So at baseline, I'm
Speaker:a smart person, right? I have a fairly high iq.
Speaker:I can do a lot of smart people things, I can do a lot of
Speaker:analysis. I'm pretty good with numbers. I can do hard
Speaker:brain thinking. I can take a different. I can
Speaker:look at things from perspectives that other people can't. All of that is, is
Speaker:indicative of intelligence, which I greatly appreciate. Because without
Speaker:that, I would have nothing going for me.
Speaker:Nothing. So I appreciate that. At least
Speaker:for my lack of social skills and my
Speaker:deeply seated sensory issues and my
Speaker:complete lack of desire to do anything the way that
Speaker:you're supposed to do it. At least I have a couple
Speaker:of IQ points in my favorite. Like, that's super nice. Thank you, universe. You did
Speaker:me a solid. However, I spend a lot of time
Speaker:wondering if I was given
Speaker:a higher ish IQ so
Speaker:that the average overall
Speaker:is not like 40 when
Speaker:I see a dog. Because my IQ
Speaker:goes from fairly high and
Speaker:able to hold very intelligent, high level conversations with people
Speaker:to basically squealing and making non
Speaker:existent sounds or nonsensical sounds. When a
Speaker:dog comes by and there it's. It is involuntary.
Speaker:It is completely involuntary. There is nothing I can do to control
Speaker:it. It could be a dog I've seen a thousand times. It could be my
Speaker:own dog. It could be the
Speaker:neighbor's dog who I see pretty much every day and who,
Speaker:by the way, is Bruno's girlfriend. They love each other.
Speaker:Don't tell Odin that. I feel like that's gonna. That will create
Speaker:some discord in our home because
Speaker:the two of them have something weird going on. But Bruno
Speaker:is such a gentleman when he sees the neighbor's dog. He
Speaker:is never a gentleman, but she goes to the
Speaker:other. We have a metal fence in the backyard and she's small enough to
Speaker:like stick most of her head through the fence. Thankfully not all of it, because
Speaker:then I would just have the head of a dog and the two of them
Speaker:see each other and they run to each other and they do like little kissings
Speaker:through the fence post is so cute. And then he sits there and then
Speaker:he always pees. Always. It doesn't matter if he just
Speaker:went pee. When he sees her, he pees again, which I think is him
Speaker:saying that this is mine, but I don't know that aside from
Speaker:the fact that every time he sees her he pees. But they like run back
Speaker:and forth with each other and he doesn't ever bark at her, and he barks
Speaker:at everything. And so they have like, they have like a whole little
Speaker:relationship and I take him outside and I go sit. And then I
Speaker:just watch them be best friends in the backyard. And it's so cute. And
Speaker:he comes up and I say, oh, you're such gentleman. You're such
Speaker:a. You're so sweet. You're such a night dog. Oh, you're so
Speaker:cute. And then my husband looks at me and goes, what is wrong with
Speaker:you? He's
Speaker:like, none of that was English. None of those were words.
Speaker:And the dog doesn't understand you regardless,
Speaker:so whose benefit are you doing that for?
Speaker:And I don't have an answer for him except to say
Speaker:my own dopamine. Fight me. But he
Speaker:comes up to me, it could be the fifth time I've seen him, and I
Speaker:say, you. Hey, yo. Oh, you're so sweet. Hey, you sweet boy. Oh, you're just
Speaker:my sweet boy. Why are you such a sweet boy? And then my husband says,
Speaker:that is not a sweet boy. That is a boy who runs around and puts
Speaker:his slobbery face all over my counters every day. And I'm constantly cleaning up after
Speaker:him. And I'm like, you just don't understand him.
Speaker:He just needs your love. And maybe he thinks your love is on the
Speaker:counter. I don't know. You knew we were getting
Speaker:house horses who are going to be tall enough to just put their faces on
Speaker:the counter. You knew this. You were there when we
Speaker:did it. You should not be surprised. But anyway,
Speaker:I think my theory is
Speaker:that I got, like, high level of
Speaker:intelligence on regular, just at baseline,
Speaker:so that when it dips frequently,
Speaker:it balances out to, like, average intelligence, because
Speaker:otherwise I would be in trouble because
Speaker:there is no activity happening in my brain when I see
Speaker:a dog aside from gimme da dog. I want a
Speaker:dog. That's a dog.
Speaker:So, yeah, just if you need me to be intelligent,
Speaker:which does happen fairly frequently, just
Speaker:make sure there are no dogs around because I cannot make any
Speaker:promises. And if we're, like, on a zoom and your dog walks up, two things
Speaker:are going to happen. One, I'm going to be like, oh, I want to see
Speaker:the dog. But then two, I'm going to get really frustrated
Speaker:with time and space and
Speaker:telekinesis. I think it is because I want to pet your dog.
Speaker:And short of punching the screen, I cannot do that because you're not in the
Speaker:same place as I am. So please send me pictures of your
Speaker:dogs. I always want pictures of your dogs. But also
Speaker:bring me the baby, because I both want to see pictures of
Speaker:your dogs and I want your dogs. I'm a very
Speaker:reasonable person on a normal day,
Speaker:like measured, good with money.
Speaker:I don't make a lot of excessive purchases.
Speaker:I'm good at making money. I'm good at running a business.
Speaker:I'm good at telling my husband when we don't need more expensive things that
Speaker:he just wants to have. I can balance the
Speaker:books. I don't do, I don't do anything to excess,
Speaker:except maybe caffeine.
Speaker:But if I had 45 dogs and you wanted to bring me a 46,
Speaker:that would be like, yes.
Speaker:Like my husband thinks that two dogs is enough. I
Speaker:think he is incorrect. There are many, many
Speaker:more dogs in the world. And I was, I
Speaker:really, really wanted Chihuahua. Had many Chihuahuas and I
Speaker:loved them. And I love the idea of having 160
Speaker:pound Great Dane and a 3 pound Chihuahua. I think that's
Speaker:hilarious. And we can get a little pouch and
Speaker:put it on Great Danes and put the Chihuahua in pouch. That would be
Speaker:hilarious. He says no
Speaker:to this. And I was talking to a friend of mine who
Speaker:is an accountant and he said,
Speaker:chihuahuas. A Chihuahua with two Great Danes
Speaker:is basically in the margin of error. You don't even count it.
Speaker:So I don't see the problem
Speaker:here. Just get the Chihuahua. He was like, it's.
Speaker:You would just write that off as waste. Exactly.
Speaker:So I want all of the puppies. And when I say
Speaker:puppies, I mean dogs. I don't care how old they are. I just want all
Speaker:of the dogs. And also, I am
Speaker:not ever going to be reasonable about dogs. I could have just gotten a dog
Speaker:yesterday and I would be like, we need another dog.
Speaker:And I feel like my husband being supposedly reasonable about
Speaker:this is stifling my creativity and he should be
Speaker:punished.
Speaker:I have no idea. I have no idea. I was just thinking about it this
Speaker:morning when Bruno was like climbing on top of me and I was like, you're
Speaker:so cute. Why are you the cutest boy in the whole world? You're so sweet
Speaker:and you're so gentle and I love you so much.
Speaker:And Kyle looks at me and he's like. I was like,
Speaker:josh, he just wants your love. Just give him love. And he's like, I. I'm
Speaker:not giving that slobbery bastard love. I let him live. That is
Speaker:love. And then I was listening to
Speaker:myself going,
Speaker:give me that. I want that dog. Oh, I'm dead down.
Speaker:He did a baby. Look at, look
Speaker:at him. I don't, I don't know how. I don't know that. Look at him.
Speaker:He did the baby. He did the. That's the wrong hand. He did the
Speaker:baby anyway. No, that
Speaker:wasn't an invitation. I don't actually like you that much. Go away. My kids occasionally
Speaker:will watch TV in my room, which means I don't have most of
Speaker:the apps logged in. We only have YouTube TV logged in. And also, as I
Speaker:said before, I don't want to pick an app. So if
Speaker:they're coming to watch TV in my room, they're watching YouTube TV, because I am
Speaker:not changing the app, because that is so much work,
Speaker:okay? And so they're.
Speaker:They're trying to. So I said, pick something to watch. And my youngest goes, well,
Speaker:I want to watch Paw Patrol. I don't know if she actually said that, but.
Speaker:And I was like, that's not on right now. And she goes, it's
Speaker:always on. You just go to the app. And I was like, no, that's not
Speaker:how television actually works. Scroll down until you find
Speaker:something you want to watch. She's like, what do you mean, find
Speaker:something? Okay. So we scrolled together, and she was like, all
Speaker:right, I want to watch this. I was like, okay, fine. So I click it,
Speaker:and then the commercials come on, and she's frantically hitting the
Speaker:next button. She's like, I don't wanna watch this.
Speaker:And I was like, you can't. You can't just skip them. We're watching
Speaker:live television. She's like, I don't know what that means. And I
Speaker:just wanna watch Paw Patrol. I was like, man, these
Speaker:kids have a very different childhood than I do. She had no idea.
Speaker:So, yeah, then, Then. Then
Speaker:my oldest was there. This was a couple years ago now.
Speaker:And she said, mom, can I watch TV on your
Speaker:tv? And I said, yeah, but just remember, like, you. I don't have any of
Speaker:the apps on it, so you're just gonna have to watch whatever's on. She's like,
Speaker:that's fine. I'm just gonna scroll until I find something. And I was like, whatever.
Speaker:And she's usually pretty good. Like, she picks things that she's allowed to
Speaker:watch. I don't worry about her, like, turning on Dateline.
Speaker:And so she picks things that she's allowed to watch. And so I was
Speaker:like, whatever, that's fine. And so I hand her the remote, and I
Speaker:went in to the bathroom to go do my makeup. I don't remember where we
Speaker:were going. And I didn't really.
Speaker:I didn't hear much. Whatever. And I see her kind of, like,
Speaker:with the remote, and then it gets quiet, and she, like, settles
Speaker:in because I can. I can see my bed from where I'm standing in the
Speaker:bathroom. And all of a sudden, she's
Speaker:like, oh, this. The Golden Girls theme fills
Speaker:my bedroom. And I was like, all right. I have done
Speaker:one thing right. I may have done everything else wrong as a
Speaker:parent, but I have done this one thing right.
Speaker:Anyway, so I just want to turn on a TV and get a channel. I
Speaker:don't want to have to work that hard. It's too much work. I
Speaker:just want to turn on my TV to have immediately
Speaker:selected murder and then not think
Speaker:about anything else. Don't make me pick my. Don't make me
Speaker:pick my noise, please. Thank you. This has been a public Service announcement from L2.