A Common Life

The Meaning of 'A Common Life'

Taylor and Morgan Myers

What if the most radical act in today's frenetic world is simply embracing the ordinary? 

For three years, we've been sharing our philosophy of "A Common Life," but we realized we've never fully explained what that means. When someone recently suggested we change our name to "An Uncommon Life," we knew it was time to articulate our vision more clearly.

A common life acknowledges that we share this journey with others. In a deeply divided world, we're making a call to remember our fundamental interconnectedness—in our communities, neighborhoods, and on this planet. The Latin root "communis" reminds us that life was never meant to be lived in isolation.

While so many voices push us to be extraordinary, spectacular, and loud, we're championing the beauty found in mundane moments. As our digital world accelerates toward virtual reality, blurring the lines between human and machine, we believe slowing down to embrace our humanity is revolutionary.

This isn't about elitism—a rich life is accessible to everyone. Whether it's savoring morning coffee, tending a small garden, cultivating relationships, or practicing silence, these simple acts reconnect us with what makes us human. Just a century ago, everyone lived by the sun's rhythms. Today, most can't even tell you when it rises or sets. Reconnecting with these natural patterns pushes us back toward our humanity.

Our philosophy embraces seasonal rhythms, place-based living, deliberate simplicity, integration of spiritual and physical life, and the centrality of the shared table. We're inviting you to notice the world around you, participate actively in life's rhythms, slow down intentionally, and connect meaningfully with your community.

Join us in this quiet revolution. In a culture obsessed with the extraordinary, perhaps embracing the common is the most radical act of all.

Community Newsletter - The Common

DM us on the Socials or email us at Taylor@acommonlife.co

Music on the podcast was composed by Kevin Dailey. The artist is Garden Friend. The track is the instrumental version of “On a Cloud”

Speaker 1:

Hey everybody, welcome back to another episode of A Common Life Podcast. And I'm Taylor and I'm here with my beautiful bride, morgan. Hi, everybody, and it's morning time. It's morning the last time we recorded in the morning as well and, uh, I felt like my voice finally loosened up a little bit by the end of the episode. I tried to do some voice exercises this morning to not sound so tired, but I don't know you got your coffee.

Speaker 2:

You're at least a half a cup of coffee in.

Speaker 1:

I am yeah. So Morgan's pointing at me because she knows I want to do a coffee plug, so we're not sponsored by counterculture.

Speaker 2:

But hey one day One day A man can dream.

Speaker 1:

Because I'm about to give them a little plug. We did their subscription their single source origin subscription.

Speaker 2:

We've been talking about doing it for a long time and this is the first month we did it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so every four weeks we get two bags of single source origin coffee from all of their partners around the world, and it's so cool. So by single source, it means this bag, all of the beans came from a single farm partner that they work with, and so you have this very distinct flavor and it's just rich. It's good.

Speaker 2:

So taylor's been doing less americanos and we've been french pressing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I've been French pressing. I want to try an AeroPress. People swear by AeroPresses.

Speaker 2:

It's probably not a big investment.

Speaker 1:

Definitely not. So yeah, if you're into coffee, you should check out CounterCultures.

Speaker 2:

Use code common Never mind.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's no code. Common life, particularly like. What is it? What does it mean? Why is it called a common life? And um, it's been a while now since we've kind of started doing this and we, we put the brand out there and like over two years, three years, maybe over three years.

Speaker 2:

It was before.

Speaker 1:

It was when I was pregnant with wilder, and he's two and a half yeah, so um three years, we'll say, of having the brand out there and we haven't, uh, revisited kind of what it means and what we're trying to communicate, and so we definitely have some, some values and some like a message that we're trying to communicate, and it's helpful for us to refine it yeah make sure we're clear, because we actually had somebody tell us recently somebody we love dearly was like you should change your name to an uncommon life and we were both like, oh man, like you're, you've really missed it and that's our fault.

Speaker 2:

It is our fault, it's totally our fault.

Speaker 1:

It's nobody's fault but our fault if, if somebody says you should change your name to an uncommon life because clearly we haven't done a good job of communicating our heart and the message of what we're trying. You know what we, what we want to communicate.

Speaker 2:

So we thought we would take a just a podcast to chat a little bit about that and hopefully encourage people yeah so, yeah, I think when we started, we were honed in and focused more on gardening, because that's kind of where the idea started was that we moved back to town and everyone we talked to when they found out that we had an organic farm and then moved into town were like oh, I've always wanted to have a garden, but I don't know where to start. And so we were like, man, this used to be so common, like everyone, and their grandma had a garden and it's just within one generation has become a lost art. And so we were like, let's make that common again, you know. But then, as we have um been doing this for three years now, we've realized, wow, even just living with the seasons, um, doesn't matter your status or, um, even where you live. There's so many things that are just common to everyday life that we want to take deeper.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, there were a couple. I think there were guys. It was Lawson is definitely a dude and Christopher that I saw on Substack write recently about this idea. Yes, so can I start with those?

Speaker 2:

two quotes yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

So on Substack, christopher Stites wrote the older I get, the more I have a distaste for hype and a longing for the mundane moments filled with hidden enchantment. And he gives us some examples, like sitting in the backyard and staring at the birds drinking good coffee in the morning. Um are a couple. And then Lawson Chapman, who's a great follow on Substack, by the way. He says in one of his essays this is a quote I pulled out of it. He says embracing the ordinary as an idea is relearning to embrace the basic joys of life and remembering that most of life is ordinary.

Speaker 1:

That's so true. So maybe we just jump in there and start to talk a little bit about the overall view and kind of what we're trying to push and influence people. So, actually. So somebody just recently asked on Substack, because that's where most of my social media interaction happens. They were like, do you like the word creator?

Speaker 1:

They're talking to creators and this person, specifically their audience, is creators and they're trying to help creators be better creators, and I was like, or they were like does the word creator resonate with you? And I was like not really. What really resonates with me is influencer. As much as I don't want to, I don't want it to, but I am trying to influence people. Like, ultimately, when I write, there's a blend of I'm writing for myself because I think it's important and I want feedback and accountability, but really I'm also writing to influence people. So what are we trying to influence people with a common life? So I would say a common life. What do we mean when we say common? I think the first thing we mean is that life is shared and it's about belonging and it's like the sense of collective life, where experiences, resources and joys are not isolated but they're woven into a shared life, into a community.

Speaker 2:

Common, yes, it's shared, yeah, shared, yeah, like the idea that a shared piece of land, what would it be like in villages? Would it be called the common?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, or like a commune. It gets its word from common for sure.

Speaker 2:

So common comes from the Latin word communis shared by all belonging to many Communion Right, yeah, definitely. And that is something that I think we're losing in our culture is the importance of actual community real life yeah, a common life is a life that is shared.

Speaker 1:

Like we share life together, whether like we like it or not. Like we are doing our life together with other humans that are on this planet right now. Like we're in this together on the planet, in our country, in our state, in our city, in our communities, in our neighborhoods. Like we're all in this together. Mm, hmm, communities in our neighborhoods. Like we're all in this together and right, it seems like obviously you know this is we're divided. More feels like.

Speaker 1:

It feels like we're more divided than ever yeah particularly in our country country, and so it's like we're trying to make a call to say hey guys, we're all in this together. Life is shared.

Speaker 2:

Not individual.

Speaker 1:

No. Also, I think what we mean when we say a common life is it's ordinary, it's every day. So we want to elevate the beauty of the mundane the rhythms of life, the ordinary table, the work of our hands. The ordinary, the everyday, is because it takes practice and real effort to be present, and majority of our life is ordinary, and so I have a tendency to really.

Speaker 2:

To live in the future. What Live in the future?

Speaker 1:

Oh for sure live in the future, to dream. Yeah, there's a lot that I want. I desire a lot, and desire is pain, and so it. It's a good practice for me to get lost in the ordinary and to to take the ordinary common things of life seriously and to be present in them. Otherwise, I'm always living in the future and I'm never. I'm never here in my, in my body, in my holding space for myself.

Speaker 2:

Right now, in the present yeah, and with that there's loss there's a lot of loss if, if you're not able to be present, because you know, even you and I have recently talked about like no one tells you. People tell you soak it up childhood and you're like, yeah, yeah, but like no one tells you about this ache, that's like about your kids, that's so deep because you cannot go back. You know what I mean and so, and it's not like you'll ever be able to like soak it all up or whatever, but being present in your everyday relationships, there would be less loss and more gratitude. Looking back, I would think you know, yeah, the ordinary Connor, my brother just sent me this thing on a reel or something and it's this woman and this has gone on Instagram. People take snippets of her essay, but it's basically like I'm an 84-year-old woman and just for one day, I wake up and my kids are trying to wake me up. Their hair is. I'm back in my old body. I look in the mirror. I don't have wrinkles.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, that's been very popular.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think that speaks to something though, oh people just weep Right, and that speaks to something that our culture is dealing with right now and I honestly think there's so many people that are rightly so pushing and wanting to influence people to step up, to rise up, to be uncommon, to be extraordinary Right. Like we just had a terrible, tragic event in our country where somebody was assassinated violently and they've lived a life of of, of non-violence, um, to many people the words he spoke were offensive, but he was assassinated and it's like now people I think people are wanting to they're, they're putting his life on a pedestal, saying we all need to step up, we all need to be extraordinary, uncommon, loud.

Speaker 2:

Use your platform.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes, and it's like I want us to be the voice that says, okay, that's great. And also, let's find the holy in the mundane and in the everyday. Let's don't constantly strive for this extraordinary, spectacular life that everybody's chasing, because we're missing out on the simple, beautiful moments of life that really make us human.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And we live in such a digital age that is moving very, very, very, very quickly towards virtual reality, and the blend between machine and human is getting blurred more and more every day, and I think slowing down and focusing on what makes us human is really important right now, and so that's again like what we're wanting to help people and encourage and influence people to do so, realize that we live a shared life, that we belong together and that we want to highlight ordinary everyday life and also a shared life that we belong together and that we want to highlight ordinary everyday life and also a common life is an accessible life.

Speaker 1:

It's not exclusive. That's part of the message and part of the meaning. So, like beauty and a rich life, finding richness in our life, like this counterculture, this is a bit of a luxury. This coffee that I'm drinking it's a bit of a luxury and also it's like I think I don't even know how much we pay. I mean, it is a bit more. But just slowing down to soak up the incredibleness of this little cup of brew that was harvested from, you know, all around the world, from this one particular farm, and has been roasted and now I can take that in and taste that and enjoy that by slowing down. And you know that is a luxury. It is a luxury and many people in the world could not afford that, but most people in the in the united states could and can. And instead of just going and grabbing this cake up or which is fine most of the days, but like not really eat, like slow down a little bit and taste the coffee and enjoy that right Like this is a little bit of a luxury.

Speaker 1:

So what I'm saying in that is it is accessible, Slowing down and enjoying the richness of life. You don't have to be an elite person to enjoy life. An elite person to to enjoy, yeah, life.

Speaker 2:

A few things I think about are, I mean, like we have talked about from the beginning, keeping a garden, how accessible that is, but then things like like motherhood or relationships. It's like relationships. You can take them as shallow as you need them to be, or stop and actually see the people that you're with, you know. And then I think about silence. Everyone has the opportunity to be silent and how, even my like, we all struggle to be silent In our minds, with our words. Everybody wants to say something, everybody needs to say their opinion. Silence, and then prayer, like talk about something that used to be common, that everyone would do.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Everyone can pray.

Speaker 1:

I'm thinking of this principle in permaculture that everything gardens, so like you, can cultivate everything. Everything can be cultivated. It's like you, you started with garden, so yeah, clearly gardens can be gardened, but uh, relationships can be cultivated and gardened. Yeah. Silence prayer can be cultivated in your life.

Speaker 2:

Or it can be Neglected. Neglected yeah.

Speaker 1:

Completely and ignored. Mm-hmm you know, the rhythm of the sun is something that used to be so people that lived on earth had to follow, and what's it called Like whenever you're the cycle, your helps, your circadian rhythm, circadian rhythm, right. So I remember talking to our kids about it and I was just like, can you imagine it was only like a hundred years ago that everywhere in the world they, they lived by the sun. Like when the sun went down and it was dark, you weren't you're done, you're done. Yeah, you're done.

Speaker 1:

You go inside and you've got a couple of candles lit or a fire, but, like you're, you're done, and then, like you, only had so much light the next day, so you're waking up when the sun's up. You're up, right, you're not sleeping in, like your life was arranged around the sun. And so even now, I mean so fast forward 100 years and, like people, I can't even tell you what time the sun comes up. Yeah, right, right, um right. I mean I think I could if I think about it. Right, but like most people, they don't. We don't know when when the sun goes up or what time the sun's setting and this is totally not a part of our culture of life.

Speaker 2:

yeah, I was. I was laying on the deck with wilder yesterday and we were looking up and he was like mama, moon, moon and you can see you. You see the moon during the day and I was just like what a sweet little thing I could do every day is go out and look for the moon and know, you know, know the cycle of the moon, know the seasons that you're in, the day that you're in. I can't even tell you what day of the month it's like okay, so why is this even important?

Speaker 1:

well, to me it's like okay, that is that is, cultivating, slowing down, being present, everybody's. So I know I am and I'll I'll say everybody, because it feels that way. Everybody's talking about how fast life is, how fast things are moving. It's like okay, if you want your life to slow down you have to practice being present. Yes, and you can.

Speaker 1:

You can slow your life down, and to be present means noticing what's happening and changing around you, in creation, in nature, and tracking the moon is exactly that, and this is accessible to everyone, right, like you don't? Every, every everybody here on this planet is looking up and seeing the sun and the moon, so get more acquainted with the sun's coming and going, the moon's cycles, and pay attention to that. Um and oh shoot. What was I gonna say?

Speaker 2:

I forget well, I was gonna say you know, in the same way, people used to know, like just being acquainted with the seasons, like people used to know you couldn't get strawberries in de December and that if you were to plant a fruit tree, it's going to be three years or more before you get fruit. And even, just like, the modern convenience of grocery stores has robbed us of knowing what season we're in. And yeah, yeah for sure of knowing what season we're in, and yeah, yeah, for sure.

Speaker 1:

What I was going to say is the living by the sun, or knowing the rhythms of the sun and even the moon. It's like that pushes us into our humanity.

Speaker 1:

There's a huge push going away from being human, away from our humanity, and I think, swimming upstream, there needs to be voices that say, hey, no, we're actually. We are human, we are biological and these type things of. We have limits, we're not unlimited, we're not robotic, we need rest, and part of that is when the sun goes down, that's this is our time now to rest, to turn down. So even that embracing the human side of us, yeah, um so yeah, I think. The other thing, when, when we talk about a common life, um, we're talking about mutual obligation, mutual care. So, like in old English law, commons meant shared land for the good of the people.

Speaker 1:

And we want to draw on this, that we're stewards of land, we're stewards of relationships and the seasons for the good of all. That's what we want to remind people. This common life is a commons and we all have to work together to steward this, Whether that be the natural world, our interpersonal world, our culture, Our interpersonal world, our culture, like this earth, this life is one big commons. And you know, are we going to exploit those things or enliven them, enrich Right?

Speaker 3:

Work together, mutually realizing that we're all sharing this and we're all in this together.

Speaker 1:

So that's, um, what we mean when we say a common, you know, a common life. It's not very sexy, but um, it actually is. It actually really is, um a philosophy, or the philosophy. What are we? It's kind of the next part that we wanted to talk about. What does that mean For us? There are a few aspects of it that we are kind of focused in on and think a lot about.

Speaker 2:

In our personal life.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and in the brand and in the message. So seasonal rhythms, life follows seasons, and so we feel like our work, our rest, our, our celebrations, that's some good structure for sure, seasonal living um also placed, I'm sorry, place based living, uh like, the more we we become more human by becoming more rooted in our place, we're watching the soil, the weather, all the natural firsts that are happening around us, caring for it, stewarding our place, becoming more acquainted and aware of it, sugaring our place becoming more acquainted and aware of it.

Speaker 1:

This changes us and makes us more rooted and more grounded.

Speaker 2:

And where we actually are Right. We talked on past podcasts about calendar of firsts. That's a great way.

Speaker 1:

To be rooted and know your place A great practice and a familiar walk.

Speaker 2:

You do a familiar walk where you just go out in the woods every day, see what's changed slowly, slowly, slowly.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, absolutely. And the more rooted you become in a place, the more aware you become. The deeper you're in relationship with the place you are and also the people in your place, the more you can care for it. Yeah, um, and tying back into this how you like, we're sharing this.

Speaker 2:

This is, this is a shared life you know, what is coming to my mind is a few weeks ago, when we were getting a ton of rain and the Paint Rock River was like super murky and you texted someone who's in wildlife or maybe saw them in person and you're like, hey, the river is really murky. I've been noticing the river is really murky and she's like. I've been noticing that too, but I just thought it was just me, you know. But like even that kind of thing, that's like almost like warning signs. They're like, hey, something's going on here that's not natural or normal and if we don't pay attention we're never going to catch that stuff right and it gets you know.

Speaker 1:

it's like, hey, if you live in the very urban environment and you're in an apartment, you know for you it might be a daily walk in the very urban environment and you're in an apartment, you know for you it might be a daily walk in the local park that you're noticing, that you're, you're caring for and that's your connection with nature, daily or weekly.

Speaker 2:

Or land trust trails, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

But also like your neighbors, like, do you, do we know our neighbors and are we? Are we noticing our neighbors? Because that's those relationships, right, cultivating those relationships and those those. That's the same concept of hey, I'm just noticing this river's murky let's we need to count, carry that over into our human relationships. Hey, I noticed my neighbors um seem a little off. I haven't seen her in two days or right like are we noticing each other?

Speaker 1:

um, it's good. Uh, so also, it's a. It's like a philosophy of, of deliberate simplicity. We live in a culture that is frantic and we want to reject that. We really for us and our family, and what we want to encourage people is to slow down right. So we have to reject that frantic pressure and the disposable pace of modern life. We want to reject that for something that is slower, more sustainable and more deeply satisfying. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

That's good, also integration. So we want to live a life that's integrated, where there's no false separation between our spiritual life, our real life, you know work, family meals, gardens, prayers all like woven together. Woven together, it all belongs together. Integrate, yeah, yeah, easier said than done, totally, but it is still kind of an undergirding yeah idea.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I feel like living that way makes so much more sense. We have like we have separated out, but we're, we are whole beings. So caring for your body is also caring for your soul, right? Caring for your spirit, caring for your body and caring for your brother.

Speaker 1:

Caring for your body and caring for your brother, right, we're all into it's all, yeah, together that's kind of what I was hitting on when I said life is prayer right, yeah, I get that you know, it's like what I was on the tractor, tractor meditations and I was just thinking like what you do reflects what you believe and so life is belief. So it's like if you do it and so life is belief. No, I mean, so it's like if you're doing things as an act of faith and you acknowledge that, like, everything I'm doing is because I'm believing something, whether about the world or about myself or about other people, reflecting on that and making it an act of prayer. It is, I don't know. It's like I believe life is prayer. I believe that statement to be true. It's kind of hard for me to articulate what I meant, but life is prayer, living, yeah.

Speaker 1:

The other thing is as far as about integration and like the spiritual with the real life. It's like I've been trying to make the ordinary, everyday tasks whether it be driving, whether it be what I'm doing at work, whether it be what I'm doing at work it could be cooking, it could be cleaning to make them more meditative, which what I mean by that. And what I'm trying to do is to get out of my mind, to quiet my thoughts and to get lost in the actual work of the movements and the motions and the actual task of what I'm doing to focus on it, and by doing that it just quiets your mind. It slows your mind and when that happens, your body physically, biologically, like you're talking about everything being integrated your mental state affects how your physiological state operates, and so that's just good to slow all those things down, and I also think it quiets your mind.

Speaker 1:

It's a good practice, it's a good exercise as we're like rejecting this frantic lifestyle that's both a mental frantic and then also a physical frantic, and I like that. It's. Yeah, this feels like the right path.

Speaker 2:

I feel like that's why I like seeding and pruning and the real repetitive things of gardening.

Speaker 1:

It is meditative for you. Yeah, so I can't stand those things. I know Because probably because it's hard for me to slow my mind down and it's like my body's going slow but my mind is racing. So, for me, doing what I just mentioned practicing slowing my thoughts and just getting lost in the work and not in my thoughts is good. But what's meditative for me is hiking, particularly overnight trips, because the only goal, like the only thing I'm doing, is just one foot in front of the other getting to the destination, and I have a very clear path. I don't have to think about the path, like the path is already right. It's very meditative because after like a day and a half, I've gone through all my thoughts and then they're gone.

Speaker 1:

There's nothing else to think about. And then I can actually have some real thought. And I never knew. I always had these heavy revvies On hiking trips.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, which usually boiled down to cut your hair and get your life together like shave. It's kind of funny, but like, usually that's what it, that's what the that's what the heavy revvy is. But I would always have these heavy revvy moments where, like moment of clarity, and I never knew how to describe it other than it's like, yeah, this is what happens, but I think what actually was happening is you had a minute. You had a minute yep, exactly.

Speaker 1:

So I think the last part of the, the philosophy, would be, uh, what we could call like hospitality and table fellowship. Where the table is central and common is it's also tied to communion. Yeah, which is cool shared bread, shared conversation, shared life life amen. Amen.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I love feeding people, man, I love, and that's so human.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, feeding people, preparing meals, food is something we should continue Gather.

Speaker 2:

Gather around, I mean take time around.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's gone. If you're living the frantic lifestyle like you were talking about earlier, when are you going to eat?

Speaker 1:

Right, I was thinking that I was listening to the radio with the kids on the way into school and it was like this. You know this woman and man that were the DJs right and they were talking. The trivia question was what was the first dessert in?

Speaker 2:

the Fast food.

Speaker 1:

No, in the. What is it called Dinner? Oh TV dinner, TV dinner. Yeah sorry, what was the first dessert in?

Speaker 2:

the what is it called Dinner, oh TV dinner, TV dinner.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, sorry, what was the first dessert in the TV dinners? And the kids didn't know what a TV dinner was. Hmm. You know, and so yeah.

Speaker 2:

Was it like Jell-O?

Speaker 1:

Oh man, I don't remember, but just think about the idea of a TV dinner.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And how sad that is.

Speaker 2:

It makes me think of the scene in Matilda. You know, the dad's the car salesman, the mom's the hairdresser, and all they do is sit there and watch fighting on their TV. And they're like. You know, it's like the trays.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, uh. So what is like? What are we inviting our audience, what are we inviting the community, inviting others into? Um, what we're inviting people into is we want people to notice, we want to pay attention to the natural world, those cues we think that's important. We want people to participate, to engage in the planting, the cooking, making, mending, sharing yeah, I think it's really easy to watch other people do these things.

Speaker 2:

For me, it's like you're looking at Pinterest. You're like, oh man, that garden, that's so. It's like you're looking at Pinterest. You're like, oh man, that garden that's so beautiful. And it's like, okay, well, go plant your own you know, yeah, just or meals. Yeah, to actually engage.

Speaker 1:

Yep, we're inviting people to slow down, down to practice rhythms of rest and celebration, and we're inviting people to connect with neighbors, the land and their god. That's right, welcome to a common life. Yeah, so that's a little bit about what we're about, or a lot a bit about what we're about, and hopefully we'll make a little dent influence. Somebody to slow down and smell the coffee, whether it's your K-cup or not, or you have single source origin from a farm in Guatemala.

Speaker 2:

Can we ditch the K-cups? Can we influence people to ditch their K-cups?

Speaker 1:

Oh man, yeah, if we could pass a law that would ban TV dinners and K-Cups, let's do it. Nah, man, we got to make the choices. Yeah, make the choices ourselves. To not do that, to choose, to choose, all right. Well, we're off script. Now I feel like this is, this is going down. I feel like we need to wrap this up, um all right so, but also feel like there's something else we need to say, is it?

Speaker 2:

um well, we've always said at the end of our podcast happy gardening. Do we want to be like slow down, Until next time, slow down.

Speaker 1:

Maybe we test run it, okay, and we'll just if people let us know what you think, yeah.

Speaker 3:

So we're going gonna say until next time all right tay all right, everybody until next time slow down, thank you, Thank you, the Thank you.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to use a little bit of water to get the water out. I'm going to pour it into a glass. I'm going to pour it into a glass, thank you.