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Yeah, thank you, Kevin. I appreciate you taking the time today. I hear rain everywhere, but out here, man, it's freaking gorgeous in the mornings, and we've been counting the sun is up. Not a cloud in the sky, but it's perfect. It is, uh, lost my temperature, 53 degrees. I'm not even losing. Now I have this thing. I like to wear shorts as long as I possibly can. And I try to go for November 1 to put on my big boy pants. Oh, I don't know if I'm going to make it this year. I was listening. I heard about the Farm and Development Act and predicting for the Midwest. It's going to be a real son of a gun. We'll wait and see. I know we've already fallen off the tree. But, um, it's been good to have a nice competition with Kevin for about an hour. He was chatting about everything. I mean, the sun. No phone, the bikes broke out. He was enjoying each other's company. He kept me out there when I needed it this morning. I was really dragging there for the last hour coming up this way. It was something that was really sad. But I'm on the downhill slide now. Get back to the house. Um, So that's it for this round. What was the question again? You know, some of your sleep points. Is that what you're asking? My son did that a lot when he was really young. He's out of it. He doesn't do it anymore. He's 29. And when he was four or five, he'd find him in all kinds of weird situations. He was trying to go pee in the closet. He thought it was the bathroom. Yeah, that's not control. Yeah, you got it. Aspects of it were in there. It listed different aspects of it. So I think I can remember and summarize. I mean, it's just reading my history. Anyways, so yeah, it was basically just asking if you have disturbing occurrences when you sleep. You know, for you or anyone else, it could be like sleep apnea woes or anything like that. And then I said, like some people have trouble sleepwalking. You know, my dad had certain aspects of it because I don't think he actually has a problem with it. Just certain things happen when he's shooting coke and dope through his toes. No, I'm joking. But when he's on something, obviously, and then everything is OK. So, hey, thanks a lot George. Hey, everybody, thanks for your compliments. You know, I won't lie. I was always a wannabe radio or talk show or podcast. I'm just too lazy to learn how to do it. And back in the days, I never was really motivated into radio. Because it's a dog eat dog murder, pet throat business. I was lucky to see at least that. And I was never motivated to ever be a part of that circle ever. I want to throw up in my mouth. I get community radio sometimes. So it isn't like I didn't. But community radio, like eight people can hear you. OK. That isn't like WBLS where people in Japan who can't even get the frequencies are shooting up stores. So they could get the bootleg copy tapes of old shows that they made off of it. So, you know, so the next thing that I kind of looked into was like, you know, ham radio. And these nets are the closest thing to kind of, you know, doing your thing like on the radio for a short period. Except these kind of nets kind of brought that out. Most nets back in my day were more just, you know, you want to be a bean in a pod and see you later. Go, your mother. You know, these things are a lot different, right? People talk to you and get to know you. Because there are a big majority of nets where, you know, you think what? Talk show? Forget about it. Where is the talk show aspect? Most of it would be your name. If it's Aries, they might ask you for a QTH and there's some other numbers they ask you for, right? What else do they ask you for? Do they ask you for FRN and all the rest of it? Basically almost like checking in the boot camp or something, right? Give me your name, I'll get out of here or you get 38 lashes. So, and then you say one thing extra, it's like knocking over the whole stock or whatever, right? So, see, old days, that was a lot of what? Two-liter kind of nets were, right? At ACHF they school around, so it's a little different, right? You could tell by the first question because a standard question on ACHF is what can we do for you? When you check into mostly anything, that's what they ask. What that means, in case you might not know, is talk for a while. We want to hear you, we want to hear your transmission because, you know, most of you all, your voices and your signals. So we need something to go on. So they usually expect you to talk like my examiner friend Randy would say. BS for a while, learned a BS, Kevin, when we would get on like the Canadian sandbox net and a few other things like that where they expect you to do a lot more than just check in. Okay, hold on.

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