Tog interviews Pastel Pumpernickel, their first “get” for the new Grackleton Gazette project. Tog learns about Pastel’s battle after a failed baking show pitch at Grack Public Access.
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This comedy audio drama / audio fiction series was created, written, improvised, edited, and produced by Jen deHaan. All dialog in the episodes is fully improvised.
Voices:
Jen deHaan (any voices by guests are noted above)
Artwork, logo, and graphics:
Jen deHaan.
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Transcript
WEBVTT
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::This week on the show, TOG does their
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::first interview for the Grackleton Gazette, a conversation
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::with Pastel Pumpernickel.
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::You're with TOG Chesterfield here on 101.7
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::FM The Grack.
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::I'm trying to pick up the pieces and
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::fix up my life after I hit rock
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::bottom, and I'm taking you along as I
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::try new things and attempt to embrace life.
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::Welcome to the show.
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::Right now it's 5.02 PM.
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::I'll be with you here for your commute,
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::or while you prepare dinner, or while you
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::attempt to make that picture on the wall
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::across from your recliner exactly perpendicular with the
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::floor.
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::I'm your uninvited guest for the evening, or
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::I mean invited if you chose to dial
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::into this FM station, I suppose.
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::Tonight I get to share one of my
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::very first interviews for the Grackleton Gazette.
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::You might remember Pastel Pumpernickel.
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::She was in one of my very first
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::shows here on the station.
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::I took a class from Pastel to learn
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::how to make sourdough and sourdough starters.
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::Anyway, Pastel met me at a coffee shop
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::here in Grackleton where she works.
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::She works there baking all of their bread
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::and pastries for them, and we met really
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::early in the morning before they got busy,
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::and she let me share our interview here
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::on the show.
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::I wanted to share this interview because it
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::has to do with unfucking her life, just
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::like I'm trying to do right now with
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::mine.
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::Oh, speaking of Pastel, Baxter Clutch had to
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::move out because Baxter's mom needed them to
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::move in because of a sock situation.
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::So now Keith Evergreen is moving into my
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::place, who is Eaton Evergreen's brother, and Eaton
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::made a surprise appearance on the same show
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::where you met Pastel.
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::Grackleton is pretty small, isn't it, you guys?
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::This is Unfuck Your Life with Todd Chesterfield
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::on 101.7 FM, The Grack.
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::We'll be back after a quick break with
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::my interview with Pastel Pumpernickel.
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::Unfuck your life with Todd Chesterfield.
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::Back to the show.
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::Pastel and I have some stuff in common.
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::We both lost things that were really important
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::to us.
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::I lost my job at Apocalypse.cloud, and
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::Pastel lost a major opportunity too.
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::She pitched a bakery segment to the Grack
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::Public Access Station.
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::Here's my interview with Pastel, which I recorded
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::over the weekend at a brand new coffeehouse
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::downtown called The Nested Bean Where Pastel Works.
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::Thank you for joining me here, Pastel.
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::So can you tell us what happened at
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::the pitch?
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::Well, Tog, I mean, that's sort of the
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::million-dollar question, if you will.
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::I mean, it was my pitch was literally
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::a million dollars.
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::I mean, for multiple episodes, though, for multiple
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::segments.
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::But yeah, so I had this idea where
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::I wanted to have some drones come in,
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::and that was because I was pitching them
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::an outdoor kitchen where I would bake my
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::breads and my sourdoughs.
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::And it was going to be outdoors, so
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::we had to accommodate for the weather.
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::And I had this fantastic idea of having
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::a drone come in.
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::It was going to be flying in and
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::then over the wood fire stove, and it
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::was going to be fantastic.
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::But they said no.
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::Oh, they didn't like the idea?
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::Well, they said your pitch is a million
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::dollars, and we have no budget.
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::Oh, that makes sense, I guess.
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::Well, I asked them what they were going
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::to pay me with, but they said, well,
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::this is public access, so you're here at
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::will.
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::I mean, they also told me I could
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::use my own million dollars, but then I
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::told them, well, I don't have a million
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::dollars.
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::And they said, well, neither do we.
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::And so it ended up being a no.
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::Oh, well, that's too bad.
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::I mean, come to think of it, it
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::might be a little bit like what happened
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::with your potato thing, Tog.
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::No, it's nothing like the incident.
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::Oh, okay.
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::And that's what led to your depression, the
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::TV pitch?
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::Yes.
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::Okay, so what was the depression like?
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::Well, Tog, I think it was pretty much
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::like any other depressions.
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::I mean, I don't think I was really
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::special in the depression department or anything like
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::that.
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::I mean, I think most people have difficulty
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::in the mornings, and that's where I really
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::noticed it, because I'm a morning person.
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::I mean, look at me here, first thing
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::in the morning, up with the birds, baking
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::all these pastries and this bread.
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::I mean, look at this sourdough right here,
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::Tog.
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::Oh, it's gorgeous.
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::I just lost everything.
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::I used to do this full continental breakfast.
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::It had the beans and the sausages.
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::You like a good bean, don't you, Tog?
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::I know you're into the potatoes.
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::Oh, I like beans too.
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::I sometimes did a hash brown that you
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::would probably like, Tog.
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::Oh, yeah?
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::Oh, it was just fabulous.
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::And I would do some of my sourdough,
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::of course, on the side.
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::Of course.
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::Sop up all that food.
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::It was wonderful.
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::Oh, it sounds lovely, Pastel.
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::Yeah, I just didn't do any of that.
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::Oh, of course.
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::Yeah, that's understandable.
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::Well, it took every morning.
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::It just took hours to complete anything.
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::I mean, Tog, sometimes I wouldn't even brush
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::my teeth.
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::I can't believe that I'm admitting that here.
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::Oh, well, I didn't either, so we'll both
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::admit it.
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::Well, I also had, you know, this distinct
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::inability, I suppose, to just make basic decisions.
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::I mean, I couldn't decide what to eat.
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::I mean, I wouldn't be able to decide
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::between a bowl of cornflakes versus my continental
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::breakfast.
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::I mean, I couldn't decide what to wear.
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::Tog, I mean, I wore a smock all
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::the week long.
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::The same smock.
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::And I would wear it to bed too.
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::Oh, I get that.
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::I didn't change my clothes for long periods
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::of time.
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::I mean, I wore the same sweater yesterday.
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::And I, you know, Tog, I mostly gave
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::up, you know, most of my hobbies.
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::I loved the baking and I didn't do
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::the baking even.
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::I loved to go out in the garden.
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::I didn't do any of those things.
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::Oh, yeah, I love gardening as well.
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::I have a scarecrow.
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::The clutter and the dishes and everything would
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::pile up.
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::But, you know, I am going to admit
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::it here.
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::I mean, I am here for an interview
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::and I should be honest.
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::I mean, for me, it just, the thing
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::that just bothered me the most, and I
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::don't really know why, but it was, it
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::really affected how I did the onions.
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::The onions?
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::Yes, the onions.
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::Well, do explain if you can.
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::Well, it was how I chopped the onions.
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::I have, I guess I'll have to explain
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::this, Tog.
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::Okay, yeah.
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::See, the onions, I had a very particular
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::way that I would chop the onions, Tog.
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::Right.
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::I would take the onions and I would
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::chop them in a very exacting way that
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::actually corresponded with the layer that the onion,
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::well, like the thickness of the active onion
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::layer.
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::So I would chop in such a way
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::where regardless of what layer was in question,
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::every single piece would basically be exactly the
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::same.
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::Can't you do that with like one of
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::those little choppers that have the squares?
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::Well, see, here's the thing, Tog.
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::I believe that if you use one of
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::those onion choppers, that's, it's akin to cheating.
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::Oh, I see.
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::I mean, not like cheating with a part,
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::you know, cheating against your part, cheating, cheating
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::on your partner.
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::It's like cheating on your onion.
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::And Tog, see, I take it very seriously.
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::I tend to, a lot of my self
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::-worth is wrapped up in how I prepare
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::my onions.
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::And you see, my depression affected that.
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::Oh, how you did it.
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::It was very important to me.
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::So I, you know, I just, I ended
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::up, I noticed I was doing a rough
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::chop.
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::Right, oh.
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::Yeah, like a rustic chop, a really rough
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::and rustic chop.
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::And that wasn't who I was.
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::I noticed it with the onions and that
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::just, it was something that I just took
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::as just a definitive sign that I was
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::definitely in a depression if I was producing
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::onions, even just for the household in that
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::manner.
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::Just such a rustic rough chop meant that
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::I was definitely in depression.
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::Right, okay.
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::But what did it feel like, your depression,
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::when you noticed you're in it?
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::Oh, what a good question, Tog.
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::Oh, thank you.
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::I knew it, this.
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::Well, you see, it's like, I mean, a
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::lot of people say getting out of depression
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::is like climbing up a mountain.
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::And I mean, I could say that I
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::was in a valley, but I think probably
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::a little bit more accurate is like I
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::was living underwater and everything slows down and
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::everything is kind of muffled and the surface
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::just seems so far away.
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::But I think maybe it's a little bit
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::more like you're a guppy.
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::Like a fish?
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::Yes, Tog, a guppy, you know, those small
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::fish, the little ones.
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::You see, Tog, guppies, I think, I'm not
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::a guppy expert by any means, Tog, but
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::a guppy has a very particular spot that
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::they would need to live, you know.
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::In order to thrive, if you will.
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::See, I was like a guppy that was
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::in, you know, too deep of the water
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::or just in some place that the guppy
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::wasn't supposed to be.
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::Right, dangerous to the guppy.
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::And you see, I knew that I had
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::to get to another place in the water,
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::but I just couldn't.
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::Right.
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::I think I get it, Pastel.
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::And what happened next?
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::When did things start turning around for you?
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::Well, you see, that's the funny thing, Tog,
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::is just when I was in the depression
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::itself, I really felt, you know, that I
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::couldn't get to that other place because I
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::was this guppy in this deep, weird part
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::of the ocean I wasn't supposed to be
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::in, you know.
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::Right.
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::So what happened was my partner, Puck, they
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::were injured and they really needed my help.
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::And it was really quite simple what they
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::needed, but I was shocked that I was
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::able to provide that.
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::It was just, it was the strangest thing.
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::I mean, by all intents and purposes, I
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::shouldn't have been able to help at all.
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::I couldn't even decide what to wear, Tog.
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::I was wearing my smock all week long,
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::but suddenly I just leapt into action.
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::I had this feeling of terror, Tog.
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::And that feeling of terror just seemed to
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::give me great clarity.
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::It was so strange, Tog.
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::I mean, the fog it lifted, it was
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::like I was lifted to the right part
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::of the ocean for my guppy self.
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::It was only because it was like a
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::five alarm fire in my bakery.
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::It was like it was in the kitchen
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::and blaring and I had to get my
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::prized loaf out of the kitchen before it
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::burned.
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::I mean, Tog, I don't want to make
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::it seem like my partner, Puck, is like
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::a loaf of bread.
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::I mean, a loaf of bread is one
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::of my favorite things and Puck is also
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::one of my favorite things.
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::So I guess comparing my partner, Puck, to
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::a loaf of bread isn't really a bad
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::thing, but I guess it probably sounds pretty
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::weird to most people.
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::But anyways, it was like the fire was
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::in the kitchen and I had to get
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::the loaf out.
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::I mean, Tog, I had this fear, this
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::terror, if you will, that if I didn't
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::do the right things, that my partner would
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::never get better and without my support, maybe
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::they would leave or maybe the whole house
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::would collapse or something awful would happen.
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::So whatever that was, it just suddenly made
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::me not really in the depression anymore.
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::So what did you do then when you
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::realized you could do things again?
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::Oh, well, that's a good question, Tog.
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::Thank you.
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::I'm new at this.
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::I found myself just kind of able to
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::do all these things that were entirely impossible
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::before.
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::I was able to organize some of the
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::appointments that we needed to go to and
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::I was able to keep the house functional
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::too and I was able to actually cook
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::again.
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::I was making my continental breakfast and all
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::these nutritious meals as well.
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::I mean, I made this meal, Tog.
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::It was just fantastic.
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::Oh, you would like it, Tog.
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::It was actually potato gnocchis.
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::I took the potato gnocchis and I just
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::fried them in butter.
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::Oh, it was so good.
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::And I fried them in the butter and
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::then I went and I roasted them in
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::a wood burning stove that I have.
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::I have it off my back deck.
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::I guess I could have filmed the show
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::there on my back deck.
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::Oh, anyways.
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::See, I roasted them in my wood stove
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::and then I just threw some arugula on
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::top and a little bit of balsamic vinegar.
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::Oh, oh, it was so good.
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::Oh, and then I took...
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::Oh, Tog, you'll like this because it's potato
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::gnocchis.
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::And then I took some of the red
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::pepper flakes.
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::You know what I call them, Tog?
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::RPFs?
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::You'll never guess.
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::RPFs.
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::Oh, you were right.
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::Yes, I do call them RPFs.
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::You call them RPFs too, Tog?
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::I do, Pasta.
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::Oh, see, we're connecting over RPFs.
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::Who would have thought?
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::Anyways, yes, it was just a fantastic meal.
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::So why do you think you could suddenly
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::do all those things?
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::Well, I think it was the fear, you
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::know.
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::It was a non-paralyzing fear.
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::I mean, usually we get fear, we're paralyzed.
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::But this was like fear that was motivating.
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::Like I was motivated by the fear.
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::It like booted my behind into action.
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::And it was like stronger than the depression,
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::I suppose.
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::But what I figured at the time, Tog,
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::and I mean, this is where it gets
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::kind of real, is I felt that that
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::wouldn't last forever.
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::And then I kind of got fearful of
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::that.
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::Like, when is this going to be over?
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::You know, when is this not going to
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::work anymore?
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::So it kind of helped me a little,
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::to be honest.
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::But I knew it wasn't going to necessarily
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::be reliable, you know.
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::At least that's what I reckoned.
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::So I used it as my opportunity to
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::have enough energy to get myself out of
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::that ocean as the guppy, you know, to
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::kind of flop my way up to the
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::right part of the ocean.
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::And then I could, from there, kind of
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::fix myself, if you will.
403
::Do you understand what I mean, Tog?
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::Yeah, I do.
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::I do understand, Pastel.
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::But do you, though?
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::I think I do.
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::You think you do?
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::Yes.
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::Oh, that's good.
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::Anyways, I just didn't know if I made
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::sense.
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::Oh, I think you make sense.
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::So how are you like digging yourself out
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::and protecting yourself from falling into the ocean
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::again?
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::Well, Tog, now I have my routines.
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::And I mean, now I'm working here as
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::well, which really helps.
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::But I also have routines, even when I'm
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::working, that I, you know, the ones that
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::I make myself.
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::So here, let me show you.
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::This is my book.
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::Oh, that's nice.
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::Can you see?
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::Yeah, it's got a grid.
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::So I have my full schedule on here.
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::And actually, it shows me that I have
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::to leave this conversation at 7.32. Oh,
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::that's coming up close for us.
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::Well, yes, we are, actually.
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::And I also, I watch for the warning
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::signs of executive dysfunction.
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::And what's that?
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::Well, the onions, of course.
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::Oh, of course.
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::Rustic chop.
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::And it's time for the weather.
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::Tonight's weather for your drive at five with
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::Un-Fuck Your Life is brought to you
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::by the nested bean on 10th and Stern
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::Street, where the beans are roasted darker than
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::Grackleton's secrets.
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::Oh, saucy.
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::Night, Grackleton is expecting about three water millimeters
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::of rain north of 10th Street, but significantly
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::less than elsewhere.
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::You just learned all about the weather.
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::And that's it for the weather on your
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::drive at five from the nested bean.
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::The nested bean.
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::Our coffee is like Grackleton weather, surprisingly intense
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::and oddly satisfying.
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::Oh, well, that's saucy.
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::Un-Fuck Your Life with Todd Chesterfield.
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::So my interview with Pastel revealed a lot
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::about her experience looking after her partner, Puck,
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::but also about her own mind.
460
::I had no idea Pastel had been through
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::so much when I was taking her class.
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::That's the wild thing, listener.
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::You never really know, do you?
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::But Pastel taught me something about getting motivated
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::to change yourself.
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::Sometimes it might be because of your fear,
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::a fear of something being worse than if
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::you don't act right away.
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::And I realized that maybe I've been doing
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::all these things, all these businesses and adventures
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::that I've told you about, because I'm fearful
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::of being a permanent disappointment to people like
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::after losing my job or becoming irrelevant in
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::the community in Grackleton because I no longer
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::go to a workplace.
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::Or what if I never find meaning again
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::in the things that I do?
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::But if I just use those things to
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::push me to un-fuck my life, I
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::don't think that it will last a long
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::time.
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::Just like Pastel said.
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::Like her, I need to find some kind
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::of intrinsic motivation based on the things that
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::Todd values, on the things that I want,
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::not just try to escape from the things
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::I fear and...
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::Hey, Todd there, buddy.
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::I am really, really sorry for bugging you
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::here, but I have a really, really, really,
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::really quick question for you, man.
492
::Okay.
493
::So I was looking at the situation down
494
::in the kitchen and I just wanted to
495
::see if it was okay.
496
::I got your note there about using half
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::your fridge, but I'm like, I don't need
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::to use half your fridge.
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::I could actually just use my own if
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::that's okay with you.
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::Oh, you brought your own fridge along?
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::Yeah, I usually roll with my own fridge
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::when I move into places.
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::I bring my own fridge and I like
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::put it next to the fridge that's in
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::the place that I'm coming into.
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::Like I was wondering if you're okay with
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::that.
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::Yeah, I suppose.
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::I guess that's okay.
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::Yeah, I'm pretty sure I can make a
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::fit.
513
::I got a crowbar in my car.
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::I could just, I just usually winch it
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::in a little, just a little bit of
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::a winch.
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::Oh, a winch with a crowbar.
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::I'll see, I'll see if it works.
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::Are you okay with me seeing if that
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::works?
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::Yeah, go look.
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::Awesome.
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::Okay.
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::I'll just close the door here for you
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::there, buddy.
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::Okay.
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::So that's it for this week's episode of
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::the show here on 101.7 FM The
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::Grack.
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::Stay tuned for mailbox decor, jazzing up your
531
::mailbox with Marianne Foote, but with an intentional
532
::emission of bedazzling.
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::What the?
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::You have been listening to Un-Fuck Your
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::Life with Tog Chesterfield, a Stereo Forest production.
536
::This episode was written, directed, edited, produced, and
537
::all voices were by Jen DeHaan.
538
::You can find all show notes and sign
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::up to get notified about new episodes on
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::StereoForest.com.
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