Tag: medical procedures

  • Bumperpodcast #443 – Season 3 – Sugary

    Bumperpodcast #443 – Season 3 – Sugary

    Join the uproarious fun in Coffee-Can Alley with the Bumperpodcast, the top-rated improvised comedy podcast that keeps listeners in stitches. In this laugh-out-loud episode, Natty Bumpercar, Rufus T. Rufus, Producer, Aloysius J. Pig, Robot, and Doodle Poodle find themselves in a hilarious debate, trying to figure out whether the show is supposed to be about sugar or surgery. As the gang navigates this confusing and comical conundrum, their quick wit and dynamic interactions deliver endless entertainment.

    Listeners are in for a treat as the characters dive into absurd scenarios, blending the sweet and the surgical in ways only the Bumperpodcast can. The episode promises a delightful mix of spontaneity and humor, showcasing the unique charm and chemistry of Coffee-Can Alley’s most beloved residents. Tune in to this side-splitting episode and join the fun as Natty and the crew bring their trademark humor to the most unexpected topics. Don’t miss out on the comedy gold—hit play and enjoy the Bumperpodcast!

    You should send us an email to bumperpodcast@nattybumpercar.com. We’re here and we’re listening!

    Go like our Facebook page

    Transcription

    Natty Bumpercar 0:00
    I’m so strange, so strange. So strange yesterday, I kind of died a little bit, which is I know a strange way to start a podcast, especially the bumper podcast, by the way. Hello, everyone. This is Natty Bumpercar. And this is the bumper podcast, your weekly jump into fun, Ray. And so let’s start it off with with that yesterday. Well, first of all, so I don’t know where anyone is here at the bumper podcast. I haven’t seen pig. I haven’t seen Rufus. I haven’t seen producer and doodle poodle, anybody for weeks. And I come in, and I just kind of click on record and it seems to be working. I mean, the thing is, Do I even need producer? I don’t know, I honestly don’t know. But that is not the question for today. To question for today is what in the world happened yesterday? What in the world? Well, I got up. And I took one of the kids to school. And then I came home back to headquarters here. And I had a little sip of water because water is good for you in the morning. And then the one of the other one of the kids had left, like a little glass of orange juice on the table, and not very much at all. But I was like, oh, I’ll just finish that. Because as a parent, I’m a vulture, and I just go and I finish off whatever the food is, it’s left around. And then I went upstairs and I was gonna go back to bed because I was tired. And it was Monday. And on Mondays. Sometimes I pass out because the weekends are so much fun. That’s what it is. I’m so tired from all the fun that weekends are. I used to love weekends growing up. I remember man, I’d be like, Oh, I can’t wait for the weekend. Everybody’s everybody’s working for the weekend. Here we go. It’s Saturday morning. Whoo. I’m gonna sleep in and then I’m gonna do fun stuff. And now it’s just like, oh, no, no, as a parent, the weekends got in the way it gets here. Oh, no. And then Monday comes in. I’m tired. But so I got into bed. And my hands were weirdly itchy. Like, I was like, What is going on hands? Why are you so itchy. And they were kind of dry. And so I was like, alright, I’ll just go, you know, like, put some lotion on him. And that’ll that’ll fix that. And then I started to feel and this was happening pretty rapidly. My my lip was feeling kind of weird. And it’s like, All right, well, let’s go check it see. And so I went to the bathroom, and I was I was looking for the lotion, and then I shut the mirror. That’s where it is. And I saw my face. And my lip was gigantic, and purple. And my eyes like were swollen almost to being shut and they were bright red. And then not only was the rest of my face, very swollen. But I noticed that my tongue swollen, my throat swollen and the breathing. The breathing was not good. And so I I grabbed my rescue inhaler, and I did the did that. Just hopefully I was like alright, this will open up my airways. And then I was just like, alright, calmly, calmly. Let’s find the shoes. Let’s make sure we have all the stuff the wallet, the phone, the keys are right. Where’s the jacket? Perfect. Let’s go downstairs. Let’s get to the car. Let’s go to the closest urgent care and I was doing this all as the everything was getting much worse. Like the breathing was just like and the like the tongue it was. I don’t I don’t like tongues. I don’t like to talk about tongues. I think they’re weird and kind of gross. But the tongue was a lot. It was a lot more than it’s supposed to be. And I also I couldn’t talk and so really just around the corner not I would say maybe is three quarters of a mile away from the house is is an urgent care. There’s one that’s closer, which is a CVS, but I looked on the thing and they were not open yet. And so I went to the other one. And at a light, there’s two lights in between my house in this place. So at the second light, it was red light. And so I texted my wife and I was just like, Hi, I’m having an allergic reaction. We’re going to urgent care, period. That’s all I saw at time, then the light turned her send light green, off, we go to the urgent care, get to the urgent care Park can’t breathe, like really can’t breathe, stumble into the place, lumbar into the place. There’s no one there. And I look around. And I guess they heard me come in. And so a woman came, you know, behind the desk, and her eyes got enormous. And she said, can I please have your ID? And I was just like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, because it couldn’t talk. I couldn’t speak at all like, rules. No, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, is how I sounded. But worse than that. And then the woman who there’s another woman who kind of looked in and she was like, get him back here now. And they got me back there sat me in the chair and started taking doing my blood. What is the oxygen levels and the thing around my arm to check my blood pressure, and all these things? And it was great. But they were running around like chickens. They were just running around in circles, like, what do we do? What do we do? It’s Monday morning. This is the first guy that comes in what? It’s not a good way to start a week called labor ambulance call the man ambulance quickly. And so the ambulance comes, but it took them about, I want to say eight minutes. I don’t know pretty sure it could have died that eight minutes. And so they get there. And they’re like, should we do an EpiPen? Do we need to do what have you been? And they’re like, get them on the stretcher. It was all very like, but do this. Gotta do this, get into that. And I, they got me on the stretcher. And they were asking all these questions. And they asked me to write down my phone number because I couldn’t say it. And I wrote mine. And then I wrote my wife’s number. And then I said, I was trying to say hold on do you want me to call my wife but they couldn’t understand it because it came out like this rah rah, love, love. And so I took my phone, they were like, We don’t know what you’re saying. So I took my phone and I pressed the you know, I was like call wife. And then I handed them the phone. And then she got a call from a police officer. And you know, when you get that call, it’s scary. And so she you know, I was talking to him about the situation what was going on? Should she come back? And I was like, No, I got this, you know, and then I get whisked to the ambulance. And they put an IV in me and then it’s Benadryl. And then things start to come down a little bit. They were debating whether to do the epi pen or not. And epi pen is like, the guy was telling me about it. And I wish you wouldn’t have it’s a it’s a tube with a giant needle, he said, giant needle that they jam into your leg and then, you know, like, whatever. And it’s what they do. When I guess you’re going into anaphylaxis, which is not good thing. So they, they were going to wait until we got to the emergency room because they were kind of monitoring everything. And I was I still somehow was getting oxygen. Even though I the breathing was just like wow, right, very rapid. And we got to the emergency room on the thing, and then they get me in there and then they start pumping me full of all kinds of other stuff. And you know, I was plugged in, I’ve got tubes, I’ve got things in my fingers things. There was this a lot. And I ended up being at the hospital for like 10 hours. And because they it was it wouldn’t the swelling wouldn’t go down. Like it was very slow, like, my face would get a little bit better. And I realized that about like, three o’clock that I hadn’t eaten anything since pretty much five o’clock the last day and I was just like and they’re like, What, and that’s because everybody was like What What are you saying what? I’m sure. And they were like, oh food. We have two two sandwiches. I was like, oh, not and they gay and then I just like everyone, Apple car or, or yoga. And they’re like, ah, applesauce, we can give you applesauce and I was like oh Huh.

    And I’m texting, you know, people updates. This is what’s happening. This is where I am, this is what’s going on yada, yada. I’ll give you updates as I have them. Yeah, and one of the annoying things was I couldn’t go to the bathroom because of these things tied into me. But eventually I was I was like, I was like, the bathroom. And they were like, okay, hold on, well, unclick you unclick I click, I click. And she’s like, okay, it’s doors right down there. And, and I started walking out of the room. They asked me if I could and I said yes. And I got like two feet out of the room, they had forgotten to unplug, like, some major thing. And it knocked me back. And it almost, and the equipment, like almost fell over. And like, so everyone in the emergency room was like, gasp it says everything. Okay? And I was just like, they were like, Oh, we’re sorry. And then I, you know, I use bathroom. And then like, a couple hours later, things were down enough. My face was okay. And they were like, Okay, you seem good. Okay, called the wife. She and the kids came and got me. And I Yeah, you know, it’s better. Now I was given all kinds of medicine, I’m going to see an allergist, see what happened. And because it was very random, and the only thing that we could figure out was it was this orange juice, because that was all I had. And we were looking at the bottle and it was orange juice that had calcium in it. And then I started researching, and it seems like calcium citrate or calcium phosphate, or some of the things that they put into the orange juice that I maybe had a bad reaction to. And so it was a pretty fun day, pretty much everyone thought that I was going to be dead or die or whatever. And my main fear was that they were going to intubate me. So put like a tube in my throat so that I could breathe, because then my fear was, well what is my voice sound like? Like, how is this going to impact how my voice sounds which I use my voice for a lot of things, talking being one of them, but now it’s all fixed except for the cleanup and the tears.

    Outro 12:42
    The bumper podcast is an oftentimes hilarious weekly romp with Natty Bumpercar and some of his pals. It is family friendly, clean and ridiculous. Thanks a bundle for listening. If you love our show, and you’d like to help support the podcast, check out our Patreon page at https colon forward slash forward slash www.patreon.com forward slash Natty Bumpercar also pretty please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, share it with everyone everywhere. post about it on all of the social medias or leave a rating and review. The bumper podcast is produced at headquarters in coffee Ken alley. It’s recorded mixed and produced by producer. The bumper podcast features contributions from Aloysius jpg Rufus T Rufus doodle poodle, robot trunks and a gaggle of other silly rascals. Our head talker is probably Natty Bumpercar. We also have an absurd newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at Natty bumpercar.com/subscribe Also, you can follow me on Instagram and Twitter at Natty Bumpercar Hugs and hearts See you soon.

    NonPro 14:01
    This has been a non productive media presentation, executive producer Franco Blaue. This program and many others like it on the nonproductive network is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution non commercial no derivatives license. Please share it but ask before trying to change it or sell it. For more information visit non dash productive.com


    About This Episode

    In episode 443 of the Bumperpodcast, confusion reigns supreme as Rufus T. Rufus questions how Natty Bumpercar can name an episode before recording it. The crew debates whether the show is about "sugary" or "surgery," leading to a hilarious spelling lesson from Aloysious J. Pig. Each character denies needing surgery—Rufus fears hospitals due to generational trauma, Producer explains frogs don't use hospitals, and Doodle Poodle pops in briefly to discuss worms. Robot makes an appearance claiming influencer status. Eventually, Natty reveals the truth: he's having arthroscopic knee surgery, explaining that hope and dreams are the only things holding his knee together. This improvisational comedy showcases the signature chaos and wordplay that makes the Bumperpodcast a delightfully absurd listen.

    Memorable Quotes

    “This is the team that you handpicked? This is the team that you went around the world and you gathered together your squad to make a podcast?”

    — Aloysious J. Pig

    “I don't have anything holding my knee together. The doctor's like, well, you don't have one of these, you don't have one of those. I said, well, what's keeping me up? He said, hope, dreams. I said, oh, no! I lost those a long time ago!”

    — Natty Bumpercar

    “We're 11 minutes into this, and we still ain't got no idea about nothing, so could you educate us a little bit?”

    — Rufus T. Rufus

    Topics: #surgery #hospitals #medicalprocedures #improvisation #wordplay #healthcare #friendship #podcastmeta-humor

    Featuring: Rufus T. Rufus, Aloysious J. Pig, Doodle Poodle, Robot, Natty Bumpercar

    Full Transcript

    Rufus T. Rufus: well now uh i was looking at the title of the podcast and i found it very interesting that you came up with the title before you even you know record the show and so it makes me wonder like i thought this whole thing was supposed to be uh organic i thought this whole thing was supposed to be improvised but so how do you come up with the name of the show before you even recorded the show if the whole thing is supposed to be made up on the spot now is what i'm at is what i'm at excuse me is what i'm asking you yeah no that makes uh yes so the yes the whole thing is made up on the spot but today um we have a big event happening and so i thought what would be nice would be fun is if we talked about the main event and so i was i was gonna kind of steer it towards that and so normally i don't name the shows before but today i was just like well i know what it's kind of gonna be about so i might as well just go ahead and name it that right yeah so what what i don't know what is it named does anybody it's called sugary what sugary it's gone this episode whatever it is and it just says sugary so i didn't know if it was talking about like uh cereal or you know uh what you know what kind of uh honey and like alternative sweetness maybe for for my iced tea i i know i natty take it away i suppose i just wow you know we're gonna talk about sugar i guess no no no people come on to me and they say you know rufus you don't even need any sugar because it's sweet enough yeah no we're not talking about sugar that's fun that's nice put some more sugar in my teeth yeah okay great it's not we're not talking about sugar but it's in the title there it's hard it's but that's not the title is what i'm saying it's not sugary it's exactly what it says sugary

    Aloysious J. Pig: s-u-g no sorry i'm reading the title i'm sorry don't talk it's s-u-r-g-e-r-y sugary right natty did you like you you went around and you this is the team that you handpicked

    Rufus T. Rufus: this is the team that you went around the world and you you you gathered together your squad to make a podcast a bumper podcast uh and uh i am aloysius jay pig i don't know if we did are we introducing ourselves anymore is that something we still do okay perfect you can call me pig so um s s-u-r-g-e-r-y is uh surgery is what is that's that's what you spelled surgery right let's break it down like the door that clamps surgery okay surgery yeah wait a minute who's who's having surgery am i having surgery i don't i don't know if you're having surgery i don't know if you're having surgery i don't know i certainly hope that i'm not having any kind of surgery i'm afraid of uh of hospitals i don't even like to go to the doctor there's a certain way that it smells in there the lighting is just terrible for me uh and you know there's just a lot of stuff that you know could happen you could you could get lost you know you could uh eat some sort of something you could get lost you know you some bad food you could they could you could get forgotten you can get left there forever that happened to somebody in my family it was my uncle great great great uncle but he went to the hospital and somebody misplaced him and we never ever saw him again and you know that's one of the things i i fear it's way um it's a generational trauma is is is as i anytime i go to the hospital i think that i hope i hold on to the person's hand that i'm with and i said now don't you leave me this is the buddy system and i'm gonna need you to keep me uh in sight at all times and keep me wait a minute now who you al cyrus is so good if you're not having surgery and i certainly

    Aloysious J. Pig: uh hospital studies there's really not a hospital for frogs so much you know you kind of you you're born in the swamp you don't go anywhere to get born and if you get sick you know you just kind of go into the water a little bit and then you come out you feel better and you know if you get hurt you just kind of take a nap and then you you're a frog and so you just kind of wake up and you're like well you know yeah sure i got hurt and everything but uh i feel a lot better you know you just go on a bachelor's day uh i did want to know he was a toad another frog but he had um um wisdom teeth surgery um which he went in for but the the only bad thing that happened to him was that his insurance did not cover any of it and so it put him into a dire financial situation and the whole thing was just

    Rufus T. Rufus: different than just regular tooth law like you got your dentist law obviously you got your orthodontist law which is a whole other subset of the other uh subcategory but uh wisdom teeth are their own kind of special law that i i did dip my toe into a little bit back in in my uh scholar lady days so you just send that toad on over to me and i i i will i will do my best to to make everything all right as i do as i do so now hold on we've eliminated uh myself uh rufus t rufus from getting uh surgery and aloysius you're saying that you're not you're not getting it either perfect all right and uh producer you're saying you also your frogs there's no frog surgery who is at leave anyway well uh so none of us are getting it uh maybe you know i'm i'm hesitant to say their names because sometimes when i say the names they just show up but uh maybe it's doodle poodle or robot i guess it could be hi hi hi everybody it's

    Doodle Poodle: it's me doodle poodle and this is gogtrasil but I haven't been in the podcast studio in so long. I've been busy, though, making some doodles. Hup, hup. So, anyway, no, I haven't been. And last time I went to the doctor, it's because I had worms. Oh, oh. So, I don't think I'm going to go to the hospital for any surgery for any kind of nitty thing. So, it's not me. But thanks for asking about me, and I'm glad to be on the show. And I'm going to go and make some doodles. Maybe I'll doodle a hospital, and I'll doodle some surgery, and I'll doodle some worms, and it'll be the best thing I'll ever doodle.

    Rufus T. Rufus: I am so incredibly sorry that I mentioned, that I said your name. Oh, he's already gone. Okay. Well, lesson learned. Oh, that was a lot to contend with. I think we missed out, though. I think the other one must not have heard his. Oh, for the love of Pete.

    Robot: It's me, honey, everybody. It's me. I'm a robot, and, wow, two weeks in a row, and I am on the Bumper Podcast. I feel like an influencer. I feel like a superstar. I feel like my career is popping off as careers do.

    Rufus T. Rufus: Now, Aloysius, this is all your fault. Obviously, but no, robot, we … no, you're not an influencer. We were just trying to figure out who's going to be getting surgery. There was some confusion earlier on if the show was about sugary, and it's not. It's about surgery. We went around the horn. We went around the table here. Okay. Okay. everybody, really. We talked to, you know, Aloysius, we talked to a producer, and then we talked to Doodleboodle came by, and now, you know, we talked to you, and you know, I guess we're just not sure exactly. I'm not, and none of us are, so I kind of wonder, Natty, are you going to come back in the room? No, yeah, come on. I know it's crowded in here, but you can come on back in. Is it a typo? Is this the whole show supposed to be about sugar? I know we were saying that it was surgery, and somebody was spelling it, and everything. I think I was, maybe it was at you, Aloysius, and it just don't make no sense. We're 11 minutes into this, and we still ain't got no idea about nothing, so could you educate us a little bit? Can you shed a little bit of your light on the subject? As it were. Yeah, yes. I was waiting for anybody to ask me, because you were all talking to each other. I actually got up and walked out at a point there because nobody even looked my way, and it's me. It's me. It's me. I get to have surgery today. I, um, knee surgery. It's what I thought was orthoscopic surgery, but it's arthroscopic surgery. Arthroscopic surgery? Yes. Where they put a camera in, I don't want to get too graphic, but they put a camera into my knee, and they see what's going on. Um, I don't know if you know this about me, but I'm old. A million years ago, I had knee surgery, because I don't have anything holding my knee together, and the doctor's like, well, you don't have one of these, you don't have one of those. I said, well, what's keeping me up? He said, hope, listen, dreams. I said, oh, no! I lost those a long time ago!

    Natty Bumpercar: The Bumper Podcast is an oftentimes hilarious weekly romp with Natty Bumpercar and some of his pals. It is family-friendly, clean, and ridiculous. Thanks a bundle for listening. If you love our show and you'd like to help support the podcast, check out our Patreon page at https colon forward slash forward slash www.patreon.com forward slash Natty Bumpercar. Also, pretty please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, share it with everyone everywhere, post about it on all of the social medias, or leave a rating and review. The Bumper Podcast is produced at headquarters in Coffee Can Alley. It's recorded, mixed, and produced by a producer. The Bumper Podcast features contributions from Aloysius J. Pig, Rufus T. Rufus, Doodle Poodle, Robot, Trunks, and a gaggle of other silly rascals. Our head talker is probably Natty Bumpercar. We also have an absurd newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at nattybumpercar.com slash subscribe. Also, you can follow me on Instagram and Twitter at Natty Bumpercar. Hugs and hearts! See you soon!

    Unknown: Natty Bumpercar. Natty Bumpercar.

  • Bumperpodcast #326 – Palette Expander

    Bumperpodcast #326 – Palette Expander

    Here it is – the new podcast that everyone is talking about. The Bumperpodcast is an oftentimes hilarious weekly romp around Headquarters, in Coffee-Can Alley, with Natty Bumpercar and his entire gaggle of pals!

    Natty went to voice training class – did it work? More importantly, what’s going on with Emerson?!

    You should send us an email to bumperpodcast@nattybumpercar.com, or to call in and leave a message – 646.847.7976. We’re here and we’re listening!

    Go like our Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/TheBumperpodcast/)!!

     


    About This Episode

    In this episode of Bumperpodcast, host Natty Bumpercar shares his ongoing struggles with Invisalign after spending $1,700 on voice training classes that didn't help his speech. He recounts a carnival mishap involving cotton candy that turned his aligners neon yellow, forcing him to wear them for two weeks. The episode takes a heartfelt turn as Natty describes his son's dental emergency from years ago and the recent ordeal of getting a palate expander installed. Through humorous storytelling, Natty captures the parenting challenge of managing a child's dental anxiety while dealing with his own orthodontic issues. The episode ends with a comical McDonald's visit gone wrong when food gets stuck in his son's new appliance.

    Memorable Quotes

    “If anyone ever asks you if you want cotton candy the answer is gonna be yes it should be yes”

    — Natty Bumpercar

    “We heard a scream and it was unlike any scream that we had heard before. You get this pit of doom in your stomach, this shock of cold through your veins.”

    — Natty Bumpercar

    “I didn't want them to look at me and be like, oh, you're the one who caused me all this misery. That's stuff that's going to send them into therapy later.”

    — Natty Bumpercar

    Topics: #invisalign #parenting #dentalhealth #orthodontics #cottoncandy #childhoodinjuries #medicalprocedures #familylife

    Featuring: Natty Bumpercar

    Full Transcript

    Natty Bumpercar: oh hi bumper podcast it's me natty bumper car and as you can tell i can talk a little bit better you probably can't even tell that i have it okay you can tell still man i took last week off and i went to some voice training classes and i was like hey i've got this new thing in my mouth this new doodad and it makes me talk kind of funny and uh they were like we can fix you and i gave them seventeen hundred seven teen dollars and they they spent it was a week course a crash course to make it sound better and now you're telling me it didn't work ah well i guess this is just how i'm gonna sound then um here's some excitement with the invisalign did i already tell you this i can't remember i went to a carnival with these things in and my kid got cotton candy and it was like a mixed bag so it was like oh look at me i'm blue which i think is blue raspberry oh look at me i'm pink which is pink flavor and then oh look at me i'm yellow which is not banana i know it's not which makes me happy it might be lemon probably lemon so there was blue raspberry lemon and then whatever pink is raspberry no because you have raspberry blue raspberry strawberry who knows i don't know i don't know why i'm saying fruits because there's nothing about these things that have anything to do with fruit at all so we uh we went and he was just like hey dad do you want some cotton candy i was like yeah i want some cotton candy because if anyone ever asks you and like it if you want cotton candy the answer is gonna be yes it should be yes and i'm just eating it and i'm eating it and i'm like we're having a good time we're at the carnival and i got home and i was like i should brush my teeth because i don't want all that sugar stuck in these little trays of tooth doom i took them out and the cotton candy was yellow like not like i'm an old man i have yucky yellow teeth but like i'm from space i have robot teeth like that kind of and uh yeah so now i have yellow teeth for two weeks yellow teeth uh and i was even i wasn't even supposed to i was in my second little trays i have three sets of them they're supposed to last me for six weeks uh i had already moved into the second set five days early because my first set decided just to crack like they just ripped in my mouth like i was trying to pop them off pop them off hey well you know you don't make sure before you eat you gotta pop them off oh okay how do i do that and then pop yeah fine that's great but mine were i gotta pop them off i gotta eat some food oh look it's the whole this half just came off so that's not doing anything so i made the executive decision to move up to tray number two so good for me but now they're neon yellow uh in other news around the house uh my simpatico young boy uh also this week had to go to the orthodontist uh a few years ago he was running around a table with his brother he slipped he fell his two front teeth took the brunt of the impact against the corner of a table i was upstairs my wife was upstairs we heard the noise we heard a scream and it was unlike any scream that we had heard before and uh nothing for a parent when you hear a noise that you know is not a natural noise and is not going to be good you get this pit of doom in your stomach you you feel this uh shock of cold through your veins through your nerves and you're just like all right let's get downstairs as quickly as we can without breaking our necks and there he was standing in a pool of blood it was disgusting and it was pouring from his little mouth and i had to wrap him up in a towel and take him to the er uh and it was a big ordeal he had folded his two front teeth they were baby teeth backwards oh it was disgusting uh the uh the emergency room couldn't do anything there's nothing for them to do they said just take him to the dentist uh asap took him the next morning the dentist was kind of looking at it and he uh the plan was once the swelling went down he uh drilled little holes in the back of the teeth took out the dead tissue or whatever the dead yucky stuff that's inside of a tooth and uh he said yeah it's gonna kind of it's gonna settle itself kid kid mouths are very resilient it'll fix itself all right i said so he's one of the teeth did they went right back but the other one kind of stayed a little bit uh hanging out in the looking backwards so he's like all right we gotta go to the orthodontist and we gotta get this figured out because this is gonna mess up his other teeth okay so he finally did that and he got something called a palate expander now what does a palate expander do i have no idea but i think it does exactly what it says it does it expands the child's palate the palate is like the roof of your mouth and it's like the roof of your mouth and it's like the roof of your mouth so he um on tuesday had to get little rubber bands they were blue and they looked adorable and he thought it was fun until they put the little rubber band spacers they're called in between his back molars just to add some get this space for the next day they were going to be in for he went in at 5 45 until 2 45 so about 21 hours is how long it took him to get this and he was like okay this is no big he was like this is no big deal and they were like he's doing so well he's doing amazing who is this child he's doing so great and i was just like i don't know by the time i got into the car he was like that that that that that these things have got to get out of my mouth and i was just like no we just got him in dad i don't know i don't know i don't dad dad dad let's go back inside dad let's go back inside dad hey dad hey dad dad hey dad let's go back inside and i was like buddy it's 24 hours it's not a big deal you're doing great you're gonna we're gonna knock this out and then you're gonna move on to the next step that and like it was like that constant and to the point where it was it was we got home and it was man the wheels came off the bus and he was it was like he was like i don't know i don't know i don't know i don't know it was horrible because he was begging he was begging me dad dad dad dad just saying dad over and over again pleading begging dad i'll do anything you gotta get these things out of my mouth dad but please dad dad and i was just like buddy buddy hey buddy buddy buddy buddy he's like i can't eat i can't drink i'm not gonna be able to sleep and it was like it was a big deal so we you know we gave him some some pain medication we gave him some ice packs we we did everything that we could and and finally we got him to sleep but the next and like over the course of the night he's like i'm taking these out i'm ripping these out i'm gonna take these out and he's like i'm gonna get a fork i'm gonna take them out i was just like what with a fork what are you doing relax like just it's it's i think it's not comfortable i was like but look daddy has these things in his mouth they're not super comfortable but you know you just kind of learn to deal with it you just kind of move on and it was it was it was not a pleasant time evening here around headquarters but we got through it he finally passed out he went to sleep and he woke up the next morning he was like these aren't it's not as bad as i thought i was like i knew it i knew it you were tired or something last night i mean i knew it might have been rough but it wasn't as bad as he was making it so we uh you know he goes to school and i pick him up and he was kind of a nervous wreck and he's just like i couldn't eat all day i couldn't talk all day and i was like these are just the rubber band these are the rubber bands i don't even like the rubber band you can see them in the jewellery doors and with this car know somebody's fucking guard look at this. You get to take home this cool mold of your mouth. But she really tried to sell it like it was a big deal. Like, look, this is the inside of your mouth and you get to take it home. And he was like, I could care less. I could not care less about that if I tried. In no way, no fashion, no form could I care less about what you're showing me right now. Get these rubber bands out of my mouth. So she popped those out, bing, bang, boom. And she takes the metal doodad and she puts it in. And then the orthodontist comes over and he has this little brown plastic bar that he helps kind of wedge the doodads in. He was like, all right, see, this is what we're doing. It's in there. No problem. How's that feel? Good, good. Didn't give him time to answer, right? He was just running through his script. He's like, hey, I've got 18 kids to touch right now. I'm going to make $50,000 today. How's that feel? Good. Fine. Boom. We're moving on. And then he took it out. He had to put some glue on it. He's like, hey, we're going to put some glue on it. And then after this, she's going to explain to you what you can eat, how you're going to take care of these, what you're going to do, bada, bada, bada. And I was like, okay, okay. I got to keep, I got to, okay, I can do this. And so he puts it in, and it's like epoxy glue. And they have this like laser beam thing that they put in his mouth that makes the epoxy harden so it sticks to your teeth. And then there's actually, there's a screw inside of this thing that I have to turn every two days. He gave me, there's a tool that I have to use, and I have to turn it once every two days. So it's like, hey, are you getting used to this? Does this feel a little bit better? All right, bam. How does it feel now? Miserable again, right? Awesome. And who did it to you? Me. Hooray. I, uh, anytime, like even with a vet, or if there's ever a procedure that would have to be done, I tried to make sure that the vet did it, or the doctor did it to my, the doctor did it to my kids, the vet did it to my dog, because I didn't want them to look at me and be like, oh, you're the one who caused me all this misery. This is your fault that I feel this way. Because that's lasting. That's, that's stuff that's going to send them into therapy later. And I, I don't know if my insurance is going to cover it, because it doesn't cover my therapy. So, um, I'm going to try to avoid that. But we actually haven't done that yet. Today's the first day that I get to turn the screws on the boy. And we'll see how that goes. Now, since he had made it through the first day, we got the pallet expander in. Uh, we went, we got Ollie. And I was like, all right, guys, we're, we're going to go out. We got to go out. Emerson's going to get a prize. And, you know, we're going to go and we're going to, oh, no, this is the next day. I'm sorry. I apologize. So, we got everybody together. And we, we went, we were, I was like, what do you guys want to eat? We'll eat anything at all. We'll eat whatever you want. So, they went, oh, we want McDonald's. I was like, perfect. So, we'll get some McDonald's. And I was like, then we can go wherever, whatever store you want. We can buy you a thing. This is what I do. I have to not bribe the children, but you have to buy them treats. You know, if they go through trauma, then I buy treats to alleviate some of the stress, some of the trauma. So, we went to McDonald's. And he got a big mac with no onions and no cheese. And, no, a quarter pound or whatever. And he got a large fry and all this food. And he took one bite and a piece of apple. He had apple from his brother's thing. Got caught in the roof of his mouth. And he tried to flip the table at McDonald's. He's like, I ain't going to eat this. I can't eat nothing. What is this, my life?

    Unknown: So, that was a way to learn a lot about peace. Thank you so much for his rad digits. Do I get anything? No. All right, anyway, dee dee dee, we gotta get out of here. So, thank you so much.