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And with my eyesight, I would definitely be the guy that would step on a water moccasin or something like that and end up getting probably killed by it because I have a very low tolerance to venom of any kind. Be it bees and wasps and hornets and things like that, they have minimal amounts of venom but they're enough to put me in a coma. Well, a shock, I guess they call it. They call it anaphylactic shock is what they do to me. They shut down my nervous system and my throat closes off. Oh man, that's just from a bee or a wasp. I had a bee sting me about 12 or 13 years ago, I suppose. And I ended up four days in a row in the emergency room from one bee sting. I'd gotten stung and they couldn't find the stinger. And every time the epinephrine and Benadryl would wear off, this poison would circulate back through me again and I'd end up really sick again and end up back in the hospital. And these were 911 calls, these were ambulances had to come and take me out of the house four days in a row from one bee sting. I mean, I got a bad, bad allergic reaction to those things. And I'm guessing anything else like a snake or a spider or something really venomous, that would probably do me in immediately. I don't know what it is with my body when it comes to venom. It just really does a number on me to the point where I've got to have EpiPens near me or in my pocket or on the bike wherever I go. And I usually do have one in the storage box or in a backpack or something on the bike when I go out for rides and stuff because you never know. And if I get stung and I'm in the middle of nowhere, that shot of adrenaline, that's going to save my life and possibly make it so I can get out of the woods to get help. Because once I take that shot of Epi, I mean, if you cure adrenaline, that gets your heart pumping again even if it's stopped. Epinephrine or Epi, that's a brutal drug, man. But it's a lifesaver for people with severe allergies. Let me reset.

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