Kat and Moose Podcast

Malverde's Balls and a Bathroom Confessional

February 04, 2024 Kat and Moose, Producer Sara
Malverde's Balls and a Bathroom Confessional
Kat and Moose Podcast
More Info
Kat and Moose Podcast
Malverde's Balls and a Bathroom Confessional
Feb 04, 2024
Kat and Moose, Producer Sara

Ever experienced the weird mix of annoyance and humor that comes with life's little mishaps? Our latest episode is a journey through the peculiarities of human experience, starting with those pesky unwanted hairs and the oh-so-familiar pain of biting your tongue. We get personal as Producer Sara recounts the saga of her tongue-piercing fiasco, while Moose offers a vivid flashback to her bold teenage years and the unforgettable tongue-piercing episode that followed. From the comical to the impactful, we explore how the smallest decisions, like sporting a piercing, can influence the way the world sees us and even affect our professional encounters, complete with a tale of workplace nose-ring drama.

This episode is not just about the laughs; it's a deep dive into the interplay between our physical and emotional well-being. I open up about the times our bodies cry out for attention, often through injuries that seem like cruel jokes at first but reveal deeper truths about our stress levels and the need for self-care. As we discuss the often-overlooked emotional fragility of the tough-as-nails Enneagram Type Eight, we touch on the transformative potential of bodywork and the lessons we can learn from listening to what our pain is trying to tell us.

Wrapping up with a mix of hilarity and heart, we recount a bizarre mix-up involving what was thought to be a blood clot, only to discover it was a benign result of pet grooming. We don't shy away from the personal triggers around health and family that can catch us off guard, yet we find solace in sharing these vulnerabilities. And to top off the episode, we share the pure joy of connecting with fans in person, reminding us of the special bond we forge through the airwaves. It's a rollercoaster of emotions – from hearty chuckles to sincere reflections – and we invite you to join our podcast family for the full experience.

Support the Show.

Visit us on the Interwebs! Follow us on Instagram and Facebook! Support the show!

Kat and Moose Podcast +
Get a shoutout in an upcoming episode!
Starting at $3/month
Support
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Ever experienced the weird mix of annoyance and humor that comes with life's little mishaps? Our latest episode is a journey through the peculiarities of human experience, starting with those pesky unwanted hairs and the oh-so-familiar pain of biting your tongue. We get personal as Producer Sara recounts the saga of her tongue-piercing fiasco, while Moose offers a vivid flashback to her bold teenage years and the unforgettable tongue-piercing episode that followed. From the comical to the impactful, we explore how the smallest decisions, like sporting a piercing, can influence the way the world sees us and even affect our professional encounters, complete with a tale of workplace nose-ring drama.

This episode is not just about the laughs; it's a deep dive into the interplay between our physical and emotional well-being. I open up about the times our bodies cry out for attention, often through injuries that seem like cruel jokes at first but reveal deeper truths about our stress levels and the need for self-care. As we discuss the often-overlooked emotional fragility of the tough-as-nails Enneagram Type Eight, we touch on the transformative potential of bodywork and the lessons we can learn from listening to what our pain is trying to tell us.

Wrapping up with a mix of hilarity and heart, we recount a bizarre mix-up involving what was thought to be a blood clot, only to discover it was a benign result of pet grooming. We don't shy away from the personal triggers around health and family that can catch us off guard, yet we find solace in sharing these vulnerabilities. And to top off the episode, we share the pure joy of connecting with fans in person, reminding us of the special bond we forge through the airwaves. It's a rollercoaster of emotions – from hearty chuckles to sincere reflections – and we invite you to join our podcast family for the full experience.

Support the Show.

Visit us on the Interwebs! Follow us on Instagram and Facebook! Support the show!

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Cat and Moose podcast. I'm Kat and I'm Moose.

Speaker 2:

This is the True Life podcast, where we explore the quirks of being human. Okay, hey, kat, hey Moose, hey Sarah.

Speaker 1:

I just greeted us all hey guys.

Speaker 2:

Hey guys, we're just talking about hairs in the mouth, it's fine yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then I noticed I have hairs all over my microphone and that grossed me out.

Speaker 2:

Oh, now I have to look. It's more of a fuzz. All right, back on track. All right, pull yourselves together everyone.

Speaker 1:

I'll tell you what I do have that's different than than a hair in my mouth is. I was at a event the other day a radio thing and I bit my tongue so hard oh no, I bit my tongue so hard that it like sent that like shock through my whole body, Like when you hit your funny bone. You know it's like it hurts so bad.

Speaker 1:

I'm so sorry and it bled, and then it like, and then it like started like swelling, which makes you like bite it 500 more times. You know like, oh my gosh. And I just realized, as I was checking out the hair on my mic, I was remembering that lovely experience that I had this week.

Speaker 3:

When I was 18, I got my tongue pierced. Oh my gosh, you did. And literally they just hold your tongue out with, like they have like gauze on there. They like hold your tongue out with a piece of gauze and then I can't hear this. They put this like open bar through a something and they just like put a hole right through your tongue and then the bar goes through it and they put a ball on each side.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I've seen it before, but why what?

Speaker 3:

inside of. You know what possessed me? My friend at the time had one. I thought it was cool, we all had. That was not sexual, it was not at all. I later learned that it's maybe runs in those circles I didn't have any interaction with those tongue ring.

Speaker 2:

People run in sexual circles, is what she's saying.

Speaker 3:

Maybe, so maybe. Anyway, that was not me at the time.

Speaker 1:

I know at least one of our listeners who has a tongue ring and I'm so curious what she's going to think about this episode.

Speaker 3:

This is great. I would, I am too. So I had it for a total of like nine months and I ended up taking it out and bailing on it. But I will tell you, cat, it was, hands down, the most painful thing I've I've experienced.

Speaker 3:

My tongue hurt for days and I didn't eat for days because you, your tongue hurts. So the first thing I ate, this is great guys. Just I didn't even know what's bringing this up. I went into Costco. This is the first time I ate. We're at Costco. I went to the Costco little where you could get pizza and stuff. The Costco restaurant, if you ask me yeah, the Costco restaurant, and I got like a smoothie, like a berry smoothie, and I threw all of it up, all of it.

Speaker 3:

Wow why it's terrible I because I hadn't eaten for like three days and my tongue was. I was in so much pain, it was like so stupid. Anyway, then I got. I ended up getting the shortest bar.

Speaker 2:

It's called a shaft? I think no, it's not called a shaft, Sarah. That's what? Something else?

Speaker 3:

is called. It might be Okay bar, because every time I would eat, you use your tongue to eat, right like you throw food around in your mouth from like side to side. The worst was an apple, I'm telling you. You bite into that apple and then you use your tongue and you throw that piece of apple to the back of your mouth.

Speaker 3:

Right, and then you bite, I'm telling you, I know this because you bite, and then I bite into that ball, I'm not kidding, I did it three too many times and I took the damn thing out, never put it back in. Yeah, and I still probably have a little thing like a whole like a divot tongue All right. Anybody else have some piercing experiences?

Speaker 2:

Let me think if I have any tongue things going on today.

Speaker 1:

Well, I have a nose ring and I just want to know what circles I run in Me too.

Speaker 2:

We both run in some nose rings. I bet you would have I ever told the story I got to tell it. Okay, this is a piercings podcast, guys, but when I worked in.

Speaker 2:

Florida. I worked for Christian radio station and I was like 23 years old, something like that, and I got my nose pierced and I came in and I just had like a tiny little diamond in it, like I wear now, a real diamond. Of course it's not cubic, is there a cone? Yeah, guys, but it's not a diamond, it's from Claire's. But I had this tiny little thing and and there was a person in charge at the radio station that thought that that was inappropriate for the work and so uh-huh, and so they said For the work or the workplace.

Speaker 1:

Thank you. The workplace I'm moving, so my brain is moving so fast the workplace.

Speaker 2:

They didn't think it was appropriate. This is circa 2003,. Okay, so about 20 years ago, anyway. So they and I said, well, what do you want me to do about it? I, you know, I didn't know that Is there something in the handbook? And they're like, well, I think you need to cover it up. And I was like, okay, so instead of getting like one of those little circle band-aids and covering up you know just a tiny little thing that would cover my nose, I found the largest band-aid I could find. Yeah, you did.

Speaker 2:

And I wrapped it over my face, just barely avoiding my eye, and walked into the next staff meeting like that and I feel like that story, as I'm telling it, explains everything about who I am. That's a really good story. You're right. You're totally right. Like I do, I can respect authority. However, when I think it is not, like there's not justice related to it, then I have to. I won't follow the rule, but I will make a statement in the meantime.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, you are like the perfect advocate. Like I know that, like aides are protectors I think isn't that one of the words that is used to describe an aide but also like I think that aides are like I was talking to our friend Mark the other day and he said I'm gonna push, I'm a pusher, like I'm gonna push, I'm gonna push things to move down the road, you know. And I thought to myself I thought, gosh, that is such an aide tendency and it's so valuable and, just like anything, it's got its flat sides too. Blah, blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I haven't found any yet, but I've heard that there are some.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, uh-huh, uh-huh.

Speaker 2:

You know. So here's I said this recently. I've been in the presence of an aide lately and I've reflected on kind of my own tendencies and different things like that. And for those who are Enneagram fans, I think Enneagram aides were known as, like these, really tough, like sometimes when you're unhealthy, like a bully type, when you're healthy, a good leader. We're known for being like bad asses and like willing to take risks and all of that, but ultimately and you guys know this it's if they can get in touch with their vulnerable side and their sensitive side.

Speaker 2:

We are actually, in my opinion, some of the most fragile people on the Enneagram. Like the word fragile keeps coming up for me and the reason. I know that I'm fragile emotionally, I'm not always aware, but like physically, things break all the time and I think because we are body types, we sort of initiate things from our gut. Because we're body types, I think things happen to our body before they happen to our insides emotionally, and then we have to reflect on the weakness in the body, which weakness is very hard for us, in order to have the intuition of what else is going on here, which is your land of body work.

Speaker 1:

Well, I was just gonna say it seems like AIDS would be really, really excellent, excellent body work clients If, like you said, they were willing to get in touch with that vulnerability and all of that Like that's. I need to maybe change my marketing strategies.

Speaker 2:

I thought about you a lot, by the way, because this is definitely an injury podcast and so I gotta tell you guys this quick story. I got off the plane last night from a work trip and everything was going well and I get my bag. Well, that's a whole other story, but I won't tell that today. Get in the car, Sarah picks up me and Megan, who is the other best friend of mine Kat would be the original and I have learned to love her more than I am jealous of her.

Speaker 1:

I know that that's good.

Speaker 2:

Well, megan might be the original, but anyway, okay. So, regardless, sarah picks us up and I in the car and I have this excruciating pain in the bottom of my right leg, and it's not quite my ankle, but it's like the bottom of my right leg and I mean it is hot, it is on fire and it's just like throbbing, like level eight nine pain on the 10 scale. Oh, I mean, I walked through this dam airport. I've been walking for the past three days, whatever.

Speaker 2:

So, to my point, as an Enneagram 8, I'm dealing with an injury that I don't even know how it happened. And I said I was like guys, megan, you saw me, like she's like you've been limping for three days, and I didn't have any clue that I had been limping. You didn't know it, I didn't know it. And then when I got in that car I was done with my work trip it just went pop, like that, and I really do think it might be a tendon or something going on. But it's so interesting, like I think my body went you're safe now, as weird as that sounds, because I was safe with these people on the road too, but for an eight, I love that kind of safety and then, like I just blew an ankle, it was like you're safe.

Speaker 3:

now you can fall apart. Yes, yes.

Speaker 1:

I think that that's why a lot of people get sick on vacation and get sick like of a. Christmas break and get sick on spring break and stuff like that, because it's like the body just like, is like we require it to be, this like high performing thing that's just go, go, go all the time and it really is quite miraculous, like how strong our bodies are and how they will just obey our brains.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I agree.

Speaker 1:

And it's like so I think it's really important that every now and then, the body gets a chance to talk, and that's, of course, I'm a body worker, so I think that. But I'm curious, like what do you think happened?

Speaker 2:

Well, so I can go off the deep end. But I have to say this I put ice on it when I got home and then overnight when I went to sleep, I woke up in the middle of the night and again level 10 pain like it just was off the charts and I was like I think my ankle might have a stress fracture is what I, what I thought, because it was just shooting up my leg and it didn't quite feel like nerve pain, it felt like muscle tendon situation. So I was like I don't even know if it's a bone. I don't think it's a bone, but so I don't quite know.

Speaker 2:

But what was funny is, a little bit later Sarah noticed I was walking around in shorts at the house and she was like you have blood on your leg. And I looked down and I have blood in the part that my leg was hurting, the exact area. And the first thing I think is oh my God, it was a blood clot and it came out of my skin I'm letting you guys into the most vulnerable part of my heart and I was like because my dad, my dad actually died of a blood clot. So you know, we have triggers in life, guys. So I was like could?

Speaker 1:

a blood clot.

Speaker 2:

So I am almost ready to type in. Could a blood clot come out of your skin? God bless me. And Sarah like comes over and she's like. I got you a cotton ball with alcohol on it and I wipe it off and it was blood because I was cutting my dog's nails, or Sarah was cutting A dog's nails and whatever it wasn't her blood.

Speaker 3:

It was two little smudges of blood Just happened to transfer to her leg Like 13 question.

Speaker 1:

I know you just opened a I know, yeah, you.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I feel so much better getting that out of me though I feel lighter right now. I'm glad.

Speaker 3:

Okay, here's the quick answer. The dog thing our dogs hate their nails being clipped. We haven't taken them to the vet for seven years. It feels like that's not true, there it's been a while their nails are long.

Speaker 2:

Frankie's are gonna come after us.

Speaker 3:

No, it's just been a minute and I tried to do it on my own. I did not bleed him, I did not even injure him. Okay, I don't know where the blood came from, because I did check anyway. It was a blood happening.

Speaker 2:

It wasn't coming from my skin, unless it's a suspicious blood. But I will say this I woke up and it feels a little bit better. So if it was a blood clot that came out of my skin, okay, nurses out there talk to me. Can that happen? What other? Questions do you have?

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna Google it real quick, let me. I feel like that I'm. I can't think of the. I've been sitting here trying to think of the vocabulary word, of the herb adjective that I'm looking for, of the statues that like bleed, do you know? I'm talking about like, there's like a phenomenon eyes.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, is it Mother Teresa?

Speaker 1:

No, no, I think it's Mary Mary, yeah, yeah but, but it's, it's called a specific thing, it's called like a something and I was just wondering if you had that gift I. That's what I'm trying to get to, I do have that gift.

Speaker 2:

Let me read this to you. I am a nurse and I'm gonna read this to you guys superficial thrombosis Come on, cat thrombosis, superficial thrombophlebitis, phlebitis, thrombophlebitis is an inflammation of a vein just below the surface of the skin which results from a blood clot. It's basically a fart. I have superficial thrombophlebitis.

Speaker 3:

I Don't think you do.

Speaker 1:

I don't think that you do either.

Speaker 2:

I'm not wrong, it is related to thrombosis. I wish I had thrombosis. No, I don't know the universe. I do not want that, no, but it's a cool name thrombosis yeah.

Speaker 1:

You know what you want. You know what I bet you want. That you don't have is a hercaldirkle.

Speaker 3:

What is a hercaldirkle? You? I feel like you've told us this before that we should know.

Speaker 1:

I know and I was thinking about it when it came up to me the other day and the person said Don't you know what a hercaldirkle is? And I was like I really feel like we've talked about this on the podcast and no, I don't. And so I'm gonna remind us right now as, as I was reminded, a hercaldirkle is when you get to go back to bed after you've gotten up.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, right, right. Oh, what a great name.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think it's Australian or something like that. Of course, the Aussies are amazing.

Speaker 2:

Um, yeah, okay. So anyway, I don't have, I don't think I have it, but something's going on. I feel so much better sharing that.

Speaker 1:

I'm glad you feel better. Saying that it it makes me wonder if this might resonate with you. Um, the energy flow in the body that is associated with the bladder, yeah, kind of runs from right here on the inside, like corner of your eyes, all the way like a Like like parallel across your head and then down the neck and down the spine and then it splits into like four. It's really a really cool energy flow and then it blah, blah, blah does all that stuff. Anyway, it runs down the back of your leg and one of the things that's associated with the energy of of the urinary bladder is Releasing toxins, releasing tension, releasing anything that is no longer serving you, and if you think about, like when we pee, we get rid of this stuff, that like our bodies, like can't use that, so we're gonna pee it out, you know, and it just kind of makes me wonder because you feel so good after sharing that If, maybe, if you've got a little bit of like water.

Speaker 2:

I got some toxins out, I feel that's so cool, that is so neat.

Speaker 1:

The theory works.

Speaker 2:

Yes, the theory does work. I also find that when I am in that vulnerable place which is hard for me to be as an eight, like in pain, that I Really want people to believe me. Mm-hmm, and people do. The people around me often do it be you guys and people I love, but it's funny I find myself saying like I'm being serious, this is really not okay and like there's something that needs to be investigated. There Is my counselor is listening, my therapist let's put that on the list.

Speaker 1:

Let's put that on the list for the little girl with the bloody eyes. So you do have the gift. Oh my gosh, what like true, the gift of the crying statue like your inner child is. This is a thing I got to look up, what this is called. I can't like if any of my Catholic friends are listening. I'm so sorry to be letting you down right now. Oh.

Speaker 3:

Hey, sorry to interrupt. The word cat is looking for here is stigmata. She's gonna continue looking for it throughout the rest of this episode. We may hear more about it later. Okay, back to it.

Speaker 2:

Speaking of Catholics, I got to go to st Patrick's. I almost said seminary, but it's not a seminary st Patrick's Cathedral in New York City, mm-hmm, and what a freaking gift. Have you been in there?

Speaker 1:

I have. I was so excited when you sent me that one of our clients that we work with Plays there regularly around Christmas time and it's just so beautiful and we have a really good friend who kind of like runs all of their events there and stuff like that. I was so Thrilled that you guys were getting to enjoy that space like it's so beautiful.

Speaker 2:

It's like sacred. It was so sacred, and did you have you ever gone to the bathroom there? Oh yeah, yeah. Do you remember where the bathroom was?

Speaker 1:

Well, I remember where, like the behind the altar bathroom is, I don't know about like the bathroom, like out in, like the public.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the bathroom is a confessional that they have turned into a bathroom. Are you serious? Yeah, it took me like a good 20 minutes to find it. There is, there's no sign that says bathroom. So I go to the information desk. After I sat and spoke with the good Lord and I went back, she says it's over here, you can't miss it. Look for the red rope. Walked right past the red rope because that's a confessional and I don't have much to confess. I don't think, and so I just keep walking.

Speaker 2:

Go to the security guard red rope he says. And I walk back there. I mean truly it. There are confessionals, and then there was one that is a red, has a red rope and if you look close there's a little thing that says vacant or non-vacate. It doesn't have a sign for a bathroom and there I walked into the confessional and I did your business, released my toxins as you.

Speaker 3:

Don't worry only the liquid kind, that's great.

Speaker 1:

Well, right, it sounds bad too, but you know, yeah, that's great. So what were you guys doing at St Pat's?

Speaker 2:

Well, we were hanging out at Sirius XM with a couple artists and and our contact there reminded me that it had been, I want to say, remodeled, restored, is that the way to say it and I hadn't been there in years I bet it was 10 years since I had been in there. So we had like an hour before the flight left New York so we walked over there and I've always spent an hour in there just like soaking it in it's. I mean, it was beautiful, the music that was playing, it's wonderful.

Speaker 1:

That's so awesome. I'm so glad that you got to enjoy that, especially the remodel. I haven't been in there in probably Four or five years, so I bet it's. I bet it looks even more different because the last time I was there there was scaffolding. Oh, there was like yeah, it's like they were. They were under like massive construction. Well, that is so fun. What else did you do in New York City? Tell me, you got to eat at Budakon.

Speaker 2:

I did need a Budakon. This time I ate at a new restaurant called Valerie. Highly recommend it. It's Probably like six blocks from Time Square or so, but I found it online and loved the menu and it was super cool Vibe space and really cool. So if you go to New York, check that out. I do want to bring up something, though, that you know. I'm traveling with Megan, who works with me, and she lives in Colorado, so she flew to Tennessee and her parents got. She passed her daughter off to her parents and said, okay, let's fly out from Nashville. So we're on the road together and we got talking about things that you can't eat on the plane and it came up that she would allow her daughter to eat tuna on a plane.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no, that's not okay, I love you, but that's not.

Speaker 2:

She's telling the whole group of us there's like five of us kind of traveling together and we all gasp and we're like what? And she's like dying laughing and she's like I mean I didn't know, but I mean I thought so. Her whole, her whole Conjecture was that because it was like the pre-made, like tuna to go, that it doesn't stink as much, she's gonna crack open a can hey.

Speaker 3:

I'm like tuna is tuna. Yeah, mm-hmm, mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you just don't eat things that stink on planes.

Speaker 1:

No, it's not. It's really not cool too. I was on a plane a couple of weeks ago and and I smelled this familiar smell that I just love but it should probably go into the category of things you don't eat on the plane and the person Across the aisle for me was eating a bag of Fritos.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's rough on a plane.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's like Fritos corn nuts like.

Speaker 3:

I know I love some corn nuts, but you got to be real selective, where you eat those.

Speaker 1:

Yeah they, they are, they're very fragrant, very fragrant, yes.

Speaker 2:

I remember, kat, when we worked at what is now called capital in Nashville. The president of the company had a rule, because his office was semi near the kitchen area, that we were not allowed to pop popcorn in the microwave.

Speaker 1:

Do you remember that? I do remember that. Yeah, because it was like a pet peeve.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's kind of yeah, Especially if you burn it. Then it's like yeah, what about the people that?

Speaker 2:

just bring, like you know, not tuna but like, just like a fish salmon from last night's dinner into the workplace and Microwave it, and the entire place Smells like a fisherman's wharf.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it just. It's just unkind. It's to me it's selfish and it's it's not thoughtful and it's unkind.

Speaker 2:

Thank you, sir. I was waiting for a laugh on that one. One of our listeners sent this photo in Kat.

Speaker 1:

Well, I can't say that I'm terribly surprised at this photo. It's a giant GMC pickup truck. It's the back of the truck that looks very souped up and a little, a little high on the tires and all that kind of stuff, and there is what appears to be a very, very, very, very large sack of balls hanging off of the biggest sack of balls I've ever seen.

Speaker 3:

And it's hanging less than an inch from the ground. It's that big.

Speaker 2:

If you're new to the podcast, you'll know that this is my biggest pet peeve in the entire world is when a man needs to hang a set of rubber balls off the back of their toe truck. Yeah, and this one, I mean I'm just noticing, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not making any comments, but this one has. It's got some, um, some like large carabiners or hooks in case they've got to pull out their friend from the mud. There's some shocks happening here. There is a don't tread on me license plate. That's interesting. I'm not sure exactly which saint this is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I was thinking that too. There's some sort of there's a real Catholic theme going on here today. It feels like it is yeah.

Speaker 2:

And can somebody look up this phrase? Malverde Jesus. So I'm hoping it's positive about the good Lord Jesus, but uh, no, are you ready? Yeah, this is going to be great, Malverde Jesus. Oh, that's the guy on the back. Oh, perfect.

Speaker 3:

He's commonly referred to as the generous bandit, or angel of the poor, or the narcosaint. The narcosaint it is a folklore hero in the Mexican state of Sinola Lawa I wonder if he had a big set of balls.

Speaker 1:

God probably, well, and to me it's like if he's an angel of the poor and a generous bandit, then like I wouldn't think that he'd be the type person that we need to show his balls.

Speaker 2:

No, I agree with you. I didn't know if that was related or not, but it says it's not recognized as a saint by the Catholic church. Just want to put that out there, right.

Speaker 3:

The Malverde legend says he was a Mexican Robin Hood type bandit who stole from the rich and gave to the poor in the late 1800s and early 1900s in the Pacific Coast. State of how do you say it, Sinola?

Speaker 2:

That's a great, try, I don't know. Yeah, okay, there you go. Oh, he's the patron saint of drug lords.

Speaker 1:

Again, not recognized by the Catholic church, by the way, Just for utmost clarity. Oh my God, I feel like we need to like delete Everything we just shared. Are they going to?

Speaker 2:

come after us. They might, they might.

Speaker 1:

I mean.

Speaker 2:

that would be a cool story, though, that the Cat and Moose podcast had all this incredible success until the drug lords killed them. Yeah, yeah, that would be pretty cool.

Speaker 3:

Jesus Malverde, lord, have mercy.

Speaker 2:

I just want to say you don't have to put a set of balls on your truck to be a man. Yeah, you really don't.

Speaker 1:

No, it's actually I think a lot of people have been, I think diminishes your manhood.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I would never put a set of boobs on my truck, would you?

Speaker 1:

No, no, I wouldn't. And we have a mutual friend who makes boob pots.

Speaker 3:

Oh, she does, I know her, I know her, I love those boob pots.

Speaker 2:

I know what you're talking about.

Speaker 1:

And we should have her on the podcast for an interview, because her heart behind why she does it is beautiful.

Speaker 2:

How do you guys know who this is? And I don't. It's remember I.

Speaker 3:

Oh, awesome, and so she. We toured together in June and then she's been with your team.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's right. Yeah, so great, I love her. Yeah, she's done a bunch of other stuff too, but she's tour managing our spring tour. And she said something about her boob pots and I was like. I was like, will you show me a boob pot? Because all I'm thinking in my head is like this flower pot that's like got boobs on it, and she's like no, that's exactly what it is, and I was like oh wow, and they're beautiful, like they're really beautiful, and I'll let her tell us.

Speaker 1:

I don't want to tell her story because I'll probably do a terrible job of it, but at some point we need to have a feature where she shares her story behind her boob pots, because I think they're fantastic.

Speaker 2:

I love those things. Who doesn't need a boob pot? We just said that.

Speaker 3:

at the same time, I have a puzzle about of boobs. It's just they're like drawings of different types of boobs. I never completed it.

Speaker 2:

Well, why not? It's hard, it's a hard puzzle. Yes, now are they photos or drawings.

Speaker 3:

They're drawings, but it's like every kind. Whether that you had a mastectomy, double single, it was really cool.

Speaker 1:

That's really neat. We should do a total thing around breast cancer awareness as well. Isn't breast cancer awareness months like October?

Speaker 2:

Yes, october, we could call it the boob cast.

Speaker 1:

The boob cast just for a month. Cat and Moose boob cast. I met someone at this radio event the other day who I have met a long, long time ago and he didn't remember me until we kind of, you know, jogged our memories a little bit. But he came up to me after we had been in the room together for probably like almost two hours. And he came up to me, he said cat and I said yes, and he said cat and moose and I said yes, you're, and I said the same thing.

Speaker 1:

I said, oh god. I said I don't know, I don't know how to feel right now. I said but I feel really nervous and he's like don't? He said you guys are brilliant.

Speaker 2:

I know that there was a at that same event. There was someone there who texted me and said I got to be in the same room as cat today and I felt like I was in the room, the celebrity, and it was very.

Speaker 1:

That's very sweet. She told me that to you and and she was like oh, I already know you because I listened to the podcast and I was like, cool, but that doesn't mean I know you. Yeah, it was really, really fun getting to meet a handful of listeners this past week that that love what we do. So thank you guys, thank you for listening.

Speaker 2:

Thank you for listening. We love you. We love you. Become a patron and you can see the photo of the Bowls the bowls bowls.

Speaker 1:

Yes, we would like to say thank you, special thanks to our producer Sarah.

Speaker 2:

To find out more, go to cat and moose podcast Dot com you.

Piercing Experiences and Personal Reflections
Exploring Vulnerability and Body Injuries
Blood Clot and Nail Cutting Concerns
Energy Flow and Plane Etiquette
Meeting Fans and Giving Thanks