I did something in your dream wrong.

Speaker 1:

Yes, sometimes you're just cheating on me in my dream, or you're probably, I don't know. Sometimes you do stupid things in my dreams and I don't like that.

Speaker 2:

I'll work on that. I'll see what I can do to do smarter things in your dreams.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

I'll do my best.

Speaker 1:

Yes, please Be better in my dreams, but I really don't feel tired of you. I never think well, except when you're over my shoulder telling me what to do and that I have to finish a deadline of something and I tell you to go away. But you go away to the couch, so that's fine.

Speaker 2:

And then I ask you, show me what you're doing over there.

Speaker 1:

I know I'm like what he's like. You're not doing what you're supposed to be doing.

Speaker 2:

Right Again, because again I'm not being overbearing, but again you have ADD and I have to keep you relatively on task or we don't get things accomplished. And again it's not one of those things where, if I could do it myself, I would not bother you to do it. In other words, it wouldn't be like, hey, this needs to be done and I full well know how to do it. I just think you should do this too. I don't do that. Like part of our jobs is you do all the creative stuff and the design of everything and the marketing and all that kind of stuff and I do all the boring stuff. So I'm the one sitting in there filling out 20 different uh packets of you know paperwork.

Speaker 1:

That's 25 pages long, you're still asking me questions.

Speaker 2:

There's things I have to know that I don't know in there. That's why I have to get the information for him. But I'm the one that has to do all this tedious, boring work that I have to do, and I would never expect you to have to do that as well. If it's stuff that's my job and that's part of what I bring to the table, I need to do that and so I do that, but I also have to kind of check and make sure okay, while I'm doing this, are you doing what?

Speaker 2:

you get caught up on doing something else.

Speaker 1:

I know I do.

Speaker 2:

So I have to keep making sure that you're at least staying somewhat on track so that we can flow the way we're supposed to flow.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but I.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Fine, I'll allow it.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

And also it's sometimes even when you get bored about like being at home, because we're at home all the time you go behind me and I can tell you're bored and you're like what are you doing? I'm like working. Oh, okay, like what do you want? What I don't know? I'm bored. Like okay, you want to go somewhere? Yeah, let's go somewhere and we go out to have lunch. But you're so cute when you do that, like you're just start like lurking around. Yeah, you're lurking, I'm lunch lurking.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you're lunch lurking, You're like yeah, let's go eat some lunch.

Speaker 2:

That works to our advantage because we can go. We can just shift dynamic and we can go sit and lunch, have a glass of wine, have some light lunch and still continue the conversation about work we can still talk about. Oh yeah, we have to do this. We have to do this. This needs to be done. We can plan it for doing a podcast. We can plan it. What are we doing again? What are we supposed to be hitting on? What are we supposed to be in? My normal, most of my career thing that I absolutely hated and a lot of people do that. That's a normal American life where you go and you work from 830 to 530 or whatever and you're in your office or you're in your cubicle and that's where you go every day. And to me that was like absolute hell. I just couldn't imagine and I hated it. That's why I would never stay in my office If you would go through like looking for Well, he also had no windows.

Speaker 2:

He was like no Well, in that office that you met me in I did not have windows. It was miserable, but that's why you would find me a lot of times. I wouldn't even be in my office, I'd just be walking around because I had to be talking to people and getting out of my office. I hated sitting in an office in a box, sit in your little box from this time to this time, and that to me was just absolute hell. I did not want to live my life like that and it was miserable to do that. So I just made a commitment to myself that once we did our own thing. That's why we won't have offices like ever. We're not gonna have offices ever, because it's like. I'm not gonna do that. Nor do I wanna put other people through that. I'm not gonna make you come sit in an office all day. You can work anywhere. You have access to Wi-Fi, your computer, your phones. As long as I can reach you, I don't need you sitting in an office where, again, I don't work in a bank in the 1960s Times have changed.

Speaker 2:

The dynamic of the workplace has changed. You don't need to work that way. The money you would waste on offices and stuff. You could plow that money into marketing social media, hiring another person Everybody. Work out of your house, enjoy your life.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but corporates don't like that. Corporate people like it.

Speaker 2:

Because they want to control you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 2:

And again, to me, it's not about the control, it's about the results. Do you get the job done? Do you get the results done? I don't care what you're doing at every moment of the day, I don't care if you're sitting there going. Oh wow, I'm waiting on something like that. I'm watching a Netflix thing in the background about you know serial killers or whatever, which Tiffany does nonstop and she works for us.

Speaker 2:

She's constantly listening to the Netflix serial killer things and she still gets her work done. I don't have to go, oh, how come you didn't get this done? Oh, because I was sitting on the couch watching TV. No, she can work, she can multitask and listen to that at the same time and still get her job done. She's not having to go to an office every day and do that and I think that's just. I think that's a mentality that's, that's way old thinking, it's not futuristic and technology allows you to do other things.

Speaker 1:

It can get a little bit overbearing when you work at home or from home because you don't know when to put a stop in it. I remember like sometimes it's late and you have to tell me stop working. Or if we're in Spain and with the time difference, I have to work late. It's like 10 pm and I'm working.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because there's a seven hour time difference. And what do we say when our biggest cut like Sally Sally says hey, I want to have a conference call at their time. At the end of the day, we're on the phone at one o'clock in the morning for us having a conference call.

Speaker 1:

That is true.

Speaker 2:

And also we deal internationally. So you could be on the phone with Asia, yeah, and all night long I'll hear beep, beep. What is that? It's somebody in Asia, it's somebody in Singapore, it's somebody people. We're all over the world. So you're working across multiple time zones that people also have to consider taking consideration when you're planning your day. But I have to sometimes tell you OK enough, you don't have it, it's not a deadline, just stop, unwind, relax.

Speaker 1:

You can pick it up in the morning, yes, but a lot of people it can get overbearing, I know. Remember when we lived in New York we had this neighbor that from our bedroom we can see her living room.

Speaker 2:

That from our bedroom.

Speaker 1:

we can see her living room. This poor girl, oh my God.

Speaker 2:

It was like nine. She's like a graphic designer or website designer or something?

Speaker 1:

We only know that because she had multiple screens.

Speaker 2:

We only know that because I'm being Mr Nosy and I'm looking at what is she working on over there.

Speaker 1:

I know Nosy Nancy. She's like what's she doing?

Speaker 2:

It's my neighbor working on over there.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and she had like two different screens, big giant screens, big giant screens which usually is like if you do design or something Right, and she was there from 8 in the morning, I remember we'll wake up, she's already working. And she was. It was 10 pm and she was still working. Yeah, I'm like this poor woman. I will be like trying to knock on the window like hey, hey, stop.

Speaker 2:

Come over for a glass of wine, calm down.

Speaker 1:

Like she was on her sweatpants all day, just working and working, and I understand that sometimes, working from home, you don't know when to put a stop.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, usually, because again, it's about the task or what your responsibility is and not about the hours, and that's the thing. And I would get into my former job. I used to get into arguments with the, the bookkeeper, controller type person, who was an older school lady, like old school lady, and you know she'd only worked in the old school offices type environment, and she would always come by and ask well, we're so and so you know, because it's it's five o'clock and they've already left and our offices are open till five thirty and they've already left and our offices are open until 5.30. And I'd be like, well, they did all their work and their son has a baseball game today that he's playing. So him and his wife are going to watch their son's baseball game that they're playing and all his stuff is already done.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but our corporate policy says look, and I stop it right there. So I don't work in a bank in the 1960s, I don't work that way. My people work for me, they get the job done and then they go live their life, because it all isn't all about the company. Let people live their lives and, you know, have a good life with your family. That makes a person, a better person, a better employee and more loyal person to you because of the way they get treated.

Speaker 2:

And I said you know how many times I call this guy on the weekends, when he's not supposed to be working, and say I have an emergency, can you handle this for me? He never says, well, no, it's the weekend. I don't work on the weekends because our corporate policy. He doesn't talk that bullshit, he just gets it done. He never, ever questions me and I don't pull the hallway and say, hey, everything is done and I'll be back early in the morning to get things done. If you need anything, call me. I'll have my cell phone on, but my son's playing his first baseball game. That, to me, is more important than appeasing the controller bookkeeper lady down the hallway that we're not following this corporate policy, which is antiquated bullshit.

Speaker 2:

So I don't live life that way. I wasn't going to let them dictate to me how to work. So anyway, if you have questions, comments, we'd like to know. Please like, subscribe, follow us and join in on the discussion. Let us know what you think in anything we talked about today and again, remember, new episodes drop every Tuesday, 6 am. Central Standard Time Music.

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