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Plaintext
Episode: 3251
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Title: HPR3251: Opposing Views on Alcohol
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3251/hpr3251.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:43:43
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio Episode 3251 for Monday 18th of January 2021.
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Today's show is entitled, Opposing Human Alcohol.
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It is hosted by Windigo and is about 31 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, Windigo and Mrs. Haka, and you'll discuss a view on alcohol.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hello, Haka Public Radio.
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This is Windigo and I'm with Mrs. Honeyhume.
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And we're going to talk about how we can't agree on things.
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Actually, we're going to be talking about how we have very different opinions on certain subjects, many of which.
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But today, we're going to talk about alcohol in particular.
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Would you like to state your position for the record?
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I am pro-alcohol.
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That sounds awful.
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Do you want to elaborate a little bit?
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I believe you should be able to partake in libations responsibly.
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That sounds better.
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And I think alcohol is pants.
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I hate it.
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I don't understand why anyone would drink it or imbibe it or whatever.
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I understand like it has practical uses and I understand the process of making it sounds fun.
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I have no qualms about making alcohol, but I have never been drunk, never really drunk,
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just abstain in every form.
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I have not.
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I have been drunk and I drink alcohol periodically.
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Yeah.
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And just so we're clear, like we are opposite ends of the viewpoint spectrum.
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But you don't...
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No, I'm not an alcoholic.
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You're not an alcoholic.
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You rarely drink.
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No, yes.
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But, you know, in college.
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Yeah.
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Every weekend.
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Mm-hmm.
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Yeah.
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Sometimes on Thursdays.
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Sometimes on Thursdays.
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Yeah.
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I don't know if that's good or not, but it doesn't sound bad.
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It's normal.
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Mm-hmm.
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No, I've seen you in ebraid and that's another thing.
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I don't only dislike drinking or getting drunk myself, I am not fond of inebriated people
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or people inviting near me.
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It's just the whole thing.
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The whole circumstance I dislike.
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But that's also because you haven't been in it.
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You haven't felt it and the freedom and liberation, I guess that comes with liquid courage,
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if you will.
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Yeah.
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Well, none of that appeals to me.
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I don't feel like I need any extra freedom, like chemically induced.
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I feel perfectly free of it is.
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I don't need any alterations to my personality or my perceptions.
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You don't think it would help with like social anxiety or social situations to kind of have
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an edge taken off?
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Maybe.
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It also might help you kill a man.
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It doesn't mean I'm looking for that kind of edge.
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I'm not saying to get wasted and kill someone.
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I'm saying.
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No, that was a facetious like extreme example for sure.
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I'm saying to have a drink and enjoy that beverage and it's delicious flavors.
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And the little bit of like warmness you get in your cheeks and that little bit of like,
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I can do almost anything because it's good.
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Well, so except for that last point, this is another thing that baffles me.
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None of those related to alcohol except for the dropping of your inhibitions.
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And that part I hate.
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I hate the thought that I could drink a beverage and all of a sudden I'm okay with doing something
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that's stone cold sober.
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I would not ever do like dancing.
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Stay tuned Hacker Public Radio.
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No, it's you're right.
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Maybe I would be more interested in dancing if I was drunk.
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Maybe.
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I just I don't know.
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None of that appeals to me.
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I don't want my inhibitions lowered.
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I have taken a lifetime to raise them exactly where they are.
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But you're also missing out on flavors.
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Kind of.
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They have non-alcoholic drinks and often people will say, you have to try this alcoholic
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drink.
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It tastes just like this non-alcoholic thing that you like.
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It's like, I'll just eat it.
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I don't know.
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I have no example right now.
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I'll eat a s'more if they had a s'more drink.
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I don't know if they have a s'more drink.
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But like wine, there's nothing else that tastes quite like wine.
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Like we drink sparkling apple cider and we've had sparkling grape juice and they're very
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good.
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Yeah, but they're fruity.
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But they're fruity.
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They're not the same as having a wine.
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And I feel like that's, or rum, you know, there's, I love a spiced rum and there is nothing
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else that tastes even remotely close to that.
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Suppose, I know my grandmother makes rum balls and I love those.
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And up until a couple of years ago, I was under the impression that she cooked the rum
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alcohol content out.
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That might not be the case.
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And they might have just been keeping the kids quiet at Christmas.
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So you might have consumed alcohol without realizing it?
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Oh, I'm sure I've consumed alcohol before, but I've never, as to my knowledge, I've never
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consumed alcohol to the point where it would have any of the fancy, dancing effects that
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people seem to like.
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Like what, besides the rum balls, what else have you had?
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Um, this is going to be super silly, but I have had a caloua and milk mixed drink once.
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When was this?
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It was on Christmas Eve with my mother.
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How old were you?
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Um, legally, I was 21.
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Okay.
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Um, I, I don't remember when, but, um, it was a long time ago.
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And, um, it's like, I didn't feel any effects.
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I don't even remember how it tasted.
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Is it cool or coffee?
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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So it probably tastes like chocolate.
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So it's like a, okay.
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So it probably tasted like I was drinking a mocha for something when it's paired with
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chocolate.
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I, when it's paired with, um, I think half and half, it's a white Russian, mm-hmm,
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like in the Big Lebowski.
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Yes.
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Yeah.
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I don't really know if that was a collouin, no, but I guess that makes sense.
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Yeah.
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No, but it's like, I don't think coffee and liqueur tastes like coffee.
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Okay.
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It tastes like sugary, sweet, better than coffee flavor.
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With, you know, some aftertaste.
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I guess.
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I don't, so I don't know.
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It could be that there's this whole world of flavor that I'm missing out on.
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But I have coffee.
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I have all the other delicious foods out in the world.
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I don't think, and there's, um, cooking wines and things, I'm sure I've had those
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flavors in meals, if not, like just a glass.
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Maybe, maybe you have, yeah, I don't know.
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I don't know.
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It's been a long time since I've gotten inebriated and being the age that we are, it's different
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when you're older, the hangovers, much more intense and almost not worth it.
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Yeah.
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You're young, you can kind of bounce back and go to work the next day, but when you
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get old, it's like, you've got a plan for the whole next day to be sick, and that's not
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worth it anymore.
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No.
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And I'm, so I'm sure that that's an experience when you're younger.
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I don't think anyone would argue that I'm losing out by not getting plastered.
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No.
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No.
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No.
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So I think our differences are just, you feel that like on special occasions.
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Yeah.
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And when the moment strikes, you like to have a drink.
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Yes.
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And I have never had a point in time where I thought, I wish I had a drink for this, or...
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Well, I think it's like one of those activities where you come together and experience.
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Like, when we taste test food, you know, you taste the food, I taste the food, we experience
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it, we have a different, you know, interpretation and some you like and some you don't, and it's
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like that, but in a different flavor profile, alcohol.
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And so it's like, when you, it's like, people go wine tasting, people go whiskey tasting,
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and they develop a sense of understanding the subtleties and the mixes and the flavors
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and things like that.
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And it's like an experience that people do together.
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And that's not an experience that we have together.
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Yeah, that's true.
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We've never shared a drink.
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No.
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And I do know that there are several people.
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There's some HVR contributors.
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I have a co-worker who loves whiskey and is very, very particular about the, I don't know
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how to describe anything.
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So like, mouth feel is that a thing?
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Yeah.
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He has like flavor notes and all those fancy words to describe the alcohols he enjoyed.
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I just, I have no interest, not, not one bit.
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Well, and that's it.
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I think there's a bit of like, like I had a glass of wine the other night and it was so
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good.
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And I know that this tastes so good and this is a great experience and it's enhancing,
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you know, this evening.
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And you're not even going to try that or participate in that.
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Yeah.
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Because it has alcohol in it, but like, that's like your line, you won't cross.
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And I'm like, this wine is so good, you need to try this, you need to taste this and
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you're like, nope.
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Well, a part of it I think is because I'm worried I will like it because I have a very
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addictive personality and I drink, you know, we make a pot of coffee a day and you have
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a cup.
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And I have the rest.
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I tried Minecraft once, 10 years ago, and I've played it almost every single day since.
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And I have never played an online massively multiplayer game because I wouldn't stop.
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So I feel like there's a part of me that doesn't know if I would handle taking a drink,
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like a real drink and feeling the effects.
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It should be noted that I couldn't be with you if that happened.
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Like I grew up with an alcoholic and I could not like live with one again by choice.
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So yeah, for sure.
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I support you.
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I just don't necessarily understand it.
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Yeah.
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No, you're not twisting my armor.
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No.
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And I should say not many people have, like there are people who've been baffled and especially
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when I went to England for Ogcamp, the first two.
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People were just downright perplexed.
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That was a thing.
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It was like, just did not occur to people.
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Which is fine.
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But it's kind of a kind of a decision to understand each other.
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Oh, well, it's, you know, it's in my head, so I don't think there is like, I get it, you
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know, I'm sure there's other people who just abstained from that kind of thing.
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Yeah.
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And some people have like genetic dispositions that they're worried about and some people
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are allergic.
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Well, that's it.
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D, if he has any alcohol because he had his liver replaced when he was so young, he
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cannot.
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He cannot have it.
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Yeah.
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And when you say young, it was when he was a baby.
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Yeah.
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When he was a baby.
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Yeah.
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He didn't try drinking a lot.
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No, no, no.
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He's not even a baby yet.
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But he knows in his mind that that is not anything that's going to be able to be part
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of his life.
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Yeah.
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Because of that.
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So there are people that don't really have a choice.
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And speaking of age, I often wonder if it's our culture in the, in the US because the
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drinking ages 21 and it's something a lot of kids do is as a rebellious phase in, when
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they're in high school.
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We had prohibition in our country for a long time where it was illegal to sell or, I don't
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know if it was illegal to drink alcohol, but it was definitely illegal to sell it.
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Yeah.
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So I wonder if I'm just reacting to those statements.
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Well, and when I was young, my parents would let us taste what they had.
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And we were never interested in it because mostly it was beer.
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And I don't drink beer as an adult.
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I don't find any interest in it.
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I know it's an acquired taste, but I don't want to take the time to acquire it.
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So I only drink the things that I think are tasty.
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And I didn't drink until I was 21.
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Yeah.
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I was a rule follower.
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Goody two shoes.
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For sure.
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I was like, I'm not going to, it wasn't worth the risk, you know?
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Yeah.
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And now as an adult, I know that the brain isn't done like forming until at least 25.
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So introducing any substances that are not natural, such as, you know, drugs or alcohol
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before your brain is fully formed, you never know the life long, like, damage that
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I do.
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That's true.
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Which is what I preach to my students because, you know, I try to tell that to them.
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Like, you don't know the long-term effects of the things that you are choosing to do
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now.
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So, like, just don't do it.
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It's stupid.
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Yeah.
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You know, part of it, part of me makes me question whether it was cultural or not.
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Like, if we were in Italy and wine was served at every meal for young and old like, maybe
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you would be.
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No.
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Oh, like, if I was born in Italy, you raised there.
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So I don't know because alcohol was a big part of my family and not like in a problematic
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way.
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I mean, sure.
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Some of them.
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And that they make their own wine?
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Yeah.
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I have a very Italian family in the Paris-Gondolas.
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They make their own wine every summer.
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I would love to go down and do that.
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And that's one of the best receptions to me not drink that I've ever gotten.
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My mother was talking to our cousin and they said, you should come down and make wine
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with us.
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Bring your son.
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And my mother said, oh, he doesn't drink.
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And they stopped for, like, maybe a split second and said, well, he's designated driver
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then.
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But you also don't enjoy being around and liberated people.
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Yeah.
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I really don't.
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And that might also be family-wise because my family enjoyed drinking.
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My grandfather was a liquor distributor.
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One of my grandmother always had a martini and my mother, after he had passed away, realized
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that when she smelled her father, he had a very distinct smell and it turned out that
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smell was gin.
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Yeah.
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And she realized it afterwards.
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And he wasn't like, if he was drunk, it didn't affect him in any way that I could detect.
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He was always just grandpa.
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It's interesting because I, because of growing up with an alcoholic, know that day after
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smell on people, like, if you had beer the night before, there's a certain smell that people
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have next day.
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And it's like, I can tell what you were doing the other night.
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I don't think it's something that the average person could probably just pick up on.
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But if you're used to it, you know, like your mother and the gin, you just get it.
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You associate it and you understand.
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Yeah.
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So, yeah, I do not enjoy people in there and they breed it.
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And part of that was because I got mostly exposed when I was younger, not like, you know,
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when I was a child, but when I was a teenager and my friends were drinking and everyone
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was being stupid.
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And it just, there's a level of anxiety that comes up when I'm around people who are
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drunk because I don't know who they are anymore or what they're going to do.
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Yeah.
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I don't know what people are capable of and that I think I'm very interested in control.
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I like to control my surroundings, preaching to the choir a bit.
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Listen, I know how to relax sometimes though, but no, there's this, I, okay, when drinking
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alcohol, there's this point, right?
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It's like, oh, this is good.
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And then there's the warm fuzzies and then there's a tipping point when you're like, you
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feel really good and you can do anything.
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And then you go over the hill and you get sloppy and you don't remember and you think you're
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talking quiet and you're actually talking loud or, you know, your speech is starting to
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slur and you don't necessarily realize it.
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But there's this, it's almost like a peak like you get up to this point and when you're
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not that point, it feels really good.
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Like that's when that level of like before you lose control, I guess, is really intoxicating.
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Oh, yeah.
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I, none of that sounds appealing, not, not any of it.
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Okay.
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Well, it also depends on who you are because there's like, in my opinion, different kinds
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of drugs, you know, there's anger.
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Angry drugs.
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There's happy drugs.
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There's the people that think they can dance.
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There's the people who suddenly love everybody, you know, and like, we played in college
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a lot of games and it would seem I was getting better at the games when I was like getting
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up that peak almost, you know, I was like, like I said, on top of the world and like feeling
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brave and like saying things to people and just super friendly.
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So yeah, there's different types of drugs.
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And it's funny that you mentioned that because I've slowly become more tolerant of being
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around people who have been drinking and I think it's partially because all of the people
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I've been around have been more mature and maturing.
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But you know, maybe I'm getting better, I don't know.
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But the first time that I realized I was getting better, it was when we were playing
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settlers of Catan and our, would they be house guests?
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Our hosts?
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Our hosts were drinking and they were a husband and wife and the wife was very drunk.
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And I did not realize it because this was the first time I had met her and you told
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me later how funny that was because she does not get that way around people.
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And the only thing that happened was she got very giggly and was very okay with trades.
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And her husband was taking advantage of it because he's a monster.
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Yeah.
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No.
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And you want to trade me some lumber?
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Sure.
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Sure.
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Yeah.
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No, she's a happy like congenial person anyway.
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Especially when she has alcohol and she's not, she's a mother of three children and a
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special ed teacher and not someone that let's go a lot because she's often taken care
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of others.
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So to see her that way, it was like maybe the second time I had ever seen her like that
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in my life.
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And I was like so surprised.
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And I thought it was hilarious because I was like, I can't believe she let herself go
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like that.
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She had so much fun.
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It was a great time and it was really kind of cool to see.
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And then you were like, what?
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I didn't realize that at all.
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Yeah.
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I mean, she was obviously being very silly, but this is the first time I met her.
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So she could have just always been that way.
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No, she's a silly drunk.
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Mm-hmm.
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You know, some people get aggressive.
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I mean, everyone has their own reaction.
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And I think that experience of getting inebriated and finding out that kind of side of yourself
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is, I don't know, I'm not saying it's essential.
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It's just something that I think writes a right of passage or almost, you know, that people
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go through.
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Nope.
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No thanks.
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So as the person sitting inside of my head all the time, I am perfectly okay keeping some
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doors closed.
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It's like, I don't like, what if I'm a vile, hateful drunk person who just goes after
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people for no reason.
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I don't want to do that.
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But living in what ifs is like lame.
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I agree.
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So let's shut that down right now.
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No.
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There's no what if.
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Okay.
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Mm-hmm.
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I'm just saying, if you're in like a comfortable place with people that you trust.
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Well that's it.
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They would be the people I would not want to expose to that person.
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No thanks.
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I guess.
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I don't know.
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No.
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Maybe if I was locked in a bunker.
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By yourself?
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Sure.
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No.
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If you think drunk by yourself is sad.
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I wouldn't be doing it every weekend or anything.
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Just a one time experience.
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Yeah.
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I guess.
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I don't like that.
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You wouldn't know how you were.
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We recorded on a videotape that I could destroy later.
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Hmm.
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You don't have a concrete bunker.
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Do you?
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No.
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But someone out there might.
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They might offer it up at the end of this.
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And.
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This is not what I thought was going to happen during this episode.
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You brought it up.
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If we get.
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Like comments offering an undisclosed location.
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Good grief.
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Yeah.
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|
I just think it's a piece of the puzzle.
|
|
An experience to being an adult, I guess.
|
|
That I feel like you're missing out on.
|
|
And it's something that we don't get to participate in together.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Well, we've.
|
|
So we've had differences in opinions on experiences in general before.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Like I.
|
|
More episodes.
|
|
More episodes.
|
|
I argued that I didn't think.
|
|
Live music was that pick of a deal.
|
|
And you have you've pulled me over on that one.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I'm going to add to the list.
|
|
No.
|
|
We don't need a bigger list.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
You're actually keeping a list.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
A little list.
|
|
Mrs. Honey Hume just turned her iPhone around and showed me the list.
|
|
And there's seven items on it, I think.
|
|
So.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I thought that was a.
|
|
Expression.
|
|
But no, you have a text file.
|
|
A literal text file.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
So yeah, scratch music.
|
|
That's fine.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
But I.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I don't think I value experiences as a whole as much as you do.
|
|
I wonder if there's anything to do with like the senses.
|
|
Oh, like back to how you can.
|
|
You can smell when someone's been drunk.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Because you just have a very heightened sense of smell.
|
|
Unfortunately for you.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But like an alcohol is an experience in flavor.
|
|
And in like.
|
|
It's a whole body thing.
|
|
Mm-hmm.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And drinking just.
|
|
You drink water.
|
|
You drink coffee.
|
|
Like drinking feels like a natural way to get things in your body.
|
|
So this is just a way to get something in your body that makes you feel more fuzzy.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But I don't.
|
|
I wouldn't.
|
|
Like the method of getting it into me isn't what's holding me up.
|
|
It's the reaction that your brain will have.
|
|
It's the reaction it might have.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I don't like the possibilities.
|
|
I don't like what I've seen of certain people on their drunk.
|
|
And some people are just fine when they're drunk.
|
|
But.
|
|
No.
|
|
And especially my family has a very mixed possibilities.
|
|
Like you mentioned there's some people that angry and some people that get friendly.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
They're drunk.
|
|
There's I have a pair of cousins who are brothers who are one of one of them is each of those.
|
|
And they're like jekyll and hide.
|
|
So that one of them's kind of rough and angry when he's sober.
|
|
And then is the nicest guy in the world when he drinks.
|
|
And then one of them is the nicest guy in the world when he's sober.
|
|
And you get the picture.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Oh.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I think this is just one of those things that's going to be agreed to disagree.
|
|
Oh, I would be very surprised if any of these episodes ends with, you know what, Mrs. Honey?
|
|
You're right.
|
|
Or, you know, when to go?
|
|
You've got a point.
|
|
No.
|
|
I think this is just-
|
|
We've been together 16 years.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
These are the awkward bricks that fit together just right enough to make our foundation strong.
|
|
I think that that friction keeps us interesting.
|
|
You know, we're not-
|
|
Yes.
|
|
You know, we're not just a personality that are melding together.
|
|
We have these things that are just we feel strongly in one way or the other.
|
|
And I think that keeps, I don't know.
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
I think I'd be of the opinion that if we didn't have these differences, one or both of us would get bored.
|
|
I would.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
I don't know if I would get bored or if I feel like my personality would push over you.
|
|
Mm-hmm.
|
|
Because I'm not someone who would have it the other way.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So.
|
|
Or I could see that.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No, I like that you kind of bump up against a grain a little bit.
|
|
Mm-hmm.
|
|
Which is good.
|
|
For the long term.
|
|
Well, until I get aggravated.
|
|
And then you lap in my aggravated face.
|
|
And that makes me more frustrated.
|
|
And that makes me more frustrated.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Is-
|
|
Is the fact that you're angry funny.
|
|
No.
|
|
It is not.
|
|
You're laughing right about it.
|
|
It's not funny.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Don't you feel like what you think of me?
|
|
The creed to disagree.
|
|
Oh my goodness.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So do we have anything else to talk about for alcohol?
|
|
Mm-hmm.
|
|
Don't drink and drive.
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
There's no question about that.
|
|
I know, but like whether you like alcohol or not do responsibly, of course.
|
|
Of course.
|
|
Everything in moderation.
|
|
Yeah, but no.
|
|
Seriously, don't drink and drive.
|
|
Right.
|
|
Like it's not worth it for you or others. Yeah, we can find you a concrete bunker if you want.
|
|
Or like a taxi. Sure. Yeah. Uber if you want. Oh, that's not a thing. I don't drive.
|
|
Yeah, that'll be another episode. So I don't have any problems if I do drink alcohol. Yeah.
|
|
There you go. Why I can't drink. I'm the eternal designated driver. Listen, I put on a train once.
|
|
Okay, public transportation is okay too.
|
|
Is there a warrant out in Boston that I should know that? No, that was a real embarrassing night.
|
|
That's another thing. Alcohol makes good stories. No, it makes good bad stories. Okay, but yeah,
|
|
everyone loves telling a good this time. I got drunk story. I've got plenty of good stories about
|
|
other people being drunk. There you go. There's another reason I don't drink because
|
|
my friends that did drink got in a knife fight and ended up in my apartment two in the morning. So
|
|
I'm sure that the people of HPR have awesome stories of things that happened when they had alcohol.
|
|
Yeah, and if they do, they should record them and send them in as an episode. So I can listen to them.
|
|
Oh, that'd be awesome. I listen to all of them. Totally. And I would connect with them. I'd be like,
|
|
oh, yeah, I've been there. I've done that. Oh, yep. And you'd be like, this is stupid. Never, never me.
|
|
We're good. Okay, well, I think that's all we have to say. What is? Do you have anything you want to
|
|
say in closing? Happy New Year. Happy New Year. It's the day after Christmas. When we're recording this,
|
|
I don't know when it will go out, but I'm so excited. 2020's coming to an end. Yes. If I ever
|
|
was going to drink, it was going to be this year. But everybody have a good New Year's New Year's
|
|
Eve show if you make it. And we will see you later. Bye.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was found
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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