Dysfunction Junkies

Why Pajamas And Slippers Suddenly Feel Acceptable Everywhere

Chrisy & Kerry Season 2 Episode 35

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0:00 | 32:16

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Pajamas at a hotel breakfast buffet. Fluffy slippers in the grocery store. Boxer shorts in a public lobby. We’ve been traveling more, and we can’t stop noticing how fast “bed clothes” have become normal clothes. If you’ve ever wondered when public dress codes quietly disappeared, we’re right there with you, and we’re not trying to be fancy. We’re trying to understand what changed and why it bothers some of us so much.

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Dysfunction Junkies has all rights to the songs "Hit the Ground Running"   created by Ryan Prewett and "Happy Hour" created by Evert Z.

Welcome And Video Growing Pains

SPEAKER_01

Welcome to the Dysfunction Junkies Podcast. We may not have seen it all, but we've seen enough. And now, here are your hosts, Chrissy and Carrie.

KERRY

Hello, junkies. I'm Carrie.

SPEAKER_04

And I'm Chrissy.

KERRY

Hello, everybody.

SPEAKER_04

I'm working on it. I'm working on it.

KERRY

You're doing good. You're doing good. I'm assuming I came in on the right cue this time.

SPEAKER_04

Pretty much. Yes. You're doing good.

When Pajamas Became Daywear

KERRY

Okay, because I we're a work in progress. We're still working on the I can't hear the music in the beginning. But hi everybody. Welcome back. Our second episode with us on video. So we're still working out some kinks, but we're loving it already. Thank you for all the support we've received so far. We appreciate your feedback. So today, this is a topic that I put out there for us because lately we've been spending a lot of times at hotels and things with the traveling across country. And I'm noticing a trend, and it's very disturbing. When did PJs become a trend? When did PJs pajamas become day wear, anywhere wear, dress-up wear, nighttime wear, hotel wear, leisure wear, airplane wear. It's everywhere. No, you sound like Dr. Seuss. No, I feel like I'm in a Dr.

SPEAKER_04

Seuss world, so it's been, I think, an issue for I would probably say uh the last 20 years. Because I can remember it pretty much, well, maybe not that long, but I bet it's probably been 20 years since my daughters, my oldest, started school. Yeah. With the PJ Day, which I was always upset about. I never wanted her to wear pajamas to school.

KERRY

Exactly. I just didn't think it was right. I know. We didn't get to do that in our school. Well, of course, you know, there wasn't uniform pajamas.

SPEAKER_04

No, I mean, we wore uniform, which I was fine with. A lot of people always wondered, how could you do that? I liked it, you liked it. But the the big thing was when we could dress out of uniform, right? But we were never told it was okay to wear pajamas.

KERRY

And no one had to tell us that don't wear pajamas, that's not acceptable. We just knew. So that's what I'm trying to figure out. When and why did it become acceptable to wear PJs in public as like normal wear.

SPEAKER_04

Well, I'm gonna bring up something that's probably gonna maybe generate some sort of dialogue. I feel and I don't want to give credit to uh a retail uh place, but when Victoria's Secret changed I remember if Victoria's Secret from the late 80s and into the early nineties was, in my opinion, kind of high-end. Yeah. I mean it was, you know, I bought a bought a dress from there, and I love that dress, and it was a very pretty dress for summer, and you know, it was sort of a big deal to be able to get your garments uh from there. I think some of the downfall, whether it just happened coincidentally or if it was purposeful, when they started making sweatpants there and with the word pink on the ass, I think that things started to get weird.

KERRY

It was the slippery slope.

SPEAKER_04

We didn't even we're like what do you call sweatpants. Yeah, I don't even remember wearing those that much. It just wasn't anything. Maybe you wore it at home, right? You know, but you didn't go out in sweatpants. I know, and now people are going out. I I don't know. I I it bothers me. So it's a huge problem. But let's hear about you what your uh experience is with it.

Hotel Breakfast Buffet Culture Shock

KERRY

So the breakfast buffets at the hotel. So, you know, we come down from breakfast, and you know, you're used to seeing people down there, but like they should be dressed, it's like a restaurant, you know, but these people think it's just an extension of their room, like they just got a kitchenette downstairs and they're just going to their kitchen downstairs, and they're in their PJs, bear beats. There was even a guy, like a teenager, like an 18, 19 year old with his boxer shorts and no shirt and no shoes. I mean, no way. Come on, really to God, yes. Yes, and I'm sitting there going, okay, if you're out in public, there's that no shoes, no shirts, no service. When you leave your hotel room on the third floor and the door shuts behind you, you better be clothed appropriately. The the the the little buffet downstairs is like a restaurant, you know? I was so annoyed.

SPEAKER_04

So then where was this at? Is it by any chance geographically? Do you see it more in certain areas now?

KERRY

No, because I've I've I've noticed it before, never to the extent of the kid just wearing boxer shorts or practically didn't fit and things are hanging out. But no, but I've seen this before, you know, where people come down in their slippers or their bare feet or whatever, but it's it's gotten out of control. And so then, you know, it kind of goes a step further where like, you know, people are going to the store. So we have a Smith's grocery store, really nice marketplace. It's I actually really love this grocery store. And most of the people that go in there, they're well dressed, everything. And the other day, I mean, there's a little Starbucks kiosk in there, but you you it's not a drive-up. You have to go in the store because it's just inside a supermarket. This girl, she obviously placed her order online. She was going in to pick it up. She's in her flannel pants and her messy bun and her slippers. Shuffling into the store, walking through produce to go over to get her Starbucks. I'm like, really?

SPEAKER_04

Like, trust me, that would be an issue with slippers though. I mean, we already know that wearing shoes from outside inside, I know, you know, it brings in a lot of and now you're wearing your slippers out and in.

KERRY

I know. Is it is this just a me thing? Am I just am I being over sensitive about it?

SPEAKER_04

I have to imagine there's other people bothered. Maybe it's our age group that it maybe it bothers more. I don't know. I haven't ran into anybody in our age group that has been wearing pajamas. I know my daughter, I don't think, thinks much of it, but she wouldn't, I hope she wouldn't do this. Yeah. Uh I know as long as she's here, I wouldn't be okay with it and allow her to go out like that. Um the other thing is, why are people accepting this that work in these establishments? They don't, I guess customers are customers, no matter what. I mean, yep. Used to be you wouldn't be allowed to be in a place dressed inappropriately like that.

Church Clothes And Shifting Standards

KERRY

No. But but no, everyone's afraid they don't want to confront anybody because you might get hopped off or might get sued, or you might get a bad Google review, so they oh, just uh my God, I know.

SPEAKER_04

I I'm not exactly, you know, people this is how and maybe I'm showing my age again, but I never was able when this change sort of happened going to church, and you know how religious I am, but I seem to recall there was a time where when I was younger, when I didn't go to church for certain things, you dressed specifically like in a dress or dress clothes. Your Sunday church. Yeah, well, that's what they used to call it, but there was a point where you started seeing, and it was more acceptable for people, men or women, to wear jeans to church. Yeah. Generally jeans are pretty darn acceptable pretty much everywhere. But there was something about it for church that I had a hard time with. And even though when I was going to church, it probably would have been easier for me to throw on a pair of jeans and maybe a nice top, there was something in me for as much as I'm not religious and I generally don't want to give a shit, but I couldn't do it. Like why? Why couldn't I do it? What is in me that I could not bring myself to put on a pair of jeans to go to church? Yeah. So I never, I never wore jeans in church. Never. Well, you go to that.

unknown

How about you?

KERRY

I will.

SPEAKER_04

You will do that.

KERRY

Well, you go a lot more, so but I always have usually a nice top on, you know, like it's it's it's not t-shirt, you know. So I'll put a nice shirt on. I don't know, but this this pajama thing, it it's just gone out of control. And then it extends.

SPEAKER_04

I mean, to be fair, yeah, we need to hear the other side. Maybe I should have asked my daughter. I don't know. Maybe somebody can send us some comments. Maybe. I know we're coming off really harsh, but no.

KERRY

I I guess I just think well, uh, you know, it then goes on to it going kind of like dressing nice, we were talking about in church. Flying and on a plane, that used to be where you dress nice. If you were flying on a plane back in the day, it was kind of a privilege. It was a privilege and you dress nice. Now you see the same thing, pajamas. Now, I totally get putting your kids in their comfy jammies on the plane. I have no problem with that.

SPEAKER_04

Yeah, there's a certain age, I think, where I get it.

KERRY

When the 30-year-old's wearing the fluffy slippers, the bunny slippers, and the pajama pants, and the I'm getting old.

Planes, Hygiene, And Bed Bug Anxiety

SPEAKER_04

Well, I'm not gonna say this as a definitive fact, because it's not. Yeah, but again, I'm probably gonna offend a lot of people. When I see people wearing pajamas, yeah, I connect that with you just woke up. Yeah, you haven't had time to get yourself together yet. And I would be concerned being seated next to you on a plane. I would feel that hygienically you're not odor ready for me to be near you. And I would not be able to handle any weird smell that I caught, I would be done. And they'd have to like probably, you know, land a plane somewhere they weren't supposed to, because I'd be freaking out by now.

KERRY

I just that brings up a really good I couldn't do it. I didn't think about that. Bed bugs. What if those people had bed bugs and they're in their jammy clothes and they roll onto the plane in their jammy clothes from their bed bug bed? Now you're getting bed bugs sitting next to oh god, I have a whole new level of anxiety now.

SPEAKER_04

I'm sorry. You're gonna have to start driving. No. Let me know when you're coming back. No. I'm driving because I can't handle you're you seem to be a even though it's bothering you, you seem to be a little bit more uh I'll just have a few more adult beverages before I get on the plane.

KERRY

That would be make me while I'm on the plane, but yeah, but you know, the slippers things in public too. Yeah, see, like I have my shoes that I wear in the house, and I only wear them at the house. I don't wear them out in public because I don't want the public street germs or crud or the dirt from the pavement being in my house. So why on earth would you wear your slippers that way? Because they're even worse. They're not meant for outdoor trucking off-road, they're meant for your carpeting or your linoleum floor. Not a lot of people.

SPEAKER_04

But we just can't understand.

KERRY

You step on a puddle, they're wet, they ain't drying quick, it ain't f falling off there. There's no rain guard on there. I don't know. No.

SPEAKER_04

Well, the other thing is I was looking at because we follow our alma mater on Facebook. Yes. And I was looking at some of the pictures of some of the students, uh, which is nice, you know. I tried to recognize classrooms or something that looks familiar to me that looks like maybe it did when we were there. And of course, it doesn't really look I mean it doesn't, it doesn't, yeah, you know. That's 30, what is it now? How long has it been since we've graduated? I think we're at 36.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it's 36.

SPEAKER_04

We're at 36, yeah. So, but I mean the kids are still wearing basically the same uniform that we were wearing. Yeah. Um, and the one thing I noticed, and I know that there's this brand of shoe, Uggs, that the kids really love, and they're expensive shoes. Yeah. But they look like slippers sometimes. Uh-huh. Yeah. And so I saw some of the girls wearing what, in my opinion, is probably would be a slipper, but I guess it might be those type of shoes. Yeah. But they kind of look slipper type, slippery.

KERRY

I think we would have been allowed to wear those if they were around when we were in school. I feel like there was still a shoe dress code. Like we couldn't just wear tennis shoes. Because if we were allowed to wear tennis shoes, I would have totally worn tennis shoes. But I remember having to have penny loafers or some kind of uh flat, you know.

SPEAKER_04

I remember getting corrected on a sweater I wore. I I wore the white blouse, but then I had like a cardigan I would wear over it. Yeah. It wasn't in the right three colors.

KERRY

Green, navy blue, or white.

SPEAKER_04

It was. I I think it was, but there was one of those colors that for whatever reason they said was not acceptable. And I know it wouldn't have been green because I didn't have a green sweater. I don't know if it was navy blue or if it was white. But I remember they said that you used to wear sweaters.

KERRY

Yours were always like navy blue. Yeah, trust me, they weren't white because then we have to go down the whole rule of uh washing them and the well water and it being white.

SPEAKER_04

Well water. I might have had a white sweater, and maybe they said it would be the green or the navy blue. And I do remember they were sticklers for the guys. Maybe they've slacked off of that too, but the hair, their hair could not reach, couldn't touch the top of their collar.

KERRY

No, they had to be short, and they couldn't even have long hair that they pulled in a ponytail. Oh no, no, no.

SPEAKER_04

Oh god, no. Oh my god, I don't remember seeing anybody.

KERRY

No, they would never have been allowed with a ponytail. No, or a man then. No.

SPEAKER_04

No, and no facial hair for the men.

KERRY

No facial hair, no, no. So anyways, we digress.

SPEAKER_01

But well, what DJ Nick's gonna say then what so even though I went to public school, I remember when and I was able to grow a beard probably by the time I was a senior. Even I don't know if it was in the dress code for the schools, but she told me I need to shave that beard. But I thought there were other kids that had beards in school, but you had a woman principal at your high school?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_04

How do I not know this? That seems out of uh out of place or something that time. Yeah. Yeah, definitely. Yeah, no, it's uh it's a whole thing. It's I don't know. I I it it does go back to clothes mean.

KERRY

It does go back to where it starts and where you know, and so like nowadays I know that it's a common thing for schools to have pajama days. Like at the place I was working at in Ohio, they had a preschool and they would have pajama days, and the teachers would join in and wear pajamas, and I just was like, Oh, I can't, uh no, no, mm-mm.

SPEAKER_04

You're gonna say something.

SPEAKER_01

So I initially was like really against the whole pajama day in school.

SPEAKER_04

And I've kind of for our dog for the kids.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and I guess I've kind of softened a little bit on it. What I do is I equate it to like a dress-down day at work.

KERRY

You ain't gonna wear your freaking pajamas at work though.

SPEAKER_04

No, I'm no, but there's probably some jobs that probably do allow it. I'm sure. You know, because some workplaces are pretty relaxed. I totally get a dress. Yeah, go ahead. A dress-down day.

KERRY

Yeah, I totally get a dress-down day or a casual day, but you still keep it, you can still keep it a little classy. You could still like, you know, have some pride in yourself. Of course, I say this as I'm sitting here with a messy bun and t-shirt and whatever, but I guess I shouldn't judge. But anyways, that was the dysfunctional pajama drama that's been bugging me.

SPEAKER_04

So yeah, my daughter used to get very upset with me because I would have a fit when because I would be like, Well, I really don't want you wearing your pajamas at school. They're pajamas, they're for sleeping, not you know, and the the only other time I guess I could say it's kind of cute to do it. Christmas.

KERRY

Oh, okay.

SPEAKER_04

When they have like their Christmas parties, yeah. They'll have like the day before you you leave school for the Christmas or winter break. They would probably have a very relaxed day where they have maybe a little party for the students and everybody sort of, you know, exchanges candy or sort of has fun. It's very relaxed, nobody's really doing anything. And they usually say they're gonna watch a movie, you know. And so uh with the kids, they I could sort of get that, you know, it was kind of fun. And if you had some fun seasonal type pajamas that had some sort of theme on it for winter or Christmas or whatever, that might be fun.

KERRY

But I could I could maybe go there. In my mind, what I was thinking was the only time it should be appropriate to go out dressed in your pajamas, Halloween. You're having your little Halloween outfit is being in your PJs and messy or whatever, but I don't know, even that's a stretch. But yeah.

SPEAKER_04

You're saying prude. I'm really trying to like go through my head and remember somebody who did wear, they're wearing a lot of things, especially adults who liked to get dressed up for Halloween. I don't see them wearing the flannel pajama bottoms and you know, the shit.

Curlers, Slippers, And Public Confidence

KERRY

Well, I remember like people would have like this this outfit I do remember seeing a lot where like somebody had like the grandma moo moo kind of pajamas on, and they had the curlers and the hair and the face cream, you know, like that that look is what I remember like occasionally seeing at Halloween. So, but you're taking it to the nth extreme because now you got the curl curlers, and of course, yeah, there are some people that go out with curlers in their hair too. I could never do that. Where are you seeing this? At the grocery store. But usually anybody see this now. You're talking about the other end of the spectrum. Now you're talking about the little 70, 80-year-old ladies that got their little rollers in their hair because they got, you know, a hot date coming up at four o'clock that they need to have their hair done for.

SPEAKER_04

Where are you shopping? I would love to know. I did not see that at all. Yeah.

KERRY

Well, actually, I shouldn't say. I don't know if I've seen it at the Smiths, but I have seen that at the grocery store. And it's usually if I see somebody, usually if I see somebody with rollers in their hair, it's a little old lady and she's got the little plastic bonnet, you know, to kind of cover it up. Ooh, don't the babushka. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So see, I remember this. I saw that with the rollers and that in Ohio. That would have been an Ohio thing. I would have seen that at the at the giant eagle there in Canfield.

SPEAKER_04

Well, I don't have a giant eagle here, and I haven't seen it. To any of the stores here, but I feel like that's more of like a for me, my personal experience, the rollers in the hair with the babushka tied over top of them is more like for me a 70s and 80s thing. I remember women doing that a lot back then.

KERRY

Yeah. Right. Well, see, but now those those women that were in their 30s and the 70s and 80s are now the same women that are still doing that, but now they're 80s and the 2030s or 2020s, wherever we're at.

SPEAKER_04

So I was gonna say, are they still alive? The women we used to see doing it, I guess so.

KERRY

Yeah.

Men, Women, And The Double Standard

SPEAKER_04

Yeah. I just wonder what comfort level you have with yourself. And maybe we're just becoming so familiar with this, yeah, that there is no downside to it.

KERRY

I will say, and as far like this this carries over to men too. Because I have I do have a problem when I see a guy out in public and they're not dressed maybe like they care, you know, but they got their their their wife or significant other or whatever alongside them. I look at their spouse or their significant other or their partner, and I'm like, shame on you for letting them come out in public like that, you know? It's like there's been times you've seen men like this too. Yes, Jim. He'll have his work shirt on at home that got stains on it or it's got a ripped collar, frayed collar or whatever. But if we're going out, even if it is just a Starbucks, I'm like, yeah, you you need to go change that shirt. I don't care. Just put a clean t-shirt on. I'm not saying you have to put a button-down collar, you don't have to put a tie on, just put a clean t-shirt on, one with no stains, no frayed collar. Because to me, that's a reflection then on me and our relationship. So I think this is the this is gonna be where the tides turn, Chrissy. You're you're you're usually worried about what people think of you and that people are gonna think bad things. This this is the episode where they go, okay, Carrie, yeah.

SPEAKER_04

Well, I haven't seen maybe I have, and I don't know. Maybe you just don't get out enough. Well, I don't. I don't want to be out. I hang out as much as I can. But I'm trying to think if I've seen men dressed in pajamas out there, and maybe it's a double standard. Why is it okay for women to wear this stuff? But if a man wore it, I think more people might be offended by it.

KERRY

Oh, totally. The guys are doing it just as bad as as far as the the flannel PJs and the slippers, but I will say they tend to be in their 20s and early 30s, is the age group I'm seeing the guys do that in.

SPEAKER_01

And it's just as go ahead and so Chrissy is so in love with me. She doesn't pay attention to any other men out and about.

Life After People And Social Overload

SPEAKER_04

I don't, generally. I'm really trying to not pay attention to anybody. I'm really trying to feel like I'm walking through that. Yeah, there used to be a show on that was actually pretty terrible. I can't remember what channel it was even on. Maybe history. I don't know. It's called Life After People. Oh. Does anybody remember that? No. You remember it because I was watching it.

SPEAKER_01

She's saying that for me, yeah.

SPEAKER_04

It was uh basically trying to show you what the world would be once people disappear off the planet. A better place, probably. It's a depressing, horrible show. Oh, it's just the whole thing is just awful.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_04

Because it shows you how long domestic animals will be able to survive without us, how long infrastructure is gonna collapse, bridges, dams, buildings, the Statue of Liberty disappears into the Hudson, you know, all of this. It takes you through like five years after people. Wow. That sounds like something like that. It was just it it was very depressing. But when I go out, I try to pretend like it's life after people. So nobody's there. I try to just totally like, you know. Because I have had people come up to me who see me and know me, and it takes me a second to sort of like get back to oh, there's people here. It's almost like I'm startled. Hello. Hello, where'd you come from?

SPEAKER_02

That's funny.

SPEAKER_04

Where did I stumble where there's people at? Oh my god. But um yeah, I just I wonder if that is an issue, and are women upset about that? Are guys upset about it? Because it seems like women get away with a lot more, but yeah, I hate to say that and it's not true. I don't know that to be true.

KERRY

We need feedback.

SPEAKER_04

I don't know if women do it. Yeah, yeah.

KERRY

We need listener feedback. I just we need to know my thinking.

SPEAKER_04

Okay, here's Did you look up when this became a thing?

SPEAKER_01

No, Life After People.

SPEAKER_04

Oh, you looked up Life After People.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, it was History Channel. Yes, from 2009, and you can watch it on Disney Plus. Oh, okay, I'll have to sponsor, but yeah, yeah, it it was a pretty bad show.

SPEAKER_04

Have any chance to look up and see when this became a thing?

KERRY

If you Google pajamas in public, ask Gemini when did people start wearing pajamas as day wearing?

SPEAKER_04

Yeah, I probably I can't imagine, although you can't pretty much find anything. Yeah, I know, really. Even if you don't really want to, but so what were you gonna say before?

KERRY

Oh, I had something on my mind, and then I totally it slipped my mind. It was something good too. Um gosh, no, I can't think of it.

SPEAKER_04

That's okay. It's about being out in public. It's about being out in public and seeing people you know.

SPEAKER_01

So this is where you guys show your age.

KERRY

Because we because we can't remember a thought we just had.

SPEAKER_01

No, 41% of adults under 45. Finding it acceptable for quick errands to wear pajamas in public. No.

SPEAKER_04

41% of people under the age of what?

SPEAKER_01

45.

KERRY

So half the almost half the people. Almost half. So it's like, oh man, that's too much.

SPEAKER_01

Finding it acceptable, not saying that they do it necessarily, but 45.

KERRY

If they find it acceptable, they're doing it.

SPEAKER_00

No, yeah, yes.

SPEAKER_01

Is it really 18% of people over 65, which we're not there yet, but we're sandwiched in the middle of this.

SPEAKER_04

It sounds like it's just our generation, Generation X, that has an issue with it.

KERRY

Yeah, I think so.

SPEAKER_01

Do you think it's all Generation X?

SPEAKER_04

Well, you just said what, under what age?

SPEAKER_01

45. Isn't some of 45 Gen X? When is 45? What year would you?

SPEAKER_04

It starts uh 1965 to 80, right? To 1980. So they would It's pretty much us. Yeah, pretty much.

SPEAKER_01

We're the problem. I don't know that you You guys may not be as much in common as you might think. There might be a good percentage of even Gen Xers that are okay with it.

SPEAKER_02

Well, how dare they? I know, really. They need to stick with the group. It's not cool.

SPEAKER_04

Don't deviate from the group or our motto. No pajamas in public.

KERRY

I remembered what I was gonna say. For anyone who doesn't really know what we're talking about, if you go to the peopleofwalmart.com, there's gonna be all the proof you need on what we're talking about here.

SPEAKER_04

I cannot imagine that there is anyone who doesn't know what we're talking about because of all of that social media that shows these videos. Yeah, it's crazy. I miss the old stores. Maybe there's just not enough places to shop anymore. The malls are dying, yeah, and you really don't know where to turn to look for what you're supposed to be wearing.

KERRY

Amazon. I don't know.

SPEAKER_04

So well I buy from Amazon and generally it's lucky, but uh, you know.

KERRY

Yeah, sometimes you do need to go. Don't look for pajamas. Yeah, I know. Yeah, but I think you well, thank you for understanding.

SPEAKER_01

She doesn't even order from Amazon her pajamas, she gets dressed.

KERRY

I thought you were going down a whole nother road there, Nick.

SPEAKER_01

No, no, no, no, no.

SPEAKER_04

Pajamas is nice the idea, but I'm just as comfortable in a pair of shorts and a t-shirt that I have. Same, you know. Same. So I guess I'm not giving a whole lot of money to the pajama industry.

KERRY

I'm sorry. Maybe that's why why we have the problem with it, is because we don't wear pajamas even as pajamas.

SPEAKER_04

No, we were we were the clothes you're supposed to wear out as pajamas.

Share Feedback And Support The Sanctuary

KERRY

We're like the opposite. So I don't know. Anyways, well, thank you for indulging me and getting that letting me get off that off my chest. I'm with you. I do want to know what our listeners think about this whole topic and what they feel about appropriate wear, or is it okay to wear your slippers in public or your pajamas in public or let your spouse go out in public? We're horribly out of touch. Yeah, we might be. So, anyways, you can drop that feedback on our Facebook page or you can put something on Instagram. But we do want you to remember that this month we are supporting Best Friends Animal Sanctuary. So if you love animals and you're looking for a great place to go visit, Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in Canab Utah is great, or you can go online. They have different options of things you can do looking at the animals, supporting the animals there. So we definitely encourage you to check them out. Otherwise, we'll be back next week. Hi, everybody. Bye.