When Life Felt Safe & Simple

Episode 51 April 15, 2026 00:30:05
When Life Felt Safe & Simple
She Sed Podcast
When Life Felt Safe & Simple

Apr 15 2026 | 00:30:05

/

Hosted By

Amy Tidwell Lisa Hardin

Show Notes

Episode 51 of She Sed takes a nostalgic turn as Lisa and Amy look back on how different life felt growing up. Amy shares stories of going to tennis camp as a child and staying with strangers, riding around on a snow cone truck, and traveling freely without fear. Lisa reflects on riding her bike all day with her dog in a basket, picking flowers for her mom, and how safe and simple life once felt compared to today.

From there, the conversation shifts into modern life, including a brilliant marketing campaign by Alix Earle that caught Lisa’s attention and how much impact it had to have made and cost.  They also talk about aging, with Amy highlighting an 80-year-old influencer she admires and joking about what aging might look like for her down the road.

As always, the conversation turns to health and wellness covering new collagen for bone density, magnesium for sleep, sun gazing, and Lisa’s latest peptide addition, KPV. Amy shares a surprising experience with magnesium knocking her out for hours, and the two discuss everything from sleep struggles to the calming effects of music on animals.

The episode wraps with a nod to their growing audience, including men and a promise to start bringing in a few “guy hacks” along the way. It’s a mix of nostalgia, wellness, laughter, and real-life conversation that feels both familiar and meaningful.

View Full Transcript

Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Speaker A: Welcome back to the she Said podcast with amy and Lisa, episode 51. [00:00:05] Speaker B: Hi. [00:00:06] Speaker A: How was your Easter? [00:00:08] Speaker B: It was. I mean, it was Easter. It was great. It was. Without my parents. It's always still an adjustment. Went to his mom's. Her. His family was there, which is my family. [00:00:18] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:00:18] Speaker B: We had a lunch, we went to church, and we went home and rested. I planted flowers. I took my stab at tons of seeds, really. So we'll see how it goes. [00:00:28] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:00:29] Speaker B: Yeah. I didn't direct, so I just did little seed trays. And I've been saving all my to go boxes, trying it this way on some of them that need an early start. We'll see how it goes. I'm hoping I didn't already screw up, but we'll see. [00:00:42] Speaker A: Well, you can replant. [00:00:44] Speaker B: Yeah. How was yours? [00:00:45] Speaker A: It was good. My dad came over, which was really. I was really happy about that because he wouldn't do it last year. He wanted to stay at home. [00:00:53] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:00:53] Speaker A: So. So I was excited because it's our second Easter without her. Of course, she had just passed away a couple weeks before Easter last year, so it was tough, but. And the last time he's actually been to my house was two years ago on Easter. My mom broke her ankle on my front porch. [00:01:08] Speaker B: So you got to have your house all cute and set up for him. And what'd you make? [00:01:13] Speaker A: I did ham and potatoes, baked potatoes and green beans and. Yeah, it was fun. And we both are huge tennis fans, so, I mean, he'll even call me and tell me when someone's playing, you know, so I can watch it because we both just. We always. I remember when he had his first colon cancer surgery, and he was in the hospital after his surgery, sitting on the edge of his bed, watching the Wimbledon on tv. Like, we just love tennis. So we just watched the tennis match that was happening in Houston, and it was fun. [00:01:43] Speaker B: Did you grow up playing tennis? [00:01:44] Speaker A: No. I played a college, but I wasn't very good at it. But we've always. We played it just playing around. We always had it. We had a tennis court right down the street from us, and I just. I've always loved it. I'm not very good at it, but I do enjoy playing it. [00:01:57] Speaker B: You know, I don't think I've ever told the story on here, but we were talking about how much. How things have changed so much. And I'd gone to OSU tennis camp. I. I mean, I was probably seventh, eighth grade, maybe ninth, we'll say eighth grade. And this lady, she was probably in her 50s and I sure wish I could remember her name now. Anyways, she was one of the tennis coaches there and we just really hit it off. I mean I really liked her and. And she lived in a small town here in Oklahoma. I almost want to say Atoka or I don't know, somewhere like that. And she had invited me after camp to come stay with her family for a week in a toca. Somehow my mom and dad said it was okay and allowed me to go stay with this stranger family for a week. We didn't know anything about them. Nothing. For the summer I just get to [00:02:49] Speaker A: go off and play tennis and go. [00:02:53] Speaker B: Family. Yeah. People I don't know, I'm like that would never ever in a million years would I ever let that happen. Now like what? Sadly, I can't even imagine. But it's so funny because now we look back like my brother in law, it's the craziest story that they used to let him, he would jump on a train from Henrietta and ride it to Tulsa or to do her and just get on a train car and ride it to get to his grandma's. That's what it was from Henrietta to do her as a kid. Like as a 12 year old just get on a train car crazy. [00:03:26] Speaker A: Like what I just remember even when I was in, right before college, I think I took the bus, like a Greyhound bus from Oklahoma to Kansas to where I ended up going to school. I wouldn't like now there's no way. [00:03:41] Speaker B: Well, my kids freak out at me getting in the. The snow cone truck and taking a ride around the block. I sure did. That story kills them. I did because it was like you could have like one of those front like steps on the inside. And I was like can I just have a ride? And I just want to sit on that front step in the window. And he gave me a ride and brought me back. [00:04:04] Speaker A: What, that you would die today like you, you would have been murdered? Yes. Somewhere between the. Round the block. [00:04:11] Speaker B: Yes. [00:04:11] Speaker A: So that's sad though that that's where we are. That you can't be. [00:04:15] Speaker B: Yeah, well, yeah, I don't know. That's. That don't do any of those things now. [00:04:21] Speaker A: No. And it's. I hate that about, you know as I, I talk about all the time. When we lived in Colorado, I was, I don't know. We moved there when I was seven and lived there until I was going to be, I don't know, junior high. But I would get on my bike and I'd leave in the Morning and wouldn't come back till that night. I drove all over town picking flowers for my mom. I had a little bike with a basket on it. We had a little. Yes, Peekapoo dog named Misty. Put a little scarf on her, around her, tied it under her neck and put her in that basket. We would be gone all day long. They had no idea where I was. And I come home before dark and it was so much fun. [00:05:00] Speaker B: It really was. Life was good then. Yeah. [00:05:03] Speaker A: And then think about even when our parents were young, how much better life was as far as kids go. And now before Atari and Odyssey and being murdered, if you're out walking. [00:05:14] Speaker B: Yeah, right. [00:05:15] Speaker A: Yeah, sadly. [00:05:16] Speaker B: Thanks. [00:05:18] Speaker A: You know, obviously I own a marketing company, so marketing is a huge thing of mine. And I've been watching the. I know Alex Earl, which is. She was a podcaster and now she was on Dancing with the Star. She's started podcasting in college, I think. I don't really know her background, but anyway, obviously doing tons of things now. She came in second on Dancing with the Stars last season, but she just launched her own skincare line, which of course we love looking at skin care. But she did such a great marketing gimmick on that skin care that I'm like, man, I. I just love that stuff. But she sent out to everybody in her circle, which I don't know how much money she spent on this, but she sent out suitcases, like a, like a carry on size suitcase that was a hard sided silver with a keypad, or not a keypad, but a combination lock on it. And on the outside was this huge puzzle piece. And then in New York in Times Square, they had like a billboard size. A billboard basically, but it was ground level. And every day somebody went out there and put in a new puzzle piece on that. The same that people were getting in the mail. That went on for like two weeks of just teasing, what is this that's launching? It was a new product. We knew it was a new product. Anyway, after two weeks, the final puzzle piece goes on. It's actually her laying there and she's launched a skincare line. And then on that billboard was the combination to the suitcases. So then everybody could open up their suitcase and the product was on the inside. [00:06:41] Speaker B: Wow. [00:06:42] Speaker A: Such a great marketing idea. And so I'm just fascinated with that. It's like, obviously that budget for that must have been who knows how many millions of dollars. [00:06:50] Speaker B: Who knows? [00:06:51] Speaker A: But to have that kind of budget to be able to do stuff like that, so much fun. [00:06:55] Speaker B: And she's a banking. She's laughing all over the bank. [00:06:59] Speaker A: The shop, they sold out literally the day it launched. It was like, within hours. Like, not even. [00:07:07] Speaker B: What's the name of the product? [00:07:08] Speaker A: Oh, gosh, I just went blank. Something that has her name in it. Oh, man, I should have looked that up. Well, we can find it anyway. It's. [00:07:16] Speaker B: It's sold out anyway. [00:07:18] Speaker A: Sold out within hours. And it's may. It's aligned for acne because she's, I guess, suffered with acne through college. [00:07:25] Speaker B: So we don't need that right now. [00:07:26] Speaker A: No. [00:07:27] Speaker B: It's funny. I sent a video. This lady named Sue Bell. She's. I don't know, she's probably 80 and she's out of Florida, I think. And she's your typical, like, just lady out of Florida with money. Just always looks to the nines. She's really a character to watch. I like her, but, you know, her hands look 90, but her face, you can tell it's been pulled back. But her hair is always perfect and hair sprayed. I sent a video to my friend today and I was like, this is going to be me when I'm like, I'm be pointing at my wrinkles saying, fix this, but my fingers are going to be bitten half from arthritis because I'm 99. I'm still like, fix this wrinkle. Do what you got to do. But she's. But she is cute. She's on Instagram and it's just Sue Bell. You need to go find her. [00:08:09] Speaker A: But what I love about that is that somebody at her age is actually because. Become an influencer and is actually. [00:08:15] Speaker B: Oh, and she's so following. She's got a great fall. Every age follows her. Yeah, she's fun. [00:08:19] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:08:20] Speaker B: Like, it's. Yeah. And that's just proof. I mean, there's this girl who is this complete. I mean, granola. I don't even know the last shower she took. But I'm fascinated with watching her. And she is the most insane dancer I've ever. I've never seen anybody move like this. It's incredible. Her teeth are coming out of her ears. But she is the most interesting person. It's just proof. You can find something interesting in everybody if you just give them a chance. But she's so incredibly talented and she's really a very smart person. And I guarantee if anybody, like, even has remotely come across to them, like, I know who she's talking about. [00:09:01] Speaker A: I'm still trying to figure out teeth coming out of her ears. [00:09:04] Speaker B: If you saw them, you'll Be like, nope, she's right. [00:09:06] Speaker A: Those what? [00:09:07] Speaker B: Those teeth are about coming out of her. Like they're just all over the place. Like her teeth are. [00:09:10] Speaker A: Okay. [00:09:11] Speaker B: All over the place. [00:09:12] Speaker A: Okay. I didn't know if that was some sort of like earring. No, no, they're. [00:09:17] Speaker B: Her teeth are just really wild. [00:09:19] Speaker A: But she just fascinating. [00:09:22] Speaker B: She's fascinating, like truly fascinating. Yeah. [00:09:25] Speaker A: Well, you know, I'm always talking about my sleep issues and I was, I had conquered it, man. I was doing well. I went, I mean, I was 80 score 80 for a long time. And then when I had Covid and my sleep was like I was hitting 90s like I thought, man, I finally figured it out. Yeah, no, it's gone down to, you know, I'm barely getting four and three and four hours sleep again. So I was like, okay, this is crazy, there's too many things that can help. And so I was watching that doctor that we like to watch on for Peptides, that Trevor, what's his name? I always get his name, Trevor, Dr. Trevor something. Anyway, he was. Somebody had written in asking for sleep and he said that, that. And I've always taken magnesium glycinate at night and I've done that for a long time and it does help my sleep. [00:10:12] Speaker B: It does help. I think, I think that's what I took last night when I slept so long last night. I'm almost positive I took it, but I took it way too late. So. [00:10:18] Speaker A: Well, I take mine about the time I go to bed and it. And it always was working and I thought I had it figured out. But anyway, he said to do magnesium L threonate and that's more so for the calming of the mind. [00:10:32] Speaker B: Okay. [00:10:33] Speaker A: And it helps with, you know, fogginess and all the brain stuff. You're really supposed to take three suggested, two at night and one in the morning to help. The one in the morning obviously helps your brain fog during the day and keeps you kind of focused. I haven't done the one in the morning, but. So last night was my second night to take it and I both had an 80 score both nights. Wow. I mean, talking six hours of sleep, that's huge. [00:10:56] Speaker B: Yeah, well, I must have scored a hundred last night because I slept till one o' clock today and that was because they walked in to wake me up. No, it was weird time. [00:11:05] Speaker A: Did you go to bed? [00:11:07] Speaker B: It was late. I mean it was probably two. [00:11:10] Speaker A: Oh, okay. [00:11:11] Speaker B: But that's still a lot of sleep. [00:11:13] Speaker A: Yeah, well, one o' clock in the afternoon I'd have the police my Phone was. [00:11:18] Speaker B: It was all. I didn't miss anything important, thank God. But it was a lot that I had to catch up on. [00:11:25] Speaker A: Wow. Don't take magnesium glycinate. [00:11:28] Speaker B: I took it late. I think I took it like at midnight because I was still up and moving around. And so, yeah, if I'd say if you're gonna take it, you really take it like at six in the evening and let it start doing its thing. [00:11:39] Speaker A: Well, I do know that it should be a couple hours before you're ready to go to bed. [00:11:42] Speaker B: Yeah, like six hours. Yeah. [00:11:45] Speaker A: That's so funny. Well, I. It's working so far. And I also, once I got sick, I didn't. I stopped doing the sun gazing. And I've been doing that for the next last two days too. Which I do think that really does get your circadian rhythm back on in. [00:12:01] Speaker B: Yeah. Because that's the only thing that even brought me to life today to get here is. Wasn't the gazing. Because when as soon as I looked up, I got super ticked off because I saw a huge chemtrail and I was not happy. [00:12:11] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:12:11] Speaker B: But I was like, I gotta get my shoes off and I put my feet in the grass and I went out there for 20 minutes and sure enough, I was more energized. And man, there's something to putting your feet in the grass and just getting that current through your body. [00:12:26] Speaker A: And I. But I also love just sitting in the sun. Just I love to go home when I go home at noon, to let my dog out, to just sit out there and just let that sun hit you because there is that vitamin D. It does make a difference. [00:12:39] Speaker B: I love it. [00:12:40] Speaker A: But I definitely have started back in the morning because I get up so early. I'm up at five. Well, they say you're supposed to do that within 30 minutes of waking up. Well, there's no sun at five o' clock in the morning. So then by the time the sun is coming up that I could actually go do it. I'm way past having time to go sit out there because I'm the ideal [00:12:58] Speaker B: time with the sun coming up truly to go out there and do that. Right now. [00:13:02] Speaker A: 7:30. Right now is when from where my house sits, the direction for me to actually have sun that's up high enough, not behind the houses. [00:13:10] Speaker B: And you're looking directly into it. [00:13:13] Speaker A: Directly. [00:13:13] Speaker B: So I wonder if you wear contacts or whatever, should your contacts be out? [00:13:17] Speaker A: I don't know. I don't know how that works. [00:13:19] Speaker B: I'll ask, but you're supposed to do [00:13:20] Speaker A: it for at least 10 minutes. And I don't necessarily look directly at it for 10 minutes, but I'll look up at it for a while and then I'll, you know, I'll check the yard because my dog's out there and. But I'll be always looking in the direction of where the sun is. But you don't have to like stare at it for 10 minutes. But I, I think it works. I. [00:13:37] Speaker B: A lot of people, I mean, swear by it. So, I mean, I know people that do it and they have had nothing but great things to say about it and they've done it for years. [00:13:45] Speaker A: So I'm, I'm back on it again because I do think that really does help me a lot. [00:13:51] Speaker B: And speaking of just electricity and stuff and being vibrational, I found the best website. That or Instagram. It just. If it doesn't make you happy, I don't know, you're just a bad person. That's all I have to say it. This guy, he stumbled across it. I guess he was like at a farm or something and he had his guitar and he was singing. [00:14:14] Speaker A: Yeah, I saw that. [00:14:15] Speaker B: Yeah. And he was just. He just does this kind of acoustic singing it's very easy to listen to. The cows just kind of were drawn to him and they all just kind of started walking to him and started rubbing their face against his guitar and then against him. And they were just really taken back by it. So from what I understand, that's kind of how he started. Well, then he would go to like, he went the. The first one that I saw was him going to this area where there's crocodiles. He sat there and these one crocodile came up and started popping up its head and inched closer and closer. But they were so mesmerized. Before he knew it, like, I don't know, they were like six to eight crocodiles maybe is what I saw. And they all just start surrounding him. I've never seen an alligator smile until I saw this video. And they have full on happy faces on their faces. It's the coolest thing I've ever seen. The page is Plumes official and it's P L U M E S O F F I C I A L. You gotta go see it. It's every animal you could ever imagine that they sing to. And they all react the same way. Lions, tigers, bears, everything just reacts. They're so drawn to the vibration of music. They all calm down instantly and they just want to be near him. [00:15:34] Speaker A: Did you think the crocodiles might be AI. [00:15:37] Speaker B: Well, I did until he finished. Everybody had thought that. But then you go to his page and you see this is what he does. [00:15:43] Speaker A: Like, no, I know, but that crocodile, when it came out of the water and of course I did Mouth, I'm like, that's totally. [00:15:48] Speaker B: I totally thought it did. And then did you watch the whole video? [00:15:50] Speaker A: No, I stopped because I'm like, that's fake. [00:15:52] Speaker B: Oh, no, no, go to the whole video. It's the whole. They all start coming in at the end of it when he stops and he's like, okay, now we've fed him. Like, now what? You can tell that he's like, what do we do now? Because I'm done singing. [00:16:04] Speaker A: Like, how do we now. [00:16:06] Speaker B: What do we do now? Kind of. No, watch the whole thing. You know, it's. It's a hundred percent not AI. You gotta watch the whole thing. And you'll totally get it. [00:16:14] Speaker A: Okay. [00:16:14] Speaker B: It's kind of breathtaking. Like, you'll get chills. It's not. You can tell. [00:16:18] Speaker A: It's. [00:16:18] Speaker B: It's soul feeding to watch it, as crazy as that sounds. [00:16:21] Speaker A: Well, I thought it was interesting until the. That one opened its mouth and I'm [00:16:25] Speaker B: like, okay, that's totally not 100% real. This is what he does. So now I don't. This guy, I don't think, with his page being what it is, because he has partnerships now with some zoos where he goes in and does that. I don't think he would dilute his purpose, his mission, or whatever it is with AI stuff. [00:16:44] Speaker A: Yeah, I think the other seemed legit. But when that alligator opened, or crocodile or whatever it was, opened its mouth, I'm like, no, I know. [00:16:50] Speaker B: I thought the same thing at first. So. [00:16:52] Speaker A: Seems fake. [00:16:53] Speaker B: I'm g. Look, actually I looked into it further before I posted it because I was afraid of the same thing, but. Nah, it's very cool. Plumes official. [00:17:01] Speaker A: Well, the music is so healing anyway. [00:17:03] Speaker B: It really is. [00:17:05] Speaker A: So I know a lady in. Where's she from? Utah. That's. That breeds dogs, which obviously there's a lot of controversy behind that, but their facility is crazy. What they do with these dogs and how the dog. By the time the dog's eight weeks old and goes home with its family, it's potty trained. It's a. On a doggy door. It's crate trained. It sleeps, takes two naps a day. I mean, they really. It's a. It's a. It's not just breeding dogs. It's a whole process. And they bait. I mean, they Teach them how to bathe. So, like, when you get your new puppy, it already knows how to be groomed. And it's not going to be, wow, terrified of the clippers and all that stuff. But they have a huge facility, I mean, a big ranch where they raise these. And it's all like golden doodles or all the different big dogs, but they have miniatures. Anyway, it's fascinating to watch her videos because you can just tell the love she has for these dogs. And they always have puppies. And, you know, the dogs have 10 to 12 puppies, but. And they don't overbreed them. Like, the dogs retire after. I think they have three litters and then they retire their dogs from doing that. But anyway, in their big room where all the dogs stay, they've got whelping beds when they're newborn and they get moved to the toddler area. Then they get moved to the teenager area, they play music. And some of it's to get the dogs prepared for, like, loud noises. So sometimes it's chaotic music, but most of the time it's very soothing just to keep the dog. I mean, it's just getting these dogs [00:18:30] Speaker B: used to it really interesting. [00:18:31] Speaker A: But music is, I think, such a healing thing and such a calming thing to most any kind of animal, a human. [00:18:37] Speaker B: And that's where it's so interesting. When you find out how they've removed, you know, you get into the whole hurts part of it and get into the history of how they've changed the hurts that we listen to over the years back from Gregorian chants and how it was just. It's different now. It's not as healing as it used to be unless you're aware of what you need to be listening to. [00:19:01] Speaker A: So, yeah, it makes a big difference. [00:19:03] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:19:04] Speaker A: Well, I'm trying a new peptide. [00:19:06] Speaker B: Are you now? [00:19:07] Speaker A: Interestingly, it's a peptide called kpv and it's. They're using it now in conjunction with or in partnership with chemotherapy to help keep your good cells healthy while the chemotherapy is killing all the cells trying to beef up your good cells. And it's actually supposed to help with colon cancer, prevent colon cancer. A lot of post cancer patients are using it, the ones that are in remission, to keep. To help kill cancer cells from. Or keep them from coming back. So I've been interested in trying it for a long time, but it's backordered in most places. But anyway, so finally today she said it's still backordered. So the one pharmacy that she uses has it in pill form and so I went. She went ahead and ordered it for me in pill form and I took one today. So I take it every day. Have to keep it refrigerated too, which is interesting. But you know, you all you hear back and forth on should you take them orally because your stomach, the acids in your stomach can break it down. It's not as effective, but we're going to. I wanted to try it. So anyway, I tried it. I got a bottle today and I'm just going to stay on it because it's supposed to keep cancer cells from coming back. [00:20:16] Speaker B: Nice. [00:20:17] Speaker A: I know it's crazy, these crazy peptides. I know I'm not excited about the pill form because I have. Makes sense that your stomach acids would break it down directly into. How long have you. [00:20:28] Speaker B: So you just started it today? [00:20:29] Speaker A: I took one today. I got. Got them today. And you don't feel weird or anything from that? Not at all. Which things do make me feel weird like that. But no, nothing at all. So it's just kind of exciting that these peptides are what's out there. [00:20:43] Speaker B: Yeah, it is very exciting. Which reminds me, there is something that keeps popping up on ads and things like that and apparently it's been around my. My question is why is it becoming such a big hot topic right now? And all I can think of is maybe it's because people are talking about Melanitan one and two, which. [00:21:04] Speaker A: I know what you're talking about. Yeah, what's it called? [00:21:06] Speaker B: Which people have a lot of side effects from those and they don't want to. And that to me that's a little scary, honestly, because they say the Melanitan can bring out your moles. Your, you know, there's some side effects that I'm personally not willing to. To deal with. Okay, so the other one, the way you say it though is, is it exanthus? Hold on. It's in a pill and they say it's an. A lot stronger of an antioxidant than like vitamin E and all that. The one that was recommended was Nutrix Hawaii Vegan Bioastin. As to my eyes just blurred out a S T A X A N T H I N astaxathen. I think that's how you say it. They recommend like 8-12mg a day depending on. And it's supposed to help you tan and that's just kind of a side effect. So it's got that keratin in it. It's not going to be like a heavy tan if you overdose on it, you would be like that. However, it's more about your joint and immune system health. So it's supposed to be really good for your eyes, skin and joint. Like that's what it's really about. But the side effect of it is attaining benefit. But anyways, have you that you've seen that too? [00:22:23] Speaker A: And I, I've heard of the product before and I feel like it's. It's been a few years, but it was in a gum that you could chew that was sort of that same. Not for tanning obviously, but it was more so for helping you with eyesight and immune stuff. But it was, it was a gum. [00:22:41] Speaker B: Yeah. Exana than. I think Exanthan is how you say it. So anyways, that is. I've seen a lot on it, seen [00:22:48] Speaker A: a ton on it lately and I don't know, it's one of those things where you think is it really or is it just influencers hopping on board and promoting it? You, I don't know. [00:22:56] Speaker B: Well, on Amazon, from the actual company that sells it, which I'm like, if you're gonna buy from Amazon, they say at least go to the direct actual company. The reviews seem to be really high on it. I did order it. Imagine that. Anything that's going to help with joint health obviously is. I'm on board to see. So anyways, we'll see what happens. It should get here tomorrow. [00:23:20] Speaker A: If you come in here next week and you look like Glow into Hawaii, [00:23:24] Speaker B: I look like this bag of sunshine [00:23:28] Speaker A: could be all different. [00:23:29] Speaker B: I do remember a guy in high school that did that. I'm sure anybody went to. Duncan knows exactly who I'm talking about. And he had taken these beta carotene pills and he was that bag. He was so orange. Oh my gosh, he was so dark. [00:23:44] Speaker A: I just wonder if it does play a role based on your skin tone. Tone, like if you're olive colored versus cool tones. If that's. If that changes what it looks like, [00:23:53] Speaker B: just jam my cup in there. I don't know. We'll find out. [00:23:56] Speaker A: I know, I was going to say back on that KPV is that I am excited that it's not another injection because I'm telling you, I like a pin cushion with all the different injections. I do. I don't. I do. I used to, but now that I let them get room temperature before I take them, I'm not having the, the side effects. I don't have them. The bruising as much or the red itchy spot near as much. But I still. I had. The other day, I had one, I'm like, geez, I did it everything I was supposed to, but so I'm kind of excited I don't have to pick poke myself again. And then talking about your joint health, you know, Shackley, which I'm a big advocate of, bought the collagen, the liquid biocell collagen that Modere was so popular for and was so helpful. And they just came out with version two or the enhanced version of it. It's plus and it actually helps with bone density. So I'm really excited about trying that because there's not anything on the market that has bone density like that. That's a collagen. So that launched last week. [00:24:55] Speaker B: Nice. [00:24:55] Speaker A: Yeah. So more good stuff. I know I'm gonna try it and see because I always worry about breaking my hip since I fall all the time. [00:25:02] Speaker B: Right. I had my friend of mine, it was funny because he was telling me that he listens to the podcast. I guess he listens to it with his wife and he's like. He was like, obviously I don't listen to it as much. But he's like, it's really good. I actually like, like listen to it because he gets tips from it. He's like, you guys need to add some guy tips to it. And I'm like, well, I remember that. So I told him, I was like, well, tell me some guy hacks that you might come up with and I'll mention it. So we need to kind of. I guess there's some guys that listen [00:25:28] Speaker A: to this and it's exciting. We always thought it was all women, but. [00:25:32] Speaker B: Right. So we'll come up with some ideas. I'm sure some things they walk away with and. [00:25:38] Speaker A: But yeah, we can give some guy hacks. It probably it would be a female hack that a guy could use that would never think of. [00:25:44] Speaker B: Right, right. [00:25:45] Speaker A: Because there's a lot of stuff that we come up with. I'm a guy for everything in my house. Yeah, I remember. What was I helping my dad with? Oh, we were out in his. Like he's got a shed that he puts all his like. Right. His riding lawnmower and stuff in it. He has one of those vent things on top to. To keep airflow through it. And it had released from just high winds that, you know, we have all these high winds lately and so he was out there, wouldn't let me climb on the ladder. But my 90 year old father's on the ladder because I. He knows I would fall off the Ladder and he wouldn't. So he's on the ladder and I'm trying to get him, trying to help him fix it. Well, he's trying to reach up there with both hands, but he's a little bit uncertain of that because he is 90 and he's standing on a ladder. And so I see a clothes hanger and I'm like, dad, just grab this, get this hanger, grab a hold of it and pull it down and then wrap it around the beam because he's got metal beams and the roof of the shit. That's not going to work. I'm like, dad, I'm telling you it is. So finally, after 15 minutes of him trying to do his way and me finally saying, dad, can you just try it this way? And I'm on the ground like trying to make sure he doesn't fall off anyway, he does it, pulls it down and it's still held today. And I had to remind him often that I am a single woman. Figuring it out, that you figure it out, you just come up with. So there's a guy hack for you. Like, yeah, just. [00:27:05] Speaker B: It works. We have a shed out back that has like the eaves, the little vent eaves that are. That dust would obviously blow into. There's really, there's not anything. So I cut some filters that you would have put in your AC vent and I just cut some that fit those eaves, which are probably 14 by 14 maybe. And I just shoved them into the space there so lawn debris and dust doesn't come in there. And I really think it helps keep the dust out of that. Shoved them up in both of those eaves just to help. And then I also put like shower curtain rods or whatever rods, you have sticks, whatever, and hang them across the rafters. And I hang my Christmas wreaths from those or wreaths, all kinds. All my seasonal wreaths hang from those. Making use of those rafters. [00:27:55] Speaker A: Just the spring loaded ones that. [00:27:57] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I just hang them though over the raft and try to spring load them because they'd fall, but. [00:28:02] Speaker A: Oh, I see. Because I use the spring loaded shower curtain rods to hang my garland in my door frames at my house. So those do come in handy. They do. You knew the neuropathy clinic closed down. [00:28:15] Speaker B: I heard that. What the heck? After all that talking, they've closed down. [00:28:18] Speaker A: Yeah. I've been bragging on that company for months now. Yeah, Insurance fraud in frauding Medicaid insurance. Wow. [00:28:26] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:28:27] Speaker A: Shame. I feel bad for all those employees because those girls were amazing. I'm Gonna reach out to one of them on social media. I found her page and just pick her, right. Tell her I'm sorry. I bet you 40 and people lost their jobs. [00:28:41] Speaker B: That's heartbreaking. [00:28:42] Speaker A: They shut it down like. [00:28:43] Speaker B: Yeah. You really thought a lot of them. [00:28:45] Speaker A: I did. And it's just you have a doctor, medical doctor heading it up. That's a criminal basically. And now all these people have lost their jobs and it's thankfully my dad, it really worked for my dad and he's still doing really, really well. And he doesn't need to go back. But I'd be really upset if he was because we had talked about just having him go back for follow up like once or twice a month just to keep him, keep everything healthy. Nothing's changed. He's still doing well. But now that's not going to happen. [00:29:11] Speaker B: That's very sad. [00:29:12] Speaker A: It just makes all doctors look bad because you've got some bad blood out there. It's like, can we not just be honest? And then insurance payers like us don't have to pay out an arm and a leg just because we got criminals working on it. It's really sad. [00:29:27] Speaker B: It's very sad. [00:29:28] Speaker A: All right, well, we're out of time and we do have a YouTube page now. We don't do video because there's only two of us and we don't have somebody to run a video camera. And also Lisa doesn't like to be on a video camera, so. But I did create a video. We can put voice only on YouTube. So we now have a YouTube channel. It's she said podcast. And then of course, wherever you get your podcast, our it's up there and the link is on our social media and we have social media pages. So bring your husbands along and listen to us. We'll give some guy hacks, but we love hearing from everybody and we'll talk to you next week. [00:30:04] Speaker B: Yeah, see ya.

Other Episodes

Episode 2

March 26, 2025 00:24:47
Episode Cover

Spring Break, Aging with Peptides, Stem Cells, knee replacement, Tesla and more!

Amy & Lisa talk about aging and using peptides, stem cells, all things knee replacement and more!

Listen

Episode 4

April 09, 2025 00:27:43
Episode Cover

Prom, Grief, friendship & and SHE SED questions (Vogue Style)

TRIGGER WARNING:  This episode talks about grief and losing a parent(s).  Lisa shares about her mother's memorial service and Amy recounts the sadness as...

Listen

Episode 29

October 09, 2025 00:30:31
Episode Cover

Episode #29: From Lantern Launches to Chicken Fried Therapy

In this episode of She Sed, things get personal, poetic, and—of course—a little unhinged (in the best way). Lisa shares the emotional moment when...

Listen