
Motor City Hypnotist
Motor City Hypnotist
Understanding Personality Disorders: Part 1
Unlock the mysteries of personality disorders as we navigate the rarely trodden terrains of mental health in our latest episode. Ever wondered why personality disorders stand out from conditions like depression or anxiety? We promise you'll gain a deeper understanding of their complexities, and why they often resist conventional treatment methods. We'll explore the profound impact of these disorders on daily life, using avoidant personality disorder as a lens. Plus, discover the intriguing connection between personality disorders and autism, a critical nuance that shouldn't be overlooked. As we venture through these insights, prepare for an enlightening experience that might just change how you view mental health.
Amidst these serious discussions, we sprinkle in heartwarming tales and light-hearted moments. Be inspired by Ted Midgley's journey of learning to read at 58, proving transformation is possible at any age. This story dovetails beautifully with reflections on the host's father's late-career change, illustrating it's never too late to chase your dreams. Amidst this tapestry of personal stories and playful banter, we'll set the stage for our milestone 300th episode celebration. Stick around to hear about our unique hypnosis events, perfect for high school proms and grad nights, adding another layer of fun to our mental health journey.
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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. You know we do a mental health podcast. For the most part, we do some hypnosis too, but today we're going to talk about specific mental illness called personality disorders. Now, there's a wide range of these, and I'm going to tell you what the difference is between that and like typical depression, anxiety, ptsd type things, because there is a big difference, and I'm going to tell you why personality disorders are harder to treat. So stick in there, hang on, we'll be right back.
Announcer: 0:30
This sounds like something for the authorities in Detroit. Well, joke's on you. I'm living to 102 and then die at the city of Detroit.
Matt Fox: 0:38
Guys like this can't take over here. Out of Detroit Spawned in the hellfires of Motown, take him to Detroit.
Announcer: 0:46
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: 1:10
Detroit to Michigan. I go to school. I know where Detroit is.
Announcer: 1:20
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 Hypnotist, david R Wright.
David Wright: 2:02
What is going on, my friends? This is David Wright, the Motor City Hypnotist. We are back with another episode of the Motor City Hypnotist podcast. You know, david? Yes, matt, how are you? I'm good, how are you, matt? Nice to see you. That is Matt Fox, the other voice you hear. He's hanging out, as he usually does yes. My producer and my drink getter.
Matt Fox: 2:22
A drink getter my drink getter and my drink getter I need to intern, you're my, you're my drink bitch. All right, we gotta be what we gotta be.
Announcer: 2:32
That escalated quickly. I mean that really got out of hand fast.
David Wright: 2:37
And it is a little bit. You're welcome. So we're here in the play show podcast, your voice, southfield studios. We're doing a podcast. It's a Monday evening, it's about 820, and we're hanging out. We just finished a man Cave Happy Hour podcast. How's your smoke? If you missed that, go back, because we did smoked cocktails tonight.
Matt Fox: 2:55
We did smoked Buffalo Trace straight. That's true.
David Wright: 2:59
We were doing smoked whiskey, so it was all the same, like same level of comparison. Absolutely, yes, yes but still you.
Matt Fox: 3:10
You got a smoked buffalo trace in front of you and you did pecan, I did pecan. All right, so you have a smoked pecan, I have a smoked pecan buffalo trace just fantastic.
David Wright: 3:19
I'm enjoying it immensely. I'm drinking hopefully not enough that that will will end this podcast prematurely, but it's good, I think you'll be able to keep it up.
Matt Fox: 3:32
You're welcome, great Odin's Raven.
Announcer: 3:39
Sexy stuff.
Matt Fox: 3:40
Yeah, yeah, oh man, let me tell you folks where you can find me.
Announcer: 3:44
First of all all.
David Wright: 3:46
My website is motorcityhypnotistcom. Check that out immediately. If you are a high school like a um a parent committee that that's in charge of your high school grad night or prom night parties we're booking quick. I'm serious, it's like the season's coming upon us. We're less than a month away from prom and grad season. Yeah, you are. I kick off the season on April 4th, that weekend at the University of Florida for their dance marathon.
David Wright: 4:14
I've done this show four or five times. Is that the Gators? It is the Gators. Yes, my buddy, richard Barker, who's another internationally renowned hypnotist. He and I kind of switched back and forth on that show, but I've had that for the last two years.
David Wright: 4:33
I've done the show. Probably this will be my fourth time doing that show, which is fantastic. It's a huge show in their basketball arena. It's a fundraiser, it's a dance marathon. My point being is that these shows are starting up within a month or two, so if you need a hypnotist for your prom night or your grad night, now's the time to do it. Go to the website, motorcityhypnotistcom, slash um shows and you'll be able to get a quote and sign your contract within minutes. Awesome, so check that out, um. My social media links Facebook and YouTube, both motor city hypnotist and on Snapchat, instagram and Tik TOK, because it is still around, apparently, is motor city Hypno H Y P N? O. Get it while it's hot, get it while it's there, cause you'd have no idea, I don't know. Things are changing so quick now, um are changing so quick now.
Matt Fox: 5:22
Hard to say I wonder what executive order is going to get signed next? Damn.
Announcer: 5:32
Is it time Great?
Matt Fox: 5:34
Odin's Raven Speaking of winner of the week. What are we doing here?
David Wright: 5:41
Well, we're not there yet, Matt but, we'll get there, you're okay. It's okay. Oh, good for you. Let me tell you also, as we've done, every show going back to number one, and we're on like 290, I think we're on 295.
Matt Fox: 5:56
Are we almost at 300? We're almost at 300. Wow.
David Wright: 5:58
We're going to do a special for our 300, so keep an eye out for that in the next few weeks, because it should be possibly two weeks from now if we stay on our schedule. All right, so check that out. We're going to have a 300 episode, some kind of celebration of some type, all right, so check that out.
David Wright: 6:15
As we've done every episode going way back. Your free hypnosis guide is yours for the taking. Just text the word hypnosis to 313-800-8510. Again, that number is 313-800-8510. That will be in the show notes. It will also be on my website. If you forget the number, it's right on the website. That's the main number you can call. You can text and you can also text that hypnosis to get your free hypnosis guide and the big thing, wherever you're listening, whatever platform you're on, please subscribe, link, connect, whatever you do on your thing, and the most important thing is leave a review and I know I can ask this a hundred times and maybe two times. It'll happen, but that really helps us out because it expands our audience. It gets more exposure of the show and more people listen.
Matt Fox: 7:03
So that would be greatly appreciated you know what, and if you're already a subscriber, tell your friends absolutely yeah, tell your friends about it.
David Wright: 7:11
You need to listen to these old, these two assholes yeah, all right, listen to these idiots because they're they're important I'm very important.
Announcer: 7:18
Uh, I have many leather-bound books and my apartment smells of rich mahogany.
David Wright: 7:28
Oh, Matt, you didn't get the high end.
Matt Fox: 7:30
Matt had a mouthful of whiskey right at that point, I did, I did.
David Wright: 7:34
That's crazy. No, don't shut me up. So good I know. So it is time, matt oh. Finally, woo-hoo, here we go.
Matt Fox: 7:42
Hi, matt oh finally, woo-hoo, here we go. That's how winning is done. Yes, so if this is your first time listening to the podcast, this is the point of the show where Dave does his due diligence and finds something that is good in the world.
David Wright: 8:02
Yes, and I know for most of us, know for most, most, most of us. I will say most of us because I see it just on my clientele in my clinic. There's a lot of stress and anxiety going around the world right now what executive order is going to get signed next? So so we, we like to bring you good stories about good things that happen, that make you feel good yes, that's what this is.
David Wright: 8:28
Yes, it's good. What are you people on dope? No, we're not on dope, but it feels that way when we read these good stories. That's the great thing about it. Yes, right, so this is a great story. Okay, a dyslexic Englishman. That's how the story begins.
Matt Fox: 8:47
So it wasn't a man. What are you talking about? Was it a man?
David Wright: 8:50
Englishman no, no, it was a dyslexic Englishman, okay, who was never properly taught how to read in school, has finally been able to enjoy a copy of a magazine he bought in 1985. Was it called Emit?
Announcer: 9:08
Oh, good for you.
David Wright: 9:11
What's it called Hooks on Phonics Hooking on Pohonics.
Matt Fox: 9:17
What?
Announcer: 9:18
in blazes are you talking about?
David Wright: 9:20
So, anyway, dyslexic Englishman who's never properly taught how to read is able to enjoy a copy of a magazine he bought in 1985. Ted Midgley has learned how to read at 58 years old, thanks to the help of a tutor who told the BBC that adults without the ability to read are actually more common in the UK than one might think. Huh, interesting. Midgley was born in Bradford, england, where he struggled in school and was dubbed lazy by the teaching staff. It was only when he arrived in middle school that someone reached out to his parents and suggested that Ted might be dyslexic. That's so 1960s. But I mean, here's the sad thing about this he had to get to middle school for somebody to pick this up. He's 58 now. He's 58 now. Shit, that's 1980s. No, no, yeah, he's 58 now. He's 58 now. Shit, that's 1980s. No, no, yeah, you're talking way back. Yes, we're talking about like late 70s. By middle school would have been the late 70s, because I'm a couple years ahead of him. So, yeah, it would have been See, I'm 50, right, okay? So if you're saying he's 58. I'm 60 or I will be 60 this year, so he's, or I will be 60 this year. So I was only a year and a half behind me. Shit All right. So that had to be late, 70 ish, okay, okay, okay.
David Wright: 10:32
Um Mitchell, he was born in Bradford, england, where he struggled in school, was done lazy by the teaching staff, was when he arrived in middle school that somebody reached out to his parents. Leaving middle school he was moved to another Institute for those with learning impairments but struggled and eventually drifted out of the education system altogether to work in a textile mill. So really he dropped out to work because he just couldn't. He couldn't read and textiles, right. No one reading needs to feel sorry for Midgley. Despite his inability to read, he had a rewarding career as a mechanic for the specialist motorcycles used in a unique British motor motorsport called speedway right heidi lefty loose.
David Wright: 11:11
You can't get that wrong in which the riders compete on a dirt oval track with single gear dirt bikes that have no brakes. They're taking another left turn.
David Wright: 11:18
You can't get that absolutely he's gotten to travel around the world for races and did as the genesis for his desire to learn how to read. I got involved with a young chap from australia called braden elliott and it's going really well and I want to become his manager. That's what I'd like to do. Midgley told the bbc nice, but to do that I need to be able to read emails. He has been taking two 30 minute lessons a week week from Duncan Livesey, a tutor with Read Easy Derby. He's been brilliant, livesey said, because Ted's so positive, he's been so easy to teach, it's been so rewarding and I get a buzz each time I sit down with him. As well as reading Elliot's emails, midgley was able to read something a lot more special a copy of a Speedway Star magazine he bought 40 years ago.
Matt Fox: 12:11
Can you go back a couple sentences? What does he get? When he said he gets a buzz.
David Wright: 12:16
Yeah, because Ted's so positive, he's been so easy to teach, it's been so rewarding. I get a buzz each time I sit down with him. That's because cannabis is legal what are you people?
Announcer: 12:27
No, somebody's just reading.
David Wright: 12:27
That's because cannabis is legal. What are you people? No, somebody's just reading. That's it. I'm reading. Go on, yeah. What are you talking about?
Announcer: 12:37
You were gone.
Matt Fox: 12:39
I'm sorry. I'm interjecting a little bit.
David Wright: 12:43
It's all good, it's reading. Go on, Mr Ebert. So he was able to read a copy of the Speedway Star magazine he bought 40 years ago. So my mind goes right to questions, as we do with these stories oftentimes.
Matt Fox: 13:01
Matt, you know what?
David Wright: 13:02
I'm saying it is 2025. Where was this magazine for 40 years? That's what I'm wondering. Under his mattress, was it with the porn stuff I mean?
Matt Fox: 13:10
Well, yeah, it's definitely a playboy. He's finally able to read what happened on one fateful night.
Announcer: 13:20
Sexy time.
Matt Fox: 13:23
It was a night, yeah, just like tonight.
David Wright: 13:26
I had this for so long and I've never been able to read it. It was amazing to do it, he said which pages were he?
Matt Fox: 13:35
was he able to?
Announcer: 13:35
no, because the rest no don't shut me up the rest were stuck together.
David Wright: 13:40
So that that's the story that this guy was. It was. It was unable to read until he was 58. A this guy was unable to read until he was 58. A successful guy, you know, worked as a mechanic. For what?
Matt Fox: 13:52
40 years In motorsports, 30-something years in motorsports, which is not an easy thing to do because that is a challenging sport.
David Wright: 14:00
But I will say and let's get semi-serious for a moment no, no. Don't shut me up, but I mean, being unable to read is not as uncommon as people think it is. No, it's not, it's it's, it's really and and I have had clients through the years more than a few over the last 32 years I've been doing this. That couldn't read.
David Wright: 14:20
So do you do you do you have staff that'll help them through the well, yeah, typically what would happen most of the time is that if somebody comes and they would bring somebody with them like a wife or a child or a partner or a friend, somebody to to kind of help them through that initial paperwork, okay, all right, fair, fair, yeah. So anyway, way to go. Ted midgley yes, 58 years old, it's never too late, you can, and I've told the story on the podcast before. Maybe you probably will know it when I say I'm at, but it's never too late to do something. No, my dad was a blue collar worker. Technically he wasn't blue collar. He started blue collar, but he, he, he worked for a steel mill for like 30 something years.
David Wright: 15:00
I love the story about your father. Yeah, and he was laid off when he was like 52 years old. Yeah, and what had nothing to do with performance that I know of, but the whole batch of people. It was an age cutting thing and this was back back when they could get away with it, back in the early eighties, yeah, when they could get away when they could get away with it.
David Wright: 15:18
Yeah, and he thought, what? What have I always wanted to do? I want to be a nurse to nursing school, and that's what he did for the next until he got sick. Yeah, well, you know he only lived to 72, but um, he had a general brain disease later in life, but but he worked up until that point and and loved it, god bless your father.
David Wright: 15:37
he worked er for uh, a year, so, wow, um, so you know he was, I mean, I mean it wasn't like he just got the job, he, he did what he wanted to do. So it's never too late, and I guess that's the moral of this story and definitely why it's winner of the week. Thank you.
Announcer: 16:00
That's how winning is done.
David Wright: 16:03
Yes, it is so back to it.
Matt Fox: 16:07
So it might be a little too late. But full disclosure you and I've had a couple of cocktails already before we've just a couple, not a lot I mean okay, so I've been crazy
David Wright: 16:17
no, I've just uh buffalo trace.
Matt Fox: 16:18
I've been here in the studio since four o'clock this afternoon you guys have been drinking since then I've had. I had a few welcome cocktails and here we are. Did you have any tequila?
David Wright: 16:29
No Well, so long as we've got some time to kill, I think I'll have a beer.
Announcer: 16:34
We don't have no beer, just tequila. What's tequila? It's like beer. Is it fattening, fattening?
Matt Fox: 16:42
If it's like beer, we'll have some Three tequilas. Sure amigo.
Announcer: 16:48
Enjoy yourself.
Matt Fox: 16:49
I'm trying not to get into too many troubles. Come on, three amigos, too much troubles, okay, and they do the shot, and all three of them at the same time. They all.
David Wright: 17:03
Anyways, go on, alrighty folks, today, our subject today is personality disorders. And when I say that, so here's the thing, and I'll just kind of give a very basic kind of overview of why this mental illness is more serious than your typical depression or anxiety or PTSD.
Matt Fox: 17:24
If I start to have a little PTSD, there's a reason why, and we don't need to know.
David Wright: 17:28
That's all good. That's all good, go on. So there is a category of mental illness called personality disorders, and it's a complex combination of different traits and issues and genetics, and what personality disorders are.
David Wright: 17:48
The way they affect people is how they understand themselves and relate to the world around them. So a lot of times, with depression, anxiety, those could be fleeting things, those could be things that come and go, or they could have lifelong depression. The thing with personality disorders is it's a combination, as I said, of genes and environment. So your parents may pass down certain personality traits to you just through genetics, you say. May I say, will that? That's certainly certainly possible. So let's rephrase it your, your traits can be considered your temperament, if that makes sense, it it?
Matt Fox: 18:29
does just to kind of even the playing field, just to kind of simplify it.
David Wright: 18:34
So the genes come into play Again. Genetically, we inherit things from our parents. Some are good, some are bad. The other factor that goes into it is your environment. That includes your surroundings, events that have happened to you and relationships and interactions with people as you grow up. So here's the thing with personality disorders. Most serious mental disorders and when I say serious I'm talking about bipolar or schizophrenia or psychoses typically, on average, occur in the young 20s, not adolescence?
Matt Fox: 19:12
Typically not adolescence.
David Wright: 19:13
Now adolescence now. Now, this is a generalization. There are exceptions, of course. It can happen earlier, can happen later. Okay, most of the time, most major psychiatric disorders in your 20s um with personality disorders, however, real quick yeah, set early in their in their 20s?
Matt Fox: 19:32
is that when you're trying to figure yourself out in the world?
David Wright: 19:36
a lot of times that contributes to it. Yeah, you have. You have as far as like career finishing high school, like like your structure has ended and now you're on your own okay, or to speak so that plays into it. It also plays into our episodes that we talked about probably 10 12 episodes ago. Check that out. Quarter life crisis yes, 12 episodes ago. Check that out. Quarter life crisis yes, and this fits right into that timeframe. So you can kind of see why young 20s is a very volatile age for most people.
Matt Fox: 20:04
You're still developing.
David Wright: 20:05
You're still developing, but then you have more responsibilities and you have the responsibilities of job and income and living and all of those pressures come into play. So a lot of times that is when a lot of your severe psychiatric issues occur is during that time frame. So with personality disorders, however, typically they develop since childhood because personality disorders, they become a part of the way you interact with everything. Now and I'm going to try and make it, make a separation here somebody might be depressed when they're a teenager or in their 20s or even in their 50s, but they're battling depression that their personality is still intact. It just may be weighted down because of the impression. A little tweet depression, well tweaked, if you will, kind of kind of like, maybe like an anchor on on your personality, if that makes sense something maybe, uh, like a trauma that you kind of blocked out of your psyche not even necessarily that for for just say, just say that you're, you just feel depressed or you feel anxious.
David Wright: 21:06
And those could come from environmental factors, they could come from other responsibilities, job stress. Those things can happen. But personality disorders, they don't just pop up. There's no triggers. There's no trigger for that. It's something that develops over time and that's why this diagnosis is so hard to treat, because it's an embedded personality trait. It's embedded into how you interact, how you see things, how you evaluate things, how your mind interprets things. So with personality disorders it's kind of this locked in, very, very difficult to change, even in therapy interesting.
David Wright: 21:45
So if alice from the brady bunches all of a sudden came out of my soul well, see, no it because it wouldn't be sudden, because personality disorders kind of again, it's not like they just hit, they develop over time. It's kind of like. But she's always been there, yeah, but you would have seen it more well before now okay, it would have affected you well before now.
David Wright: 22:08
Fair enough, okay, so I'll give you a couple of examples. So so I have a couple clients, um, one is an adult male, probably in his 30s, very, very passive, like just I, just I, I can't handle things, I just don't want to. And and he said since childhood he would have these episodes where he got so overwhelmed, he would just have these emotional breakdowns since grade school. And this continued on his parents, of course, as a kid. Well, not, of course I shouldn't say that Some parents don't do what they're supposed to do. Of course you know that just happens.
David Wright: 22:43
But he was taken to therapy as a child, he was a saw therapist when he was a teenager, but but during time he so it's a long story short he developed that, this, this way of interacting with the world that we call what, what's called an avoidant personality disorder, avoidant, avoidant. And now and we'll get into specifics as far as as categories of these disorders when we get a little further on but for him it is. It is overwhelming for him to make a phone call, to make an appointment, or to even be on time for something, or to be assertive with someone. It just can't happen. His personality, it's just overwhelming for him and the emotions are so strong that even though he, in his mind, he says I want to do these things.
Matt Fox: 23:33
I just can't do it and a lot of people will call that they don't deal well with confrontation.
David Wright: 23:38
Right, or they call it laziness, or they call it somebody who's just uninterested or flippant, whatever terms you want to use. Interesting, but it's not by choice, and that's that's the hard thing, because a lot of times with personality, disorders Interesting.
Matt Fox: 24:08
Okay, that's kind of an autistic trait as well.
David Wright: 24:11
It's funny you say that, Matt, because it can fall into that.
David Wright: 24:15
Many autistic people have personality disorders because of their inability to interpret the world around them correctly, I shouldn't say correctly Typically the world around them and things that happen and navigating challenges. That's very hard for people. Well, in this gentleman's case, the avoidant personality disorder is really hard. That's really intriguing. Yes, so you may or may not know somebody that has a personality disorder. I'm going to say a majority of us out there have met someone who has it. You may not know you have, but it is common enough that you know somebody who has one, so the person that has this do they?
Matt Fox: 24:54
do they even know that they?
David Wright: 24:56
have. Oftentimes they do not, because they're avoiding it right and they just think their way is the way that it's supposed to be, which, which, again, with mental illness, that's unfortunately. That's a lot of the challenge that we face is that people just feel like this is the way it's supposed to be. I this, this is what is, and they don't realize there's an option to be better.
Matt Fox: 25:17
My way or the highway?
David Wright: 25:19
Yes, yeah, so here's the big thing. There are a lot of different types of personality disorders and we're just going to hit on these and kind of explain and they're grouped in different groups and there's reasons why, and I'll get into that too. So we're going to start first of all. Actually we're going to do this, we're going to come back, okay, because this, this is a lot of info and we always split up our episodes, which we do Listen this was the intro to what we're going to talk.
David Wright: 25:47
It is yes, and, and I've explained the basics of it. So we're going to get into specifics on the next episode as we roll along here. Those of you on Facebook Live stay where you're at. We're going to do another episode. Those of you on a platform somewhere either skip ahead to the next episode or it'll drop next Tuesday or Thursday. They know where that button is at, yep, and yeah, just look for it, it will be out. So hang in there, folks. We're going to be right back for you on Facebook Live and we're going to get into specifics on the groupings and specific personality disorders and why these are so difficult to treat, and there's a few here, so stay with us.
David Wright: 26:23
This could be a three-parter. We don't know, we never know, we never know on this show. It's crazy, it's amazing actually Great heavens.
Matt Fox: 26:31
What kind of radio show is this? So I'm curious to know who am I going to adopt this?
David Wright: 26:36
yes, yes, I'm going to tell you who you're going to adopt. Who is the first dog that mad is going to adopt and take home? Is a presley. Who is it? Presley presley, as an elvis presley was born in 2015, so this is a senior dog, it's a nine-year-old puppy. It is a nine-year-old dog. It's shih tzu, female, 20 pounds, almost dog friendly. Yes, cat friendly. Yes, kids friendly. Yes, see, this is the first dog. Yes, cat friendly. I know I. I noticed that when I looked this one up.
David Wright: 27:08
Yeah, he's cat friendly he's probably friendly to everyone because when you see this picture, okay, no, he'll be friendly to all.
Matt Fox: 27:15
Right, here's presley oh, absolutely come on look at that tongue presley's a cutie. Presley's a little cutie look at him.
David Wright: 27:28
so presley is at DetroitDogRescuecom. Slash adopt. He has a senior dog. Here's the thing. He needs a home, and I know some people are a little reluctant to take on a senior dog because they think they're stuck in their ways or whatever. But he just wants to be loved. Give him some love for the last years of his life and enjoy his company.
Matt Fox: 27:51
So do you know what happens when you breed a Shih Tzu with a bulldog? Yeah, you get a bullshit.
David Wright: 27:56
Yeah.
Announcer: 27:56
You get a bullshit.
Matt Fox: 27:57
Yes, he's adorable.
Announcer: 28:01
Oh, good for you. And he's cat friendly.
Matt Fox: 28:03
I love that Right.
David Wright: 28:05
Yeah, absolutely Presley. He needs a home. Detroitdogrescuecom. Check him out now. All righty folks, change your thinking, change your life, laugh hard, run fast, be kind, we'll see you next time.