
Motor City Hypnotist
Motor City Hypnotist
The Quarter-Life Crisis - Part 5
Ever felt like you're stuck in the chaos of transitioning into adulthood? You're not alone. This episode's exploration of the quarter-life crisis reveals how young adults grapple with the exhilaration and stress that come with newfound freedom. We unravel the rollercoaster of emotions tied to choosing careers and seeking life balance, and we spotlight the influential role parents and our environments play. And, for those feeling overwhelmed, we offer strategies to navigate this pivotal life stage with confidence and grace.
Imagine finding yourself in a life-or-death situation aboard an aircraft with no pilot at the controls. That's exactly what one brave passenger faced! With no flight experience, they successfully landed a twin-engine plane, showcasing the extraordinary power of calm and effective communication. Delve into this gripping tale of heroism, supported by guidance from Kern County Air Traffic Control, and reflect on the pressures that pilots often face in the skies. We also share a personal touch with anecdotes from our own aviation adventures, highlighting the complexities and unexpected moments that aviation can bring.
Meet Wetzel, the delightful pup awaiting a forever home through the Detroit Dog Rescue. Wetzel's heartwarming story is a reminder of the joy and companionship pets can bring to our lives. As we wrap up our episode, we encourage listeners to embrace positive change and kindness, leaving you with anticipation as we tease the final installment of our "Quarter Life Crisis" series. Don't forget to check out our website for additional resources and a free hypnosis guide—a little something extra to support your journey toward well-being and personal growth.
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Change your thinking, change your life!
Laugh hard, run fast, be kind.
David R. Wright MA, LPC, CHT
The Motor City Hypnotist
David Wright: 0:00
In this episode of the Motor City Hypnotist Podcast we are going to finish up Quarter Life Crisis. I know we're on episodes five and six, but it's a lot of information to get in and it's important stuff. So I mean, that's an important thing. So, yes, Quarter Life Crisis, part five, and we'll see if we can wrap that up. We may have a part six, but we'll see, we'll see. We'll see what happens and, as usual, we're giving away free stuff. Hang in there, folks, we'll be right back.
Announcer: 0:34
This sounds like something for the authorities in Detroit. Well, joke's on you. I'm living to 102 and then dying at the city of Detroit.
Matt Fox: 0:43
Guys like this can't take over here out of Detroit.
David Wright: 0:46
Spawned in the hellfires of Motown. Take him to.
Matt Fox: 0:49
Detroit.
Announcer: 0:51
No, no, not Detroit, no, no, please, Anything, but that no, stationed in Drambuie, it's worse than Detroit. We did not have, as a unit, the confidence that we felt like we needed to beat Detroit. Let's go to Detroit. Now you're talking brother. I don't think so. He plays for Detroit now. Do they have many farms in Detroit?
Matt Fox: 1:15
Detroit to Michigan. I go to school. I know where Detroit is.
Announcer: 1:19
Get ready for the Motor City hypnotist, david R Wright. Originating from the suburbs of Detroit, michigan, he has hypnotized thousands of people from all over the United States. David R Wright has been featured on news outlets all across the country and is the clinical director of an outpatient mental health and hypnosis clinic located just south of Detroit, where he helps people daily using the power of hypnosis. Welcome the Motor City Hypnotist, david R Wright.
David Wright: 2:07
What is going on, my friends? This is David Wright, the Motor City Hypnotist. We're back with another episode of the Motor City Hypnotist podcast. What's up? What's up, matt Fox? That's the other voice you hear. I'm just relaxing. He's sitting across the table from me. My feet are up. We're hanging out doing a podcast. Yes, we are here in the palatial Southfield podcast, your voice studios.
Announcer: 2:29
Okay, I'll sit up having a drink, you know you don't have to set up because it's palatial.
David Wright: 2:33
It's your own palace. You can do whatever you want, it's polite.
Matt Fox: 2:36
Yeah, well, yeah, but you have to be polite with me.
David Wright: 2:39
Oh you know it's crazy.
Matt Fox: 2:41
No, no, don't shut me up, I could be somewhat professional.
David Wright: 2:46
Come on, I like this in the background.
Matt Fox: 2:49
What the fuck is it with you? I don't know, I don't know at all.
David Wright: 2:55
So again we're here doing a podcast. Let me tell you first of all, folks, where you can find me. My website is MotorCityHypnotistcom. Check it out. You can get information regarding a show, you can get information regarding personal sessions. If you want to stop smoking, if you want to lose weight, if you want to reduce anxiety, if you want to conquer insomnia, um, if you're an athlete, I do a lot of work with professional and amateur athletes in the detroit area for sports performance enhancement really can you teach them how to hang on to that?
David Wright: 3:24
fricking ball. I could do that, although it's it's, I get what you're saying, but but I mean, I know you're going to have, you're going to have a you're going to have a hiccup here and there.
David Wright: 3:36
That that's just what happened. So so, yeah, check out the website, especially if you're interested in the show. Um, honestly, my fall schedule is really open right now. So on, um, I don't have anything scheduled till december. So if you're looking for like a holiday gathering for a corporate event, the hypnosis shows are great for corporate events because we can we can work in a lot of things as far as just having fun in the comedy portion of it, we can also put in, you know, suggestions, as far as you know, know, performance improvement and motivation and things like that that will help your company, so you will give them an exceeds expectations.
David Wright: 4:13
These are not the droids you're looking for you will give them a fine.
Matt Fox: 4:15
I'm very important.
Announcer: 4:17
I have many leather bound books and my apartment smells of rich mahogany.
Matt Fox: 4:26
Everyone gets a 15% bump in pay.
David Wright: 4:32
You will give me your money. So, yeah, check out the website. My social media links Facebook and YouTube. Both Motor City Hypnotist and Snapchat and Instagram are both Motor City Hypno. That's H-Y-P-N-O. Yeah, motor City Hypno, perfect. City hypnotist. And snapchat and instagram are both motor city hypno. That's h y p n? O. Yeah, motor city hypno perfect. And as we do every single episode that we've ever done, I think we're on episode. I believe we're on 277 today, gonna hit the three zero we're gonna hit the three zero zero.
David Wright: 4:57
We're gonna have to do something for that one. Yes, we will. Maybe we'll like do a. Do a combined man cave happy hour hey this is sparta it's. It's crazy, we could do that. So yeah, free hypnosis guide. Text the word hypnosis to 313-800-8510. Again, that's 313-800-8510. You can find that in the show notes. You can also go right to my website. The number's right there. Text it right to the number you see on the website. Text the word hypnosis, you'll get it. You can also text that number. You can also call that number.
Matt Fox: 5:31
Um, it's pretty much an all-in-one number on the website what about 3 am some?
David Wright: 5:37
the bot will answer you that's what I mean. It's set up. It's set up, you'll get a response and and everything is designed on the website that you can get. Uh, you, you, you can. You can uh for a show. You can get a quote within minutes without, without anyone ever seeing it. It's all set up, it's automated. Uh, as far as in-person sessions, you can complete a form and all your information and send it and it'll come right to our office.
David Wright: 6:00
So you get to schedule. So it's a pretty much hands off. So check that out, all right. And um, yeah, um, either make a, make an appointment or book a show. There you go, fantastic, do it. And, the important thing, wherever you're listening, whatever platform you're on spotify, spotify, stitcher, itunes there's millions of them. I don, I don't even know anymore Spitchifier, spitchifier, itunes, I don't know.
Matt Fox: 6:28
It's crazy. Just like and subscribe. What in blazes?
David Wright: 6:31
are you talking about? Yeah, like and subscribe and connect or whatever you have to do on your platform. And the big thing is leave a review. The reviews help a lot. In fact, if you text the word hypnosis to 313, 3, 800, 8, 5, 1, 0. You're going to get a link with your hypnosis guide. It's also going to give you a Google link to leave a review. Now you can leave a review of the podcast. You can leave a review of the show. If you've seen one of my shows, if you see me in person, you can leave a review for that. So you can leave a review for a lot of things. If you've not seen me, you know, leave it for the podcast, because that's where you're hearing this from. Love it Fantastic. All righty, here we go. It's time, all right.
Announcer: 7:14
That's how winning is done.
David Wright: 7:16
All righty. So these stories come up fairly often. I feel like Okay Hero passenger lands plane after her pilot suffers a cardiac arrest. I heard about this. Yes, this was just in the last couple weeks. Picture it You're happily sitting aboard a plane and the pilot fails over unconscious. It's the stuff of nightmares in Hollywood movies, but for one Californian it was all too real. All too real. On what was supposed to be a flight from Las Vegas to Monterey, the twin-engine aircraft was diverted to Bakersfield before the pilot went into cardiac arrest.
Matt Fox: 7:51
Bakersfield, bakersfield, go on.
David Wright: 7:55
A brave female passenger took the helm and received instructions from Kern County Air Traffic Control Tower at the airport at Meadows Field. Instructions from Kern County Air Traffic Control Tower at the airport at Meadows Field, where county airport director Ron Brewster spoke to NBC about the ordeal. We were able to get fire, ambulance and everybody on standby so as the aircraft came into a stop they were getting medical attention in seconds, he said. Audio released by the Kern County Airport Authority captured some of the instructions given to the passenger, who was instructed to keep her airspeed at around 132 miles per hour. Both GNN and Discovery Channel's Mythbusters have shown that passengers possessing no flight experience whatsoever can be talked into landing a plane successfully. We've seen it.
David Wright: 8:42
I don't know if you saw that myth busters I did yeah now I will say I, I'm, I'm a, I'm a little bit of an aviation geek as far as just watching things. I've never I mean I have flown.
David Wright: 8:54
I've flown in private planes, actually okay, okay um, sidebar, way back when, like, like, when I was a teenager, I was in a youth group at church, okay, and one of the one of the one of the men there had a private pilot's license Fun. And he's like, hey, let's go out this. You want to go flying this weekend? I'm like, absolutely so. We got to Metro Airport, take off, flew all around downriver. Let me take controls for a while. Nice, super cool.
Announcer: 9:27
And it was just a two-seater cessna, like small, you know, one single engine plane yeah, it was super cool.
David Wright: 9:30
I have also been skydiving okay, so that was a small plane yeah with four people packed five people packed into it if you count the pilot and the flight instructor that was.
Matt Fox: 9:41
that was an experience too Just a little single engine you know, but you're jumping out of a perfectly great plane.
David Wright: 9:48
Sure, you are, yeah, and they, and they tell you that it's a funny thing that I did this with my dad when I was in my probably my young twenties. Right, we both went out. You could you do two days of training. You jump on the third day, right, you jump on the third day, right, it's kind of how it works. So, uh we. So when we get into the plane, they say this plane takes off. There's, there's no come, you're not gonna. You, you have to jump. Yeah, you cannot ride the plane back down, right, there's no chickening out, in other words. So if we have to push you out, we'll push you out, right, that's what they tell you, what? So?
Matt Fox: 10:23
what? Here's something funny real quick yeah, absolutely. Something that just came across my feed was the sky jump, the skydive, the Red Bull skydive. Felix Baumgartner when he jumped.
David Wright: 10:36
From space, from space 129,000 feet Right.
Matt Fox: 10:40
It just came across my feed and I'm watching it and they actually had the camera on his suit. Yes, it just came across my feed and I'm watching it, and they actually had the camera on his suit so you could see him in his arms. Just he's falling, yeah.
David Wright: 10:50
Just falling for forever Hours it felt like for that video. Yeah, sure, so anyway, long small plane. The best thing to do in the situation is to get in contact with an air traffic controller. You think that's pretty obvious, s O S. In contact with an air traffic controller? You think, yeah, that's pretty obvious. Uh, sos. The name of the woman has not been released, which is unfortunate. That's the only thing missing from the story, nor details about how many were on the flight, but Brewster said she was dealing with the tragedy as best she could. Was it a flight attendant or was it?
David Wright: 11:22
a no, it was a small plane, so it was a passenger. Okay, yeah, yeah, they said it was a two engine aircraft.
Matt Fox: 11:29
I read a different story where the pilot of a like a major airline, had suffered a heart attack. Yeah, and I think one of the flight attendants or the copilot had to step in. Yeah, and I think one of the flight attendants or the copilot had to step in and he just keeled over from our massive coroner.
David Wright: 11:43
You know what this is not. I've heard the story before. This has happened before. Sure, if pilots having heart attacks when they're flying which is, which is weird yeah, they're drinking too much, I don't know. Or maybe it's, maybe it's the stress of flying, of managing an airplane, I don't know. It just seems weird though because, like I said, this story comes up probably once every few years, frequently. Yeah, it does come up frequently. Brewster said she was dealing with the tragedy as best she could, referring to the unfortunate ending that the pilot took. Oh boy, this is a terror. I don't. I'll read it, read it, read it. I'm gonna read it. I I don't like the way the story ends referring to the unfortunate ending that the pilot took the 7 30 am non-stop to heaven for goodness, and was pronounced dead at the hospital.
David Wright: 12:34
That's the last, the last line of the story, my goodness yeah, I don't like that last line of the story that that's a little little disrespectful, I think a little bit, and they didn't release her name, but but definitely a hero. I mean, yeah, I, you know, I've always thought and I and I've told you I, I think I brought it up, I'm sure I brought it up on the podcast before you know I I've. I've messed around with flight simulator on my computer for for many years, I mean, and it's just like I could probably do this. I mean in my head, I think that, but it's probably not true.
Matt Fox: 13:04
It's the fight or flight, right. Will you be able to?
David Wright: 13:07
Well, sure, yeah, when it really counts. Yeah, if you're on a video game, it's easy, right or easier. I'll say so, yeah, I mean it's a good story and unfortunately the pilot passed. But yeah, for somebody to take over and get talked down, that's always a great story. Love it Cool.
Announcer: 13:34
It's our winner of the week.
Matt Fox: 13:38
That's how winning is done. Yes, it is. I'll go back, go ahead. So back to it. So the beginning of close encounters of the third kind you don't really understand. Yes, it's very stressful up in the air for the pilots, but the people down on the ground and the air traffic controllers the, the vernacular that these folks have is crazy.
Matt Fox: 13:57
And if you watch back from the 70s, mind you, but if you watch close to kind of third, kind that first opening scene where the air traffic controller is trying to get people to understand where each other are, but everyone else is seeing this bright light, he's like, do you want to report a ufo? And they're like I don't even know what I would. But yeah, just the vernacular that these guys have. Well, and in the other.
David Wright: 14:21
I'll bring up another air traffic control. Show that you know. Breaking Bad, oh yeah, when What's-Her-Face's dad, just you know, after she passes, just mentally, you know.
Matt Fox: 14:34
Yeah, yeah Q.
David Wright: 14:35
Just Q, yeah, q, yeah, just Q. Okay. What's the actor's name? Uh, you would ask, oh I have it on the tip of my tongue. I can't delancey, john delancey yes, yes, there we go.
Matt Fox: 14:47
God, I was gonna bug me for the next three days.
David Wright: 14:49
It was gonna bug me. That's why I had to bring it out. All right, folks, we're talking about we. We are going to finish up on quarter life crisis, so I'm just going to review quickly, please. You know that the whole idea of a quarter life crisis was a study done and the study link is in the show notes. If you want to actually read that, studies are typically not pleasure reading.
David Wright: 15:08
That's a lot of scientific jargon and a lot of data yeah but if you want to read the actual study itself, the link is in the show notes, so so you could take a look at that if you want. But the whole idea here is, you know, when you're from ages like 17 or 18 up to like 24, 25, there's this, I guess, realization, or maybe it's an epiphany of some type that I have no idea what I want to do. I don't know what my purpose is. I don't know what I want to do for a living. I thought I did, but now I want to do. I don't know what my purpose is. I don't know what I want to do for a living.
David Wright: 15:42
I thought I did, but now I'm not sure you know I'm being forced into adulthood, you know, and all these thoughts like, oh, is this really all there is? I have to get a job and work from my nine to five and commute and then go to sleep because I have to go to work again tomorrow, and really it's kind of a culture shock for young people. And I mentioned this in one of these episodes on Quarter Life Crisis. Even in my shows, when I do grad night shows, I always say let me be one of the first to welcome you to adulthood. And most of the time they cheer and clap Over the last couple of seasons, not so much it's, it's just a different reaction.
David Wright: 16:21
So I'm I'm kind of backing off on that now, because their reactions are like, oh, you know, just like I, I think, for, for whatever reason and and this would be something interesting for a study to be done like what, what is causing this, this regression in young people as far as just getting on with life and I don't want to say it in a critical way because I this is a real issue for them, but most again, as as children, we think, oh, it'd be great to be an adult, I'll be free, I can do whatever I want, right, but when that time comes, yeah, you can do whatever you want, but you still have to be responsible, because you have to support yourself. You have to be a functioning human being in society.
Matt Fox: 17:05
I have opinions as a young, younger father raising, you know, very intelligent in my mind. Successful kiddos, yeah, and you know, you see the younger generation coming through and you're right, Even at the ripe age of 12 to 18 now they're just like got that mentality of why, why do I have to do that? And it's up to the parents or the guardian or something to motivate them to want to be successful, to motivate them to want to be successful.
David Wright: 17:39
Well, and I think you can have a desire to be successful. I think you can have that feeling like I want to be successful but then be like I don't know how to do it. What is involved with this? How much work do I have to put in? How many years is it going to take? And that's where the regression is coming in.
David Wright: 17:56
Yes, exactly, and that just overwhelms people. So really, you know, when you look at the research on this quarter-life crisis, is that again back to the idea that teenagers feel like they don't have freedom? They want freedom, so they think adulthood will give them freedom, when in fact it's the opposite they have to earn it. You have much more freedom as a teenager than you do as an adult. I would love to go back to being a teenager. No, absolutely. And who wouldn't? Because you don't have any responsibilities per se. Per se, yeah.
David Wright: 18:29
You know, yeah, sure, depending, have any responsibilities per se. I mean, you know, yeah, sure, depending. There are specific situations, like if you're in a single family or single parent household, or you know, um, there are certain situations where you probably have to grow up sooner, but but that's not typical, that's fair, um. So, you know, and, and even in teenagers and I, I can use my son as an example, he's 22, but he grew up in the video game era. That was his shtick. And even now, even then, it's like well, no, you can't play video games for eight hours a day, you can play for two hours a day. So again, parents setting limits, but then teenagers rebel to that. They're like tell me what to do.
Announcer: 19:10
I just want to do what I think, try to barter with you, you know if I were.
David Wright: 19:13
If I were free, I would just play video games all day. The problem is that's what happens. And then people start failing at school, people start, you know, not being able to keep a job, people yeah, it's. It's just this, this, this funk that these young people get into and and you've realized, really the bottom line is, you realize you have no freedom at all. This funk that these young people get into and you've realized really the bottom line is, you realize you have no freedom at all. A dental doesn't bring you freedom.
Matt Fox: 19:39
But then what happens? Dave Movies sensationalize kids that play video games, For example, the movie Gran. Turismo, and the guy made a career out of driving a race car on a video game first and then proved that he can do it in real life. So, oh, it's real, it can happen. I get it right, I understand it well but the likelihood is very slim.
David Wright: 20:07
Yeah, I mean as many video games as I played as far as sports and baseball, yeah, but they it was sensationalized.
Matt Fox: 20:13
That's not what you should be.
David Wright: 20:15
So again to review real quickly. The first stage is when people get locked in. They're trying to figure out what they want to do. They don't know what's right. They haven't lived life yet, so they don't have experiences to draw. On Stage two we get into separation, which is kind of just separating from from. Whatever you check out is what you do. And people check out with video games, alcohol, pot, drugs pornography pornography, sexual encounters.
David Wright: 20:45
So what happens is when you check out, when you do that separation, once you realize it, it, it's, it's. You've wasted so much time, and that compounds the problem, because now you think, well, oh man, I've just wasted two years of my life, right, and now I, where am I going to go now?
Matt Fox: 21:04
out of the whole grand scheme of things, two years, not that big of a sure, but it, but it could be longer or shorter depending on people's situation.
David Wright: 21:12
And then we, then we moved to the stage two, b, which is the timeout phase, and they think that once they separate, once I mentally check out that I won't have to deal with this. So there's no, there's no external motivation, what we call extrinsic motivation. They just feel like I just moved back towards my old life, because that's all I know, and that doesn't help either. Instead, people are waiting for this guarantee about their future. I put all this work in. How do I know it's going to work? You don't? That's the point. I have my handout.
Matt Fox: 21:57
Yes, your handout.
David Wright: 21:59
So stage four is rebuilding. I think we ended in rebuilding last episode, so let me kind of we'll start here the rebuilding stage. I take that back. Exploration would be next and I think we hit on that. Next the last episode. I take that back. Exploration would be next and I think we hit on that. Next the last episode. Yes, we did so.
David Wright: 22:16
Phase three is this exploration phase, which is I don't know what I want to do. I don't know what I want to be, I don't know how to succeed, I don't know what I'm going to do for a life. But here is where you proactively try out things. It's kind of like testing the waters. It's kind of like experimenting, finding out what your interests are, and you can find things that are more aligned with your own, whatever it is moral values or your own aspirations or your inner identity, something that clicks with you. And this is the big thing I talk about, especially with young people in therapy. I say to them what, what, what would you like to do? Like, like, what do you have fun doing? And a lot of times things like video games will come up sure or something insignificant like watching tv, that's all okay.
David Wright: 23:11
Now, I don't know that there are many careers for watching TV or playing video games. There probably are. That's probably not going to pan out, you know, if that's what your aspiration is. But this exploration phase is the time for you to kind of test things out and to do things. But here's the thing what happens in this exploration phase is people get stuck because they already feel like they've wasted time.
David Wright: 23:38
So now they feel like they're wasting more time just trying to figure shit out. That that is and. And there can be some resistance to this exploration phase because it's like oh gee, that's a lot of work. I gotta figure out what I want to do. I gotta look at you know what? What are my interests? I don't know what I, you know it's, it's, it's very I'm trying to think of the word for it it it's very. Um, I, I'm disappointing is coming up, that's not the right word. It's, it's, it's very like, like self-deprecating that oh, I, I don't even know what I want to do. I just don't know what I want to be, what is my purpose in life.
David Wright: 24:20
So during this exploration phase, it's important not to get stuck in this because and I've known people like this professionally personally they will get the shiny new object syndrome.
David Wright: 24:35
Okay, but with careers and I don't know if you've ever seen this before, matt but they'll be like oh, I want to be, I want to go into, like, medicine. Okay, maybe I can be a PA. So they go and they do and they take the classes and they think like, oh, I don't like this, maybe I'll, maybe I'll go into a skilled trade. Then they start that and they don't like that. And then they're like well, maybe I'll just, maybe I'll think about college and just doing that and finding a major. So it's just hard to define what direction to take, and that's the difficulty with this exploration phase is that you got to search till you find something. If it takes a year, it takes a year. If it takes five years, it takes five years. The point being is that you want to be able to spend the rest of your life doing something in your own mind that's either meaningful or rewarding or exciting on your end.
Matt Fox: 25:33
And I know I've said this before it's like work like you don't have to Right. That means you enjoy what you do.
David Wright: 25:40
Absolutely.
Matt Fox: 25:40
You have that purpose. You don't feel like you're going to work, right, but it gets you out of bed and it keeps you motivated, right.
David Wright: 25:48
And that's the other important thing is that this exploration phase, if it takes too long, you get adjusted, you get accustomed to not having that structure, like as far as not a steady job or not a specific path as far as education goes or not a specific path as far as, even if you go to work, it's like is this my career? Do I stay here? Do I try to move up here, right? It's like, is this my career? Do I stay here? Do I try to move up here, right? So this exploration phase is really it's just about kind of just saying you know what, let's not worry about the future, let's figure out. What do I want to do right now? Let me figure out something that appeals to me and then kind of build off of that Fair, and that's stage three. Then kind of build off of that Fair, and that stage three was which is the exploration? Got it? So we are going to finish. I swear to you we're going to come back for part. It's the next stage, is one more stage, and it's called rebuilding. And that's the important one, cause I'm going to tell you exactly what how, how to move forward if you're in one of these situations.
Matt Fox: 26:51
Oh, wow, okay.
David Wright: 26:53
And this one is probably the most insightful, I think, as far as the study goes. So we are going to talk about rebuilding in the next episode, quarter Life Crisis, part 6. And we will wrap it up. This is the last stage. Okay, Perfect, we will do that Last stage. So, before we do that, if you're on Facebook Live, stick around. We're going to be recording another show right after this one. If you're listening to whatever platform you're on Spotify, stitcher, wherever just jump ahead to the next episode, or it will be there Tuesday or Thursday. Got it Awesome.
David Wright: 27:26
So, before we leave, somebody needs a home. Who is it? It's Wetzel. Wetzel is a hound mix. Oh, bless you what. He's a neutered male. He's 80 pounds. Wetzel, he's a big dog. Okay, he's dog friendly, as long as they're calmer dogs. Okay, cat friendly is unknown. Kid friendly. 10 year age, 10 years or over Okay, his activity level is low. So if you don't want a crazy, you know, but wetzel was born in 2018. Okay, so six years old, yeah about that. So this is here's wetzel. Oh look at that.
Matt Fox: 28:00
I know he looks like a look at that. He looks like he, just he just looks like. I just want a home yeah I just want somewhere to live where people love me cute, cute puppy there you go, matt, if you can look at Wetzel, close up Wetzel, what's up W? Cut it out Wetzel, what's up W? He looks like a good boy. What are you people? He's a good boy. He's a good boy. Yeah, he just looks like a good boy.
David Wright: 28:28
Doesn't he look like a good boy? He does, doesn't he? Doesn't he look like a good boy? He does. So wetzel needs a home. Uh, it's detroit dog rescue slash. Adopt wetzel's ready to go home tonight, please, or tomorrow, or whenever you hear this. Wetzel needs a home, adopt him, please. All righty folks, we will be back with quarter life crisis part six, and we will wrap that up and then I'll tease something next episode that we may be doing soon. Okay, all righty, all right. In the meantime, change your thinking, change your life, laugh hard, run fast, be kind. We'll see you next time, thank you.