Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: Foreign.
Come back to the she Said podcast with Amy and Lisa.
[00:00:16] Speaker B: Episode 50 bringing you more hacks and ideas to spend your money on. I've been very busy this week. I feel like I haven't had a whole lot of things to just tap into that have been fun. Like every single thing in my house has been breaking and I've had. Cox was like, I'm talking Internet. It looks like the wind probably blew something off of one of the towers. So we've been without Internet for a few days.
So that had to get big. And then I've got AC guy or AC just quit working. The first night it got hot. Well, we had it one good night when it was warm and the second night it just went out on us. So now we're waiting on the AC guy to come. And we had a plumber come fix something in the shower. And next I've got an electrician coming out because of. I don't know if it's wind. Maybe wind damage has caused some of this stuff like with cops trick and I just don't know. But, but there was a few things I've kind of put off on me to get some switches, you know, taken care of. And it's just a matter of organizing it.
[00:01:12] Speaker A: Nothing makes me madder than to pay for that kind of thing.
[00:01:15] Speaker B: Oh, I know. Now I'll say I keep a home warranty and I do use it and it, it takes. It causes a little stress at times. I'm not going to say it's totally stress free, but once you do it a few times, you understand the process that like there's a process, you got to stick to it.
They're not going to come in, you know, five hours. You're gonna have to wait a day or two. If you can work with that, it's definitely worth. Now the rates have gone up really high on it, on mine that I keep, but I just pay a hundred dollar co pay and they come out and they do what I need done. As long as it fits within the, you know, realm of their scope of
[00:01:50] Speaker A: their, you know, description, it's probably a good idea. I probably need to look into this.
[00:01:55] Speaker B: Yeah. Have you had some big expenses?
[00:01:56] Speaker A: Well, my gas leak that I had a couple weeks ago.
[00:02:00] Speaker B: Oh, goodness. Yeah.
[00:02:01] Speaker A: $2,400, which I think is ridiculous. And I know they overcharged. They charged me for things they didn't need to, which I'm still figuring it out. Mullen Plumbing. Hello. That's frustrating.
[00:02:13] Speaker B: Yeah, that's frustrating. Yeah.
[00:02:16] Speaker A: Kind of kick yourself when you pick These companies. And then you're like, I knew better.
[00:02:20] Speaker B: Well, when it's under the house and stuff, how do you know that what you're really getting?
[00:02:25] Speaker A: So I don't know. They just did weird things too, where they showed up the day they were supposed to be there. They quit at 3 o' clock and said, well, what we need to do is going to take all day and the first opening is Wednesday for all day.
So that means another two days without gas.
[00:02:43] Speaker B: Oh, man.
[00:02:44] Speaker A: And then they come back on Wednesday and they stay. They were there for two and a half hours and they were done.
I don't know where the all day came from. So they could have finished it. They'd been done by 5:30 on Monday, which would have been. I got an inspection from the city on Tuesday and gas turned on Tuesday.
But because they waited till Wednesday, then they were only there two and a half hours and then they said, well, we're done, we're ready for the city. We've ordered the city to come inspect it. But then the next. By that evening they were back at my house at 4 o'. Clock. The guy rings the doorbell and says, I'm just going to let you know I'm in the backyard getting everything ready for the city.
Well, they were there and they left saying everything was ready. He spent another hour at my house and then they were back that next morning checking things, just weird stuff like that. And then of course the city inspector that didn't get ordered until the next day, which means another day and get my gas turned back on till Friday.
[00:03:43] Speaker B: So how long did you go without?
[00:03:44] Speaker A: A week. Oh, cold showers for a week.
[00:03:48] Speaker B: That's bad.
[00:03:49] Speaker A: Yeah. And it was that weekend that it dropped down to seven. Wind chill of seven, dude, you know, it was just. I don't know, something just isn't adding up.
[00:03:58] Speaker B: I did try to give my face an ice bath the other day and I thought I was suffocating myself.
[00:04:02] Speaker A: Yeah, it's brutal.
[00:04:05] Speaker B: Whoa.
[00:04:06] Speaker A: I used to do that too, because it is so great for your pores and the. But it was, it's tough.
[00:04:11] Speaker B: I did it and then I had Stephen do it after me and I mean, I don't have any complaints. I was just in shock a little bit. But I was like, I think I've just cut off my whole breathing wiring going on here.
[00:04:23] Speaker A: It's hard to hold your breath.
[00:04:24] Speaker B: I cannot imagine doing my whole body. So more power to you.
[00:04:28] Speaker A: Well, and they say you really should do that after every shower. At the end of your shower, just go all Cold for several minutes. If you're not doing the ice plunging thing, which. Have you ever done cryotherapy where you get in the cryo tube. And now I did so many things just trying to recover from chemo and that was one thing I did. I will tell you, it works because I just hurt from head to toe joints. And you stand, you put gloves on. You have to wear gloves and booties because the extremities will get frostbite quickly. And then you go into this tube and you're in there for I think it's a minute or two minutes, I can't remember. And you have somebody, they won't even leave you in there by yourself just in case you die in the tube or something happens.
[00:05:11] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:05:12] Speaker A: And so they stand in there with you while you're inside. But it's just like, do they still have those?
[00:05:17] Speaker B: I knew there was a cryo spa that had opened up, right. That had opened up here in Tulsa and they were offering cryotherapy.
[00:05:24] Speaker A: Well, they have it at that recovery place at Utica Square. Okay. That's where I did it.
[00:05:29] Speaker B: It's.
[00:05:29] Speaker A: By the time you get out of there, you are supercharged. But it is, it does really help with achy joints and stuff. I sometimes I think I want to go back and try again, but. Oh, that minute is tough. But I get the whole ice bath things. But there's no way I'm climbing in a tub of ice.
Those showers were I. I will not
[00:05:48] Speaker B: be able to breathe.
[00:05:49] Speaker A: Well, it's easier than putting your face in water because you're holding your breath because your face is in water. And you're also true trying to breathe because you've got freezing cold ice. Yeah, it's tricky, but it does some great stuff for your skin.
[00:06:02] Speaker B: And there's this little Asian lady who she just gives the bet. Her daughter is the one who actually talks about her mom's lifestyle. Because the woman I think might be 80 in skin of a 12 year old. And just her everyday habits, like she eats a kiwi fruit every single day. Which I did learn. You can just eat kiwi like an apple. Like you eat the skin and everything. And that's how we do it now at home.
[00:06:24] Speaker A: Really?
[00:06:24] Speaker B: Oh yeah.
[00:06:25] Speaker A: That little fuzzy.
[00:06:25] Speaker B: I love it. I love the way that fuzzy thing feels. But you do chew through it and it works just fine. So like she has eaten a kiwi every day like for as long as they can run her ice baths on her face and her, you know, her daily walks with her dog. And it's just a lifestyle, but my goodness. And. And she does push ups on the street, on the side.
She does her. And then she does some dips on the railing outside.
But her routine has clearly been incredible for. Because, I mean, she's fun to watch. I wish I knew her name and I'd share it. She's a. I really like watching her stuff. So she's a great cook too.
[00:07:01] Speaker A: I used to be that person that had a routine and ideas, consistent, consistent, consistent. And now, I mean, I. I don't know. I've really struggled this week with post cancer body because it is tough. And I had a friend tell me that her husband even mentioned it to her about me trying to go downstairs. And it's like, it's just crazy how your body is just beaten up and I don't know how to get it to recover. I'm nine years later and I still feel like I saw somebody that had cancer posts on social media and was talking about that, you know, after cancer, her clothes don't fit. Her body's. Everything changes. Your shape changes, your body changes. Like you're really. My doctor told me I was 10 years older.
You know, my body, 10 years older. And so it's. So it's really been bothering me this week because obviously I'm not the body I was before and my clothes don't fit. Those same clothes I can't wear. You know, it's just. It plays a lot of mind games with you. And this week has been a tough mind game just dealing with that I'm still here and still can't fully recover. And with everything I do and I can't, you know, I. I just think about that person that I was, that person that was so focused on everything and the thought of it now seems so hard and difficult to do. And I do feel like you would have taken a different avenue at 1000% without a shadow of a doubt.
[00:08:27] Speaker B: It's funny you're saying that too, because there was a lady I was watching this week who real health guru. Like, I actually just shared her with you today. She had found a lump in her breast and she was like, against everything she's ever known or taught. And she was like, I scared myself. She was like, I fell into the. Okay, let's go get. We got to go get it. But she was like, I went to get an ultrasound and she goes, I remember walking into the breast center and it was full. Everything was like pink. The walls are pink, the brochures are pink. And it's all that Your next steps. It was all fear based. And she said, truly, it was a lovely place, but it was all, what's your next step? And she said, I remember telling them, I don't want a mammogram. I'm not doing that. And she was like. And I felt really insulted. Like, you're like, what? You're not taking care of your body, you're not doing a mammogram. And she was like, I just want the ultrasound. Let's get. Turns out it was okay.
And she has no regrets about how she handled it. But she said that was at that moment where she was like, I am not falling for this spell of fear to manage this. This one way that they're only going to throw at me this one way. And it's really unfortunate because I know there's a lot of people who got. Of course you're thankful you're bought. You were spared. But could you have been spared a different way without having to suffer the way that you have?
[00:09:46] Speaker A: Yeah, and I don't. I mean, I. Back then, I mean it sounds like 100 years ago, but nine years ago, compared to what's available now is night and day.
[00:09:54] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:09:55] Speaker A: So what I know now is different than what I knew back then. And also I was, I wasn't in the cancer world. I didn't, I did not know anything. I mean, now I know a ton because I've been in that world for nine years and I volunteered and I, you know, I did all the things. And so today a whole different perspective than where I was nine years ago. That was my first foray into, you know, cancer. And so you, you think you do the research. And I felt like I did do the research and I did feel like I did the only thing that was really going to keep me here. Potential. We didn't know. And now here I am nine years later. I'm going getting close to 10. But I mean, the damage has been horrendous. And it's still here and it's still suffer from it, you know, daily. And it's. It's been a tough week, just. But it's been a.
[00:10:44] Speaker B: It's been adjustment for a long time. Well, you've inspired a lot of people, without a doubt.
[00:10:49] Speaker A: Oh, I know, but it's just like, geez, you know, you just question like the whole, why me?
[00:10:55] Speaker B: I know, I can imagine.
[00:10:57] Speaker A: But anyway. I didn't know I was gonna cry today.
[00:10:59] Speaker B: Sorry.
[00:11:00] Speaker A: So crazy out getcha. But.
[00:11:02] Speaker B: Well, you want to talk about the nipple cream?
[00:11:04] Speaker A: Oh, sure. Let's go There.
That'll change at all. I'll say.
[00:11:09] Speaker B: Well, so I've told you before about the lanolin.
[00:11:13] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:11:14] Speaker B: That they. You know, which. They have that product called Lana lips. And so I said, I'm gonna buy the Lansa. No. Because I've heard it's the same thing.
And sure enough, because my lips have just kind of been peeling real chappy. And overnight, my lips were completely a different story.
When I put it on, my boys, they didn't know I was putting on. They're like, what is it?
[00:11:35] Speaker A: That'll shock them.
[00:11:36] Speaker B: It's like, well, since you asked, I thought they were gonna throw up. They're like, what?
But they say you can put it on your heels, that it will heal cracks. Put a pair of socks on over it.
It's actually really, really good. And I even put it under my eyes, too. And I liked how that felt under my eyes. It's a little sticky at first, but it smooths out to where and it just feels really silky on your lips. The Lansa knows what I got. It was like $10. I think the Lana lips is like a little bitty tube that might be 18.
[00:12:05] Speaker A: Wow.
[00:12:05] Speaker B: It's just a little tube, but it's the same. Maybe it tastes like watermelon. This has zero taste, zero smell. You gotta think because a baby is the one that's gonna be on it, there's no flavor at all, nothing.
[00:12:17] Speaker A: So, yeah, my lips get chapped a lot.
[00:12:19] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:12:20] Speaker A: And you said heels too, which would be good.
[00:12:22] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:12:22] Speaker A: Especially summertime.
[00:12:23] Speaker B: Yes, I know.
[00:12:25] Speaker A: So bad.
[00:12:26] Speaker B: The flip flops are what do it to me. And I can tell. I've been wearing my flip flops a lot lately. And I'll tell you, my body feels it.
[00:12:33] Speaker A: Oh, I bet they do it.
[00:12:34] Speaker B: I feel every.
Yeah. And I think that's one reason why I've been a little more achy, maybe is switching over to throws your host step off.
Matter of fact, I had on flip flops yesterday and I walked in, my doctor was like, missing a few toenails polished. So Tiffany will appreciate that. She's always on me about my. You know, that's what it is.
[00:12:55] Speaker A: Well, yeah, toenails are tough to. Especially not very good about that. Yeah, me either. I don't mess with my toes. But, yeah, it throws your whole. Stepping off your walk is different. Your gate is different.
[00:13:06] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:13:07] Speaker A: And so I. I could see that we're sitting in my podcast room that's been converted to my AI training room. And so it's been. It's been really fun. Teaching people and then I'm getting, getting messages this week people are emailing me documents that they've created in AI that people that didn't even have AI anywhere in their life learned and now they're using it for work and home too. But it was, it's been fun to getting people sitting going. I just want to show you what I've done so far and how much it helped me. It's crazy. And once you get it, get into it how you start using it for every aspect of your life. So really do. We're holding classes every Wednesday from 1 to 4 if anybody's interested and send
[00:13:50] Speaker B: us how much is it?
[00:13:52] Speaker A: It's 3.95 for a three hour class. But you willy walk away with tons of knowledge about not just ChatGPT but AI in general and how it works. But probably mainly chat GPT just because so many people that are coming are beginners.
[00:14:07] Speaker B: Right.
[00:14:07] Speaker A: That really just need to learn one. And then I'm going to hold advanced classes from all the other stuff that's out there.
[00:14:14] Speaker B: So It's Wednesdays from 1 to 1
[00:14:15] Speaker A: to 4 at my office.
[00:14:16] Speaker B: There you go. Yeah.
[00:14:18] Speaker A: So it's been fun so far and boy it's. I keep talking about this but it's so crazy how when you know, social media started and I launched a division of the company to teach social media marketing because it was where everything was going and it's the same exact thing right now. So I launched a division of workshops on teaching AI because it's where it's going and if people are going to be left behind. Absolutely. I mean I think a huge example is my camera. That's an AI camera now and it tells me. Exactly. And one example I show in class is the Amazon driver leaving a package and the AI camera telling me that an Amazon driver dressed in blue just dropped off a box at my front porch. Wow. As opposed to there's motion at your front porch and you got to go figure out what it is. It tells you exactly in a full paragraph describing the grass behind him, the green grass and walking up a paved sidewalk. And wow. It tells you. That's interesting, the type of car sitting in your driveway. And so I mean that's just, I think one example of where that's where life is headed in, in everything that we do.
So it's been fun. But yeah. So one o'.
[00:15:29] Speaker B: Clock. Learn how to use it.
[00:15:31] Speaker A: Yeah. And do it right. I had a guy send me a graphic today to use for his social media. It's like that is not going up on social media.
I cannot put that up. It's like, yeah, it drives me crazy because everybody. You see it all on social media. Everybody's graphics all look the same. And it looks like cartoons.
The old fashioned superhero cartoons. Yep. Crazy.
[00:15:54] Speaker B: So are you changing it up? Oh, yeah, yeah.
[00:15:56] Speaker A: I'm like that. I don't even, I didn't even acknowledge that he sent it. It's like, yeah, that's not happening. I'm not putting that up. Funny. It's so crazy.
[00:16:05] Speaker B: Well, have you. Are you going anywhere anytime soon on a trip or anything? Which I'm actually thankful. Like there's no way am I getting stranded in an air.
[00:16:15] Speaker A: No, but you know, here's what's funny is every single person that I know of that has flown during this time has all said I had no issues. I got there, I went through security like normal. I've heard it from at least a dozen people that said, I mean I just showed up. There's a video going around on social media. This guy From Like Yonkers, New York shows up at that, not at LaGuardia, but the other one that's up there and they're interviewing him and they're like, what do you think about the security lines? He goes, I didn't have any. I just walked right up and went through. And they're like, what do you think about I ice being here? He goes, oh, are they here? Oh yeah, there's a couple of them right there. He goes, yeah, I don't like. It's fine.
[00:16:59] Speaker B: Yeah, they're really trying to blow it up.
[00:17:01] Speaker A: And, and then all you see on the news is these lines that are out walk wrapped around the airport. But every. I mean I'm talking about a dozen people that have flown.
[00:17:09] Speaker B: Isn't that crazy?
[00:17:10] Speaker A: So they arrived, went through security like normal. There were no lines. It was not an issue. But I backed that would not be traveling today because of that. But then I keep hearing it's actually not like that showing on the news. So I don't know.
[00:17:24] Speaker B: Yep. Well, that wasn't me in an airport going anywhere. But I did hear about a new packing method called if I say it right because I. I've never tried to
[00:17:31] Speaker A: play so do so Doku. So Doku. Sodoku. Yeah.
[00:17:37] Speaker B: So there is a packing method and it's called the Sodoku packing method.
And it's really cool. Like it.
[00:17:46] Speaker A: It.
[00:17:46] Speaker B: You basically look at it like a tic tac toe. You can make it larger based on your trip, but the standard is you know, three across, three down the side. Tic tac toe method. And everything has a kind of a coordinating color scheme. And you can make. What was it, like, 26 outfits out of 27. Yeah, like 27 outfits out of these. Nine things that you bring as far as clothes go. And then, of course, you. If you bring, like, three pairs of shoes, then you have even more outfits and a couple scarves. You're. So it's a really cool method, and it allows you to pack light but have a whole bunch of options. And that includes even having, like, a little overcoat, you know, things or sweater or whatever. So it, like, that's gonna. I'm gonna. I'm gonna do it next time. I.
Exciting.
[00:18:30] Speaker A: I never really was a great packer, and I didn't do well with packing outfits. And so that makes total sense because then you do have. Oh, me too. I. I packed a ton of stuff and then would get there and I
[00:18:41] Speaker B: was like, over the same three things.
[00:18:43] Speaker A: Me too. And it makes me mad that I.
The whole time and didn't even know it.
I'm bad about. And taking 20 pair of shoes and you end up wearing the same pair.
[00:18:52] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, absolutely.
[00:18:54] Speaker A: I would pack differently probably now than I used to, but, man, I used to take way too many things.
[00:19:00] Speaker B: Now I pack for pain. Like. Yeah, I've got my red light therapy. I've got a little emergency fan if I need it. I've got, you know, a little battery. But everything is based on what if.
[00:19:13] Speaker A: Yeah. I remember when I was living in Europe and traveled to Germany to meet with a client. And I mean, the size of suitcase I took with me full of stuff and trying to lug that on trains, because every. All the transportation was train. And then once you got on the train, you had to lift it above your head to get it. You know, they didn't have, like, you just park it next to. You had to go above your head. And I always had to have these men help me because it weighed so much. I was a horrible packer.
[00:19:42] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:19:43] Speaker A: Packed way too much. So that method seems like the way to go. If you could really figure it out
[00:19:49] Speaker B: and do it, get it nailed out. Well, that's how I'm going to do it next time.
[00:19:52] Speaker A: And the whole Tai chi walking thing, that every time you say Sudoku, I think about. Every time I turn around, there's an ad for Tai.
[00:19:58] Speaker B: Oh, I see that too.
[00:20:00] Speaker A: And they say walking makes you old, but Tai chi walking makes you young.
[00:20:03] Speaker B: It's like, yeah, I don't know. We'll find out.
[00:20:06] Speaker A: I mean, I think Tai chi is actually a really good form of exercise because of the slow movement and the breathing and the blah, blah, blah, blah. But I'm tired of hearing the commercials. You see it. Apparently you have to Tai chi walker you or you're not doing it right.
[00:20:19] Speaker B: Doing it right. But speaking of, like, I've been thinking about, like, why that right side of my leg is always so tight. And I. Because, like I say, I do truly, truly stretch and do all kinds of things to keep it my knee mobile. But I was thinking about, you know, a long time ago, I had a bunion surgery. Yes. I hate to admit it, that I had one at 18.
Yeah.
[00:20:42] Speaker A: Well.
[00:20:42] Speaker B: And they did a really weird method. You know, normally they would pin your toe in place. Well, this doctor used a ligament that he cut and used it to tie that bone over. Well, that ligament pop. Oh, popped loose again.
It never really held my toe in place. So it's kind of special looking. It likes to look the other way from the other toes. Okay. But I was sitting here thinking about how, like, because I wanted. I need to go back to physical therapy and just work on it. Band in that hip. My calf, like, it is all so tight and no matter what I do, I can't get it to feel good like that. Like, I don't need it to. But I have this scar on my calf that, I mean, maybe if you're close to me, you've noticed, but it's about 3 inches long. I did it when I was like 5 years old on a swing set. It's always been there. It still tans with my skin, fortunately. But between that being on my toe, not holding my balance correctly on my foot, if you think about how I have to compensate, it'd be. I mean, it's almost like having being told big, no, big toe maybe. I don't know.
[00:21:43] Speaker A: Yeah, probably.
[00:21:44] Speaker B: And then that scar cutting through my calf muscle. Because I do remember when they were scraping in physical therapy at one point, I was shocked to see how much pain was involved in that scar. I had never messed with it before to know that, well, it all is right there at the top of where that real bad tension is. And so I'm just thinking, like, I really need to focus on myofascial. Is that how you would say myofascial release therapy on that side? Especially because I think between that bunion surgery, the cut in my calf, and of course I've had knee surgery, I think it's all tied together with scar tissue and it's all just pulling on each other in different directions, but nothing is balanced. So, yeah, like, I just feel like that's something I need to. So, I mean, if you think about some of the pains you have, scars could totally. Scars are what. That's what took my mother's life.
[00:22:33] Speaker A: I also think blood flow makes a difference too. On the pain you're feeling?
[00:22:37] Speaker B: Yeah. Oh, yeah.
[00:22:39] Speaker A: With all the stuff that you've had with that leg, for sure.
[00:22:42] Speaker B: I know in the past when I've had them do the scraping, like on my IT band and stuff like that, I was shocked to feel how much my knee started itching. And that's from just, you know, stagnant blood and, you know.
[00:22:57] Speaker A: You know what else would help with that is a vibration plate. Have you tried that?
[00:23:01] Speaker B: Yeah, I looked at it. I looked at it today and I was like. To come out of hiding. That helps.
[00:23:07] Speaker A: Yeah, but it does help with blood flow. I mean, your legs will itch and.
[00:23:11] Speaker B: Yeah, so I need to pull that back out too.
[00:23:13] Speaker A: It's interesting because when my mom was in the hospital, not this last time, but the time before, she had like this medical encephalopy just due to medication and all the things. And she kind of had about a 48 hour period where she was out of it and it was really sad and screaming and I was holding onto her hand and she, in one of these fits, jerked my arm back and it hit the railing on the bed and tore like a muscle in my bicep area. And when I would lay down at night for months and months and months and months, when I would lay down at night, it would just start like the sharpest, intense burning pain.
And the doctor said that's because when you lay down, the blood flow changes to your arm. And it was lack of blood flow to that muscle that was injured. And I mean, I had to sleep with my arm in every contortion possible just to try to keep the blood flow normal because if I didn't, it was excruciating pain. So you don't think about like the blood flow makes such a difference on how at all blood gets to the muscles and. Yeah, so that may be some of what you're feeling too, especially with a surgery.
[00:24:24] Speaker B: Well, and I sleep, I really sleep like in a fetal position, but it, it really creates a lot of pain on my knee. So I've noticed now if I make an effort to just have my leg straight, it's like that pain goes away. Maybe it is because things are flowing better.
[00:24:38] Speaker A: I'm not restricting because I never would have thought about blood flow causing it to hurt. But boy, and even to this day, if I lay with my arm like straight and like try to tuck one hand underneath the leg. Yeah, it, the pain is. Will wake me up and I have to move my arm and I tend to like lift my arm up and like stretch it out and do stuff because it'll.
[00:24:59] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:24:59] Speaker A: Really start hurting.
[00:25:00] Speaker B: First of all, two things hand in hand. Okay. The ordinary lash serum I was using the Babe Lash wasn't disappointed in it. I think it did its thing. But I switched to the ordinary lash and brow serum. Oh my gosh. For what is it? 1415.
It is pretty amazing what it's done in like a two week time. If that crazy works. Hands down, I have not been irritated with it. Nothing like that. But you know, I've always.
Not always, but I had switched to hourglass tubing mascara. I'm a tubing mascara girl. Has to be brown. I've tried lots of different ones. Well, I went to go get some the other day. Long story, ended up not getting it. I found one off of reviews. That elf of all people has a new brown tubing mascara and it's called Lash Extender EXT for extender. And it comes in brown, a soft black and a black. It is so good. I love it. And it's $8.
[00:26:00] Speaker A: Yeah, you can get that at Walmart anywhere.
[00:26:02] Speaker B: Yeah, anywhere.
[00:26:03] Speaker A: Ulta.
[00:26:04] Speaker B: Yep, yep.
[00:26:05] Speaker A: Well, I saw that and it's black
[00:26:06] Speaker B: with a green lid. Just so you know. It's like a different. It's a different kind of packaging.
Yeah, so black with like an aqua green too.
[00:26:13] Speaker A: Well, I saw that women over 60, I shocked that that's a ghost for me. But I supposed to wear burgundy mascara, not black. That anybody over 60 should not be wearing black mascara. And I'd like to report that when you have little lashes like I do, black mascara is necessary. But I would be interested to find burgundy mascara.
[00:26:36] Speaker B: Voluminous makes it. Because I have a burgundy. Of course. I mean my makeup cabinet's ridiculous, but I have a burgundy. And that was the one that I got for it. And I would use like the, the tubing on top and I use that burgundy on bottom. But I just wish it was tubing. So if I could find a tubing that's burgundy, I would do it in Harvey.
[00:26:54] Speaker A: I need to find that because there this one was tubing mascara and it was burgundy. But of course I didn't keep track of it because why? I don't know. Because that's my job to keep track of it. But I didn't. But I'll find it.
[00:27:07] Speaker B: You try the ordinary lash stuff and see if you like it.
[00:27:10] Speaker A: Does it itch your eyes and phase me?
[00:27:12] Speaker B: Because I. I get sensitive.
[00:27:14] Speaker A: I am. That stuff usually makes me go crazy. Like, I can't wear lashes because the lash glue and any of those like Latisse used to set me on fire. The itching and the burning to my lashes.
[00:27:26] Speaker B: If I get sensitive or something.
[00:27:27] Speaker A: You've kicked me like, 65.
[00:27:29] Speaker B: Straighten out this stupid leg of mine. I'm like, oh, we're sitting at a
[00:27:33] Speaker A: table as opposed to our normal chairs. And she keeps me under the chair.
[00:27:37] Speaker B: My leg. I'm like, you know, I remember being in the car with car rides with my parents and my dad. Be like, I gotta stretch out my leg, Dorothy. I gotta stretch out. And I never understood, like, that knee pain, but it is. It's a constant.
[00:27:48] Speaker A: Yeah. Fidget. That's the worst, too. When it's been bent for too long. And then you gotta straighten it out to stretch it.
[00:27:54] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:27:55] Speaker A: Really tough getting old.
[00:27:57] Speaker B: So get my guest room ready for me because if I have a surgery, I'm not going.
[00:28:01] Speaker A: Come on over.
I have. I didn't have a great caretaker, so. Wow, that would not be fun. But I need to have. I'm not having surgery. I'm going to keep doing Peptides. I don't want surgery. Yeah, I can't imagine. But I would check myself into, like, a skilled nursing facility. I'd get insurance to cover skilled nursing, literally, to take care of me. That's what I would have to do. Best way.
[00:28:24] Speaker B: You're not kidding.
[00:28:24] Speaker A: Or a friend. Yeah, that would actually do it.
[00:28:28] Speaker B: Yep.
[00:28:28] Speaker A: All right, well, that's episode 50 in the books.
[00:28:31] Speaker B: We're out of here.
[00:28:32] Speaker A: Share us, follow us. Tell your friends. We love hearing from people that are listening to us.
[00:28:38] Speaker B: Yeah, tell us if you want us to try something, because I'll try it.
[00:28:41] Speaker A: All right, we'll talk to you next week. Adios.