
Black Boomer Besties from Brooklyn
Black Boomer Besties from Brooklyn
Downsizing with Heart and Humor
In this week’s episode, The Besties discovered that a new, yet unused, yellow Schwinn bike harbored a lesson about life's unexpected attachments and the difficulty of letting things go. It was Leslie’s turn to attempt the difficult task of decluttering and emptying her storage unit so she solicited Ange’s help. Afterall, Angie had just cleared out her unit so who would be better to show Les how it was done. And it wasn’t easy.
With Angella's stern but pragmatic approach, and unwavering support, the ladies balance fond memories with the practical need to simplify their lives.
Their humorous stories underline the importance of small steps and the value of seeking help to get unstuck. Through laughter and shared experiences, they hope to inspire you to not only break free from clutter—both physical and financial—but to embrace the changes that promise a brighter, more organized future.
This episode and all previous episodes are available on YouTube. Please join our Besties Quad Squad as a Patreon subscriber at the $5 or $10 monthly level. You'll receive exclusive behind-the-scenes content.
Get Angie’s eBook: We’re Too Old for This Shit! The Inquisitive Older Woman’s Guide to Joy
Visit Black Boomer Besties from Brooklyn website for behind-the-scenes extras.
hey aunt, hi leslie, how are you?
Speaker 2:sounds a little formal, but I am fine. How are you?
Speaker 1:good, I'm okay. Listen, I was just with you the other day. I know you just left.
Speaker 2:I did we were gonna be in the same frame I know, but now you left me, I know, so you're there I'm here.
Speaker 1:We tried to record when we were together but we just had too many. There wasn't enough hours in a day and let me tell you we already canceled two things that leslie had planned, even though this was all a work I even baked three things because I was trying to get that movie in. A movie, going to have dinner with some family members and a Dr Martin Luther King Jr event. Reverend Dr Martin Luther King Jr event.
Speaker 2:All three. We had to get rid of those things.
Speaker 1:And they interfered with this very important mission. I had A very important mission.
Speaker 2:But we only had three days, so we got a lot done.
Speaker 1:This is what I'm saying. I'm not sure why she thought but this is Leslie, but wait, who is she?
Speaker 2:That would be me. Welcome to another episode of Black Boomer Besties from Brooklyn.
Speaker 1:I'm Angela and that is Leslie, my best friend of almost 50 years. And listen, we're here, we're really curious about life and about the things that we've been taught that maybe, maybe, maybe we believe them and we shouldn't have. So we kind of challenge the status quo and challenge some conventional thinking, especially for boomers. We're 62 years old. We both are Leslie's a little bit older, though I just want to make that clear. Leslie is some months, several months, more than half a year.
Speaker 2:Older than me, older than me. That's why I'm so much wiser.
Speaker 1:That's where the wisdom comes in In this part of the year. We are the same age and and, yeah, we invite you to stick around. We, we, we hope that you are encouraged to think boldly no, to think deeply and to act boldly. I'm feeling very summery today, even though there's snow on the ground here in North Carolina, but this is one of my favorite dresses and I had it on all day today, and so I thought I should bring some radiant summery energy today, anyway.
Speaker 1:So this is what happened. Leslie and I were together for a few days. I did not want to be by myself when the transition in government was happening. I know what my energy was and I knew that I needed to be in community. So I said, les, why don't I come up? And Leslie has, is in the process of moving and she has two, two, two. Remember, two, two, two. What's that? From? What's that commercial? Two, two mints in one or something.
Speaker 2:Double mint, double mint, two mints and one. We're aging ourselves.
Speaker 1:We are boomers, anyway. So she's like Ange, since you have already done this gotten sold the house, gotten rid of 80% of your things can you help me to do that? You know, to reduce from at least one storage unit, of two storage units, to one.
Speaker 2:So I looked at. Ange was the trailblazer. She needed to be with me this week. So here we are. So here's the thing. I learned a couple of lessons, but I think I'm going to bring that up a little bit later in the episode. Okay, I was faced with paring down at least 50 years of stuff. If anybody knows anything about me, I keep things in good shape for a long time.
Speaker 1:She buys quality and she keeps it.
Speaker 2:I do I do I have clothing that I have pictures of wearing when my son was a baby a child, and he's now 36.
Speaker 1:Leslie, I don't think you should tell people. I just don't think it's right.
Speaker 2:No, but it's not the point is, I have too much stuff.
Speaker 1:They'll still love you. They'll still love you, yeah.
Speaker 2:So I sold my house, I moved, I'm downsizing and here I have all this stuff and I'll be honest, I can do a lot of things. Yep, I'm typically not a fearful person. I'm pretty bold, but each time I opened the storage bin I felt this. I felt almost like not defeated per se, but I felt like this is something that I'm never going to be able to do. I guess that's two feet right and it was just easier to just close the latch, lock the thing and then move on. But one of the things is that this was costing me $600 a month. That's a lot of money. That's seven grand a year just to store things. The other thing is that I initially put these items in the storage bin. Storage unit, oh, storage unit, I don't even know the language In the storage unit Is
Speaker 2:that a slip Four or five months ago and I could see it being there for another five years, because there are things that I haven't touched, looked at, thought about in many more months than five months. So that's why I knew, cognitively, I knew that I needed to get that, I needed to pare down, but practically and logistically I've really felt stuck and I got to tell you, in she comes, you know, like the western on the white horse, it wasn't galloping, she was walking, I saw her from beyond. First of all, was I just doing this? And then, yeah, you were just doing this, waving to the people, tapping your hat, like coming on in, coming on in, and you know she left yesterday or two days ago no, yesterday, yesterday you left yesterday and I honestly feel more competent, I feel like I can do this.
Speaker 2:Let me just tell you I'll let you jump in Ange, but it was a thing of beauty and, and all jokes aside, the reason that I we keep talking about storage is like why do you guys have several episodes about storage? But let me tell you why it's important and significant. I know several people personally I'm 62 years. We have many of us have parents who have either passed away or are in the process of downsizing themselves or coming to live with you, and then parents have a house full of stuff and, try as we may, we may ask our loved ones can you just get rid of it? Why do you need this stuff? And I just remember these conversations, even with my grandmother, and she would say these are my good pants, those are my good china, that's my good couch. So if it's good, you have to hold on to it.
Speaker 2:There's a lot of psychological thought that goes into those things how long it took you to acquire things, the things that you may be proud of yourself for acquiring. My mom, rightly so, is very proud of her large brownstone that she was able to buy 50 years ago in Brooklyn, and because that was such a wonderful accomplishment of hers. She can't really understand that an 80-year-old woman does not cannot live in four floors of a home, and so we're struggling with that. So what I'm saying is I understand some of the psychological barriers to getting rid of the things that no longer serve us, but the was one thing I could not do. I needed another set of eyes to look at these things and even if I turned away, get rid of you know, box it up, let it go, and I know, once it's gone, I wouldn't think of it, but I couldn't, so it was a little comical.
Speaker 2:Let me just tell you this there was almost a couple of arguments, but let me just tell you one thing that Ange is really good at, and then I really am going to turn it over to you. Ange, that's fine, you're really good, and this is one of the two things I love about you one of the two reasons why you're kidding around.
Speaker 2:I gotta tell you about that too, what she said, but okay, so and just really good at weeding out the fluffs in many circumstances, but in this case it's like really getting down to the nitty gritty and identifying the things that are important. So when she first, we stepped into both units, we looked at them and the first thing she said to me is what is your goal? What are you trying to? What do you want to accomplish? We had limited time with her there, and et cetera, et cetera. What do you want to accomplish? We had limited time with her there, and et cetera, et cetera. What do you want to accomplish? And I'm like, oh, I really I honestly I said, oh no, what do you mean I want to accomplish? I don't know, but it showed up throughout the whole process because she kept bringing me back to what do you want to accomplish?
Speaker 2:For example, what I realized I needed to accomplish was that 50 percent of the items, the tangible things that I own, had to go. That was my goal to get rid of stuff. So when I sold well, we'll talk about that in a minute so when we set up, she set up a system for me of selling things and she was right there. I mean, she didn't say this is what you do Les. She's on the phone taking pictures and posting for sale and I'm like what do you mean? That's a good bike Only $25. A good bike, new, never been ridden with the helmet and all this bicycle equipment.
Speaker 1:Part of the grounding conversation that I had with her are what are her goals and what were her priorities and how much things cost, and getting money was not a priority at all. Exactly, exactly. Her goal was getting it down to one unit.
Speaker 2:When I pushed back and said I can't sell this bike for $25. She's like, well, are you trying to get rid of it? Are you trying to get rid of it? And that's when I said yes, it was the first thing that sold. 20 people wanted that bicycle.
Speaker 1:We got to put the picture in the comments 20 people wanted it Within 15 minutes of me posting it it was like ding, ding ding ding, ding, ding ding, and I just handed her the phone.
Speaker 2:I'm like Ange, here, you take it, you take over.
Speaker 1:It's too much for me that bike that Leslie was like.
Speaker 2:I can't sell it for that.
Speaker 1:Never ridden. She has her bike because she likes to ride. I've had it for years. She has her bike. This was like a really beautiful yellow Schwinn. Like a roadster. She has never ridden it. So when she was walking I I mean it was probably worth 200 dollars. But I'm like, do you want to get rid of it?
Speaker 2:are you trying to?
Speaker 1:do you want 20 people to want it or are you trying to? You know, get as much value out of it as possible. It's so important to do that.
Speaker 2:This is, this is. This is so in keeping with my personality. The more people that wanted it, the more I wanted to keep it. It's like when you're done with a man, you know you're ready to break up with that boyfriend or whatever. It's like I'm done with him, whatever. When other people start looking, you're like wait a minute.
Speaker 1:That's that competition thing.
Speaker 2:Maybe it's not that, maybe he's not that bad, let me take another look, so that's, that's what I did with so many of the items. I'm like, if you other people thought it was so interesting, maybe I need to hold on to it.
Speaker 1:Oh my gosh, it was, it was, it was a lot, it was a lot, it was a lot. And what was funny is at the end of the first day it felt like I'd been there five days. Yeah, not because you know it was just how much we got done.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we did.
Speaker 1:How much we got done. We were able to move things aside.
Speaker 2:She, she even the word even went out to a family member who needed stuff. By the next day he was there with a truck, and, and the day before and was like this is for him. This, I said but what if he doesn't want it? He's taking it. He has friends who want it. All the exercise, exercise equipment was gone the weights, the weight bench, the this, the that, and we even listed the elliptical machine and the treadmill for free. All you got to do is take it.
Speaker 1:When it came to all my Christmas decorations, Let me tell you what you had me do, right? So I posted, I took pictures of all of her Christmas stuff. I'm like Leslie, put them all together, take the Christmas stuff, okay? It included two big beautiful metal stars lighted, a couple wreaths and things like that and some really nice tabletop Christmas trees, kind of those slender, really nice Christmas trees, right? And then it also included a Christmas tree, a big eight-foot Christmas tree. That was in a beautiful bag. You know what?
Speaker 2:Leslie would buy.
Speaker 1:On wheels? No issues, it's quilt, quilted, it's all the things right. So I took a picture of all the christmas stuff and I posted it. This is what this would have me do. Ang, did that include the tree? I'm like leslie. We are going to put a link to the, to the episode where leslie was talking about her humbug.
Speaker 2:She has not decorated for christmas. I don't even like christmas. She has not decorated for christmas.
Speaker 1:In years. She, like she, gets angry around. You know christmas because of the, the consumerism, it and the last time we were together around Christmas season, Leslie was such a sourpuss. We went out to dinner and there was lights in the streets. Look at this. It's all fake. They don't care about their fellow man. This is all fake. This is all bullshit. And now she tells me she wants her tree.
Speaker 2:You gotta take down the listing so you can remove the tree.
Speaker 1:This is how she got me. She said wait a minute, let's set it up so you can get a good picture. You can get a good picture of it, so people can actually see, once it was set up she was like this tree is beautiful. It wasn't really beautiful it wasn't really what.
Speaker 2:This is what I had to deal with twenty dollars for this is the whole kit and caboodle money was not.
Speaker 1:I'm like, I'm not here to be robbed, let me. There's another, uh, another episode you may be interested in. When I talked about, in my moving experience, my storage experience, you realize how much you're actually paying for the things you already bought them and then you're paying to store them when you're not enjoying them in your home right. If you bought them and you're paying rent you're living here, it's not a big deal but you're paying for them over and over and over again so this idea.
Speaker 1:I paid all this money and you're still paying, and you're still paying, you're still paying for it. So she was able to sneak out the Christmas tree so that one isn't. I did take down the listing and put it back up and kind of separate it, because you know it's like, look, not a big deal, it's Christmas stuff, people are going to buy it and I had to, like give her a little win. But I, this is, this is. This is what encouraged me to be as decisive and assertive as I was. You really were.
Speaker 2:You were a little bit. I was a little nothing.
Speaker 1:I was just what I needed to be. I know how it feels to be rid of what is hindering you when it comes to accumulation of stuff. I know the albatross that it is. It is so present with me and the more that I could feel Leslie starting to feel that it was like let's go, let's get it done, let's get it done.
Speaker 2:I'm there. I'm there. You know what I'm saying, and it was so weird because it was I keep saying this, but it was something that I felt so incompetent about. You know, I just I said I'd rather just pay every month than to deal with it, and once you showed me a way and we moved a lot of stuff in two days.
Speaker 2:I really felt able, and obviously there's more work to do, but I have a plan and I know how to do it. So I learned something from this fun little stressful weekend. You know, I really learned something Not, you know, I'm the type of person I don't ask for help too much, I'm very set in my ways and I like to do things my way and whatever you know. But by speaking to you about this issue, this brick wall I felt like I was facing, it was like it was so easy for you to show me and put me on the other side of it. You know, it didn't take months of therapy. It didn't take weeks and weeks of, you know, prodding or whatever. You really just did this, this, did this, this boom, boom, boom, like a quick coaching. This is what we're going to do.
Speaker 2:But it really started with you pushing me, as you've done many times in my life, to say what is your goal, what are you trying to accomplish? Because the behavior can change based on what your goals were. If I wanted wanted, let's say to make as much money from selling things, it might be slower and perhaps we would post things in a different way, perhaps take pictures differently or post to different places or things like that. But my goal was to get rid of it, to let it go, and you really helped me with that. I owe you. You're in.
Speaker 1:Listen, I have to say you're off probation. This is what she did right, you're off probation.
Speaker 2:You've been on probation for decades. You're now off probation.
Speaker 1:Hilarious she told me that I was off probation. Hilarious, she told me that I was off probation.
Speaker 2:You've been on probation as my best friend for years. I never, told you that I didn't want you to feel funny like you could be fired and let go at any time but you've been on probation for 47 years and you just got out of probation. You're off probation. That's why I bought you dinner to celebrate your tenure. You're tenured now you're tenured now. Now you can act up, you can show your ass.
Speaker 1:You got tenure there's something I did later on, like the day before I left, and she was like but I can't touch you, doc, I thought I was going to lose it.
Speaker 2:She said I have tenure.
Speaker 1:She said I have tenure, okay, so here's something right that started coming to me. As you were, you were talking about what I did Right, were you were talking about what I did right, how? And I'm like, and you had the same struggle when you were dealing with your stuff you guys got to listen to this, because I don't want you to miss this okay, I really don't want you to miss this, leslie.
Speaker 1:You haven't heard me talk about this in this way. I struggled with my things. I sold my house in 2022 and my things were in storage for two years plus before I got rid of them, sold them, gave away, whatever right. And I had the same feeling of, okay, it's too much, and all the things, yeah. And so you might think that I am this.
Speaker 1:You know that I like structure, that I'm organized that I do this because my behavior would indicate that Leslie just told you what I did, how I came in and said this would go.
Speaker 1:Right. She described this structure, that I had, this process, that I had right. But let me tell you the point here. Behaviors are not the indication of people's, what people like, their personality, what they're good at. It's not what they do. This is the thing. The behavior doesn't tell it. I did this not because I love and I'm so good at organizing and getting rid of stuff and so on.
Speaker 1:I'm good at it, but what drove me to do this so well for my best friend is because I wanted her to feel a certain way is because I wanted her to feel a certain way, and so that way, this thing that I could give her, with this way of making her feel freer, like she could make decisions without this thing on her head, that's what drove my behavior.
Speaker 1:It's not you understand, so so you could look at this and say, oh, angela's really organized, and so on. It's not. The organization is a skill that I have, but the behavior was because my goal was to make Leslie's life a little easier and I was willing to do this for her because I know that I could because I wanted to make her life easier.
Speaker 1:Right, because I know that I could, because I wanted to make her life easier, right. Leslie might organize, be organized for other reasons. She might like to have things in order while we were there. Yes, she bought a little bookshelf because her books were getting, or she likes to have things in order, but my drive is different from hers, but so our behaviors could look the same, but my drive is very different.
Speaker 1:Yes, and the motivation behind my motivation was very different I couldn't do this for myself, but I could do it for her I see, I wanted I wanted to yeah, so there's there. There's it. It was a fascinating experience, even though you think it's just okay we're in storage units, we're doing this thing. But I hope you heard what Leslie was saying about feeling so stuck that there's no way. I'd rather pay than fix the problem. I'd rather pay. And how many times do we?
Speaker 2:do that in so many areas across our lives. You know, we have so much ability and confidence in other areas of our life. Many people are, you know, attorneys or engineers or whatever, and they may just come home and be faced with something you have. That I'll be. You know, you said it before but like looking at finances, yeah, yeah, it's like you make money this and that, but just organizing and thinking about money drives you. It's like that's your brick wall.
Speaker 1:It's my brick wall.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:It's my brick wall and I don't understand it. You can't understand it and I'm like oh, it's mid-January.
Speaker 2:I got to start doing my taxes, getting my taxes ready. You're like what January? This is what.
Speaker 1:And she says it with ooh, I got to.
Speaker 2:Like she's late, like ooh I got to.
Speaker 1:Ooh, I got to like are you crazy right now, get away.
Speaker 2:Get away from me.
Speaker 1:Get away from me, you, who's that? So, like Leslie said, I have this thing and I got a money coach, not someone to help me to make money. I got that. I got coaches for that. Great. I needed someone to help me in how I spend the money and how you process and look at the money, because that's where your barrier is.
Speaker 2:A lot of people have that with math. It's like even simple things. They don't even get to that part of it because they put up such a barrier when they think about oh, there's math involved, or whatever the way that I spend if there's math involved or whatever you know the way that I spend it's.
Speaker 1:If there's a need, I evaluate the need and then I spend the money. Right, it's not an excess. It's not an excess thing, it is a lack of tracking. I don't like like I make fun of Leslie, because Leslie will still use.
Speaker 2:You telling my business listen.
Speaker 1:She's been doing it since 15, writing everything down. I really do listen. She's a labeler.
Speaker 2:She's a labeler, she labels everything, she labels everything you're not the only one that pointed that out, but somebody else said that they're like I don't even notice these things anymore.
Speaker 1:This is hand soap and this is dish soap.
Speaker 2:She labels it but how else would you know? There's two things of soap they're not in the original bottles because I wouldn't leave them in the original bottles they're in nice things, half of our audience. How and Half of our audience, if it doesn't say hand soap, you would be washing dishes with hand soap and washing your hands with this soap.
Speaker 1:Needs a label. Half of you will agree with her and half of you will agree with me?
Speaker 2:No, 90% will agree with me, because guess what? Who wants to wash their hands with Ajax?
Speaker 1:Let me tell you what happens at my house.
Speaker 2:You wash your hands with Ajax.
Speaker 1:I have two things and people who visit say oh, which one is the soap, which one is for your hands? And I tell them and I keep it moving, I don't label, and I tell them because when there are two things, most people ask or they can tell right, and soap is usually not green.
Speaker 2:That reminds me of the and this is funny, but all of the light switches in my house in Charlotte they're labeled with it.
Speaker 1:So we went to eat and we had leftovers everybody knows what they got right. There were four of us. Two people were leaving no confusion no confusion. Leslie gets out her pet and on my, oh my gosh, you might put it down and take home somebody's food. Wait a minute Wait. I would have showed you, guys and you said it, I would have shown you guys. I would have shown you guys, I would have had it right here.
Speaker 2:Don't out me, you're outing me.
Speaker 1:I took it off because it was uncomfortable. So I'm at Leslie's. I happen to have one of her pens in my notebook that. I brought home, so I'm writing with the pen. I love the way that it writes, but it's kind of like something is interfering with my finger. Stop it, I mean guess what was on it? A label, I can't A label that said her name. I guess she takes that to work Everything. Everything has a label Everything, everything.
Speaker 2:What is wrong with me? Look at it my whole life is labeled.
Speaker 1:It's everywhere, it's everywhere.
Speaker 2:All my drinking cups are labeled what. All right, all right, we're getting a little off topic, but let me just can I explain myself let's bring it on back.
Speaker 1:I'm here, there's somebody who's so organized, but I'm also very absent-minded and I leave things all over the hospital.
Speaker 2:So I may like hospital, but I would go up to a nursing station and I'll see my cup there. How do I know it's my cup? Cause it has my name on it. How do I know that they took my pen? Sorry, what name is on that pen?
Speaker 1:Yeah, so you might think that because leslie's that way organizing her stories, no brainer, no brainer. But there was this blockage. I have it with that. We got the help that we needed, we got, and that is the point.
Speaker 2:That really is the point you, I said to you and I kind of think maybe we just need to talk about the things that are blocking us and who I knew, but who could know that a solution and help was right there with your best friend or right next to your neighbor. This could be your thing, because there's a lot of things that I like to do that people don't, and love going to the supermarket, I love doing laundry.
Speaker 1:She does, she does, sorry, don't and love going to the supermarket.
Speaker 2:I love doing laundry, you know, although they're, you know, sorry there's. There's assistance out there if, if we talk about some of the things that I think that we're struggling with and I think you know that's a simplistic way of saying it.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but it's the. The point is that your, your answers are there to the things that are in your way, whatever it is, whatever it is you may not have the big answer right away, but you have an answer that could get you to the big answer. You just have to figure out what is it that you need and say it. Say it. Maybe the person who you're speaking to isn't the one, but they may know someone who knows someone who knows someone but you never know unless you you know, and I and I know that it.
Speaker 1:It may take a while to kind of get to the point where this is a real issue, like after spending x number of months for something that you know for storage or whatever it is, you may have your. It may take you a while to get to your red line, but once you get there, maybe even a little before, ask for it. Ask for it. Trust me, this is like I deliberated over whether I should get a money coach or not. Oh, not another coach.
Speaker 2:Whatever?
Speaker 1:But then when I realized how much not really getting clear on my expenses was holding, back other parts of your life.
Speaker 2:So it's not just that one tangible thing.
Speaker 1:Exactly. It was in the way of something greater that I wanted to do I want to travel and so if I don't know what it's going to take for me to um travel and do the things that I want to do, it was kind of like it was almost like you ever see um uh runners or basketball um players anyone who's trying to increase their speed. They put a harness on and it's it has like oh yeah, a.
Speaker 2:Thing on their back, almost like that catches air like a parachute, and so they're running, they're resisting Exactly.
Speaker 1:It feels like that. It's resisting your speed when you're kind of carrying this thing. You're moving forward, but you're not moving forward with the speed that you can while you have this thing on your back and it may take a little money to get that help that you need. But I'm telling you I don't look forward to our meetings with my money coach. I don't look forward to it, but I'm committed to it because I paid for it and I'm going to do everything she tells me to do because I paid for it. And I'm going to do everything she tells me to do because I paid for it and I'm going to get the value out of it because I want the transformation and I'm going to do the work. But it got to a point where it was like you cannot do this thing that you want to do this year without dealing with this issue, if you don't get the help that you need.
Speaker 2:And that's the same thing with me and something as simple or hard as a storage bin. I cannot move forward in the way that I want to, holding on to all these years of stuff that I haven't seen in over a year, don't really care about. And it's like oh, yeah, that thing. Oh yeah, that lamp. And oh, first of all, how do we accumulate all this stuff? But yeah, that thing. Oh yeah, that lamp. And oh, first of all, how do we accumulate all the stuff?
Speaker 1:Yeah, yes, Food for thought folks.
Speaker 2:Oh, there's one other thing Ange did for me. What did I do? Oh, she cut about eight inches off of my hair.
Speaker 1:I did. What do you think? It was very long, I'm like Ange of my hair.
Speaker 2:I did what do you think? It was very long. I'm like and my hair is too long and I need your help. And I wanted it a little shorter. She's like you don't want it as short. Let's leave it right there.
Speaker 1:I know she's going to fuss at it and know it's too short. It's not apparent from this, but I'm actually a licensed natural hair care specialist and so um I have my natural hair. I have my shears with me that leslie didn't know that there's a difference between shears.
Speaker 2:I'm like you bought scissors with you. She's like they're not scissors, they're shears. Please, girl.
Speaker 1:So anyway, it looks good. I can't wait, thank you, for cutting my hair.
Speaker 2:It's a good look, it feels terrific, it looks great. This has been another episode of Black Boomer Besties from Brecklin. Brecklin Bye.