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Alright, cool stuff, Greg. Well, glad you got that done. And just remember, I mean, there's nothing scary about the fall. It's that friggin' landing. That's the scary part. That's what gets me. Our house is two stories. And I don't know how many feet that is, but when you look up, it looks high up. And when you climb up there on a ladder, I mean, it's... You're extending that ladder to the brink of its capability. Excuse me. And when you walk up that ladder and it's like, bowing in and out, that's creepy AF to me, man. It really is. I don't like... It's not the height to step out of me, because I've worked on heights before, but I've also fallen off a scaffold from a couple of lengths up there, so it's not something I ever want to do again. I bounced off of that thing on the way down, and bruised and broke a couple of ribs, and it was not fun. So, I really don't like heights anymore. I mean, it's okay when you get up there, and we've got like a slanted roof. It's like a peaky kind of roof. You know, it slants down in the front and down in the back. And I want literally nothing to do with being up there. I'd like to have my antenna up there. Right now, it's on the back deck, which is like a two-story deck, so it's like up slightly above the roof line. On the second story of the deck, which I don't mind being up there, because there's two flight stairs that leads up to that deck. So, that doesn't bother me, but I'd love to have the antenna right up on the chimney. I bet it would roll my signal to the west end, because right now you go certain parts of the west end, it gets staticky. But that's just because of terrain, I think. I don't know. Next up, we're going to go to V-A-B-K-K-Y, even though I only put one K, so why? Good morning, Kevin. Yeah, all right, word is born. Yeah, I'm kind of afraid of heights too, but a lot of it, I can't even see it, right? So, that could be one thing that adds to it, but you don't even necessarily need to fall high to be embarrassed, right? I remember in a grade 9 school play that Mr. Nesbitt was running, see, I'm saying names up in this, and more like grade 7, wait a minute, yeah, something like grade 7, because I left that school shortly after that. And so, somewhere in that mix, I fell off the stage, because this was before at that school, they had tow lines and things on the stage, so you could fall off it. And I remember my pants split just like that, I don't know how the hell I covered myself to go in back to the residence to get a new pair of jeans, and I wasn't trying to rip those either, but yeah, they tore something terrible completely from the back. And even like, I took it home, and my dad still messed it down and sewed it back together again. He hasn't thrown anything away, right? So, and that was like a 4, 5 foot drop from the stage, right? Because I remember when I was speaking, I had one of the microphones, and then I was kind of being a little bit too comfortable, so the microphone slides out of my hand, falls onto the platform, and then shortly after, me kaplunking somewhere a few inches away from the audience with the hard metal benches and that, right? I probably could have injured myself falling on one of those, because they had the long metal benches where they keep the people in the audience, right? And so, you don't have to fall off the high rise to be afraid, you can just fall off the stage. I pulled a Gerald Ford up in that piece. Best believe, kid. Let's see, sometime today, I'm lamping out right now, listening to CBC Van, and they said that at about 10, 16 my time, see them, so they'll be a minute even, they don't go around with that, they're telling you the minutes. They basically, they're testing out the emergency system, so all phones here are going to go kaflui. They're having an earthquake drill, which I always kind of remember three simple rules, right? I picked it up living in the bay, it was like stop, drop, and cover? Stop, drop, and cover, or something like that? And so they're doing some kind of earthquake drill here in Vancouver in a little while, that's going to make, wow, about 1.16 your time where phones are about to go eeeeaaah, eeeeaaah, right? Don't you like that? When that nighttime dust is going off, you know, somebody missing, and then you hear this eeeeaaah, eeeeaaah, eeeeaaah, and if you're like my dad, he'll let it go forever because he won't, he doesn't know how to shut it off, right? Because he ain't really messing with the touchscreen too much. That's funny when sighted people don't want to put touchscreens. I thought that was a blindy thing, like a blind person saying, I'll put touchscreens, that. But he, I guess he's not down with it either, he's fully sighted, right? He got eyes, I don't. And so what's really funny is, he'll let that go forever, and then it occurs to him later that you do the tippity-tap situation, you okay it, you get out of it, and it'll never bother you ever again. Because there's times he'll let one of those warnings go the day into the next day, and then try to hide his phone, right? It's hilarious. Look for a drawer in a far off place to try to hide it so he can stop hearing the buzzing noise that it's making with the alert. Now my blind shell, I don't like it when it does it right. It freezes my keypad and all that stuff. But the point blank is, I know how to get out of it. It's inconvenient, but I can get out of it. I'm not going to let that beep all day. That is crazy. It's crazy. All right, so anyways, I should be here, but yep, just know that if you, anybody in here who's in VE7 land, so that means nobody, there's a possibility that your phones are going to be nervous in like five, six hours from now. So if you're doing that earthquake drill, because you never know, then somebody might get hit with something, yo. There never have been, but things that never happen to Vancouver eventually does. And so, alert the bums and the addicts that are sleeping on the pavement. Wait a minute, they got phones. If anybody's alerting anybody, they'll alert you. I mean, they've got way better phones than I do sometimes. I mean, they're sporting some serious gear. Those are the people like, they sleep in the subways and in the tunnels. They got better cooking gear and better food than I do at the house. So no, some of them, these are posting high, best believe. Okay, well, I don't know if I'm posting high, but I'm posting for the rest of the group to continue, so I'll put it back to you. I should be here. I don't have to work. It's not a work day. Word them up. Okay, so back to you, Daryl, from VA3. KKY, yep, you know the business.

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