Dear Hank & John - 20: This Episode Contains Puke
Episode Date: October 19, 2015Should I cave to my parents and have them at my wedding? Are we just cats? Why does 98 degrees feel hot if that's my body temperature? How do I read slow books? What do you do when your loved one is i...n a pyramid scheme? Hank Green and John Green have answers!If you're in need of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams and an exclusive weekly podcast at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn
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Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John.
Or as I prefer to think of it, Dear John and Hank.
It's a podcast, where me and my brother John,
answer your questions, give you do-be-use advice,
and bring you all the week's news from both Mars and the AFC Wimbledon.
Hank, it's been a big week for AFC Wimbledon.
Actually, it hasn't.
There's not that much news from AFC Wimbledon.
Is there a lot of news from Mars?
Or should people just stop listening to the podcast?
There's always news from Mars, John. Well, there's always news from AFC Wimbledon. Is there a lot of news from Mars or should people just stop listening to the podcast? There's always news from Mars, John! Well, there's always news
from AFC Wimbledon too, it's just, I don't know, how are you? I'm good, I'm good, how
are you doing? Yeah, I don't know, I don't even know anymore. I'm writing a lot and I'm
inside of the story and so when I get frustrated with the story, I feel frustrated with every other facet of my life. But I will say
in weather news here in Indianapolis, the post-tailor swift beauty that we have been experiencing, we're just clinging to it. We're just barely holding on. The sky is still blue, but the
temperature is dropping. It's a little worry. So I'm beginning to think that fall might be in the air. How are things in Montana?
It's actually very beautiful here. It's definitely fall, lots of color on the trees. And I am
doing good. We did nerd con stories. It turned out to go really well. It was a treat for
me because I got to hang out with a bunch of great people and watch lots of cool things
happen on a stage that I was like, I would think it'd be funny if we did this and it turned
out I was right.
Well, I'm occasionally wrong.
Sometimes, but mostly right.
Yeah, I just, I don't want you to be praising yourself too thoroughly.
It's unbecoming.
Well, it had very little to do with me.
I just put people on a stage and crossed my fingers.
And I was very pleased to have all of our guests
and all of our attendees totally come on their A-game
and make a good thing happen.
And everybody was just down to clown.
It was fun.
I really liked the attendees of Nerdgun Stories.
I have to say, I felt like it was a good
and gracious bunch
of people who were positive and enthusiastic. And it was really, that's what made it special
for me was just, you know, being around people who care about stories in the same way that
I do. I felt like, I felt like I was kind of with, with my tribe. It was a wonderful, it was a wonderful weekend and thank you for it. Hank, the only downside for me was like I was kind of with my tribe. It was a wonderful weekend and thank you for it.
The only downside for me was that I was in a car race
against Maggie Steve Otter, a great young adult novelist.
And I, well, I crashed my car and erupted into a fiery tomb
of death, but fortunately I was pulled from it
before I was injured.
So other than that, I would qualify the weekend as an entire success.
Well, I have to say, in fairness to you, you didn't crash the car.
I didn't.
You spun out.
I spun out.
It didn't hit any of you.
I never hit any of you.
You managed to control the car that you didn't slam into anybody or anything, but apparently the stress of whatever,
of losing control of the car caused, I think, the brake line to brake, which then sprayed,
brake fluid all over the hot underside of the car, and apparently brake fluid is flammable.
So that happens.
Yeah, you're right, I didn't crash. I came within about six inches of crashing into the wall,
but didn't, and I was very pleased with myself
for about 10 seconds.
I was like, look at that.
I managed not to crash.
I even put the car into reverse,
and I was gonna keep going,
and then I realized that I was on fire.
Well, I call that the car's fault not yours.
Do you have a short poem for us?
I do, it's Philip Larkin.
Is a request actually today.
William requested the poem Home Is So Sad by Philip Larkin. It's a bit of a depressing poem.
I apologize for that Hank. I know that you prefer the funny stuff. But this is Home Is So Sad by
Philip Larkin. Home is so sad. It stays as it was left, shaped to the comfort of the last to go, as if to win them back.
Instead, bereft of anyone to please, it withers so, having no heart to put aside the theft and turn again to what it started as,
a joyous shot at how things ought to be long, fallen wide.
You can see how it was, look at the pictures and the cutlery, the music and the piano stool, that vase.
Home is so sad by Philip Larkin. Oh, home. Oh, it is so sad.
Well, I guess when you take out all of the people because everything is impermanent.
Yeah, I guess that's the sadness, Hank. The underlying sadness of most stories is that everything is impermanent
I was thinking today as I was writing that
That in a way like all stories are about a
Not just all stories, but also all of life
But but every story in one way or another is about a plucky young
Hero desperately trying to escape her fate. Yep
a plucky young hero desperately trying to escape her fate. Yep.
And each of us is a plucky young person
desperately trying to escape our fate
until we become middle aged.
Ha ha ha ha.
I've touched for there lots of plucky middle aged
people trying to escape their fate.
Right, I know, but the only choice is between
being a plucky middle aged person trying to escape
your fate and just accepting it. Not that I'm frustrated by how the writing is going at the moment or anything.
Maybe we should answer some viewer questions in this incredibly depressing humor podcast.
We have a question from Renee who asks,
dear Hank and John, my partner and I will be getting married in a couple of months.
Originally we'll be-
Oh, why bother Renee? What's the point of being alive?
a month, originally we felt pressured to allow our families to attend the actual ceremony.
Do you think we should stick to our guns and do what we want?
Or will we regret it later?
It's a big question, Hank.
And I suspect that you and I might actually disagree.
So I'm interested to hear your thoughts on this.
I think that I don't know Renee, and I don't know Renee's
partner, but I do know that
marriages are about more than just the two people inside of them.
I think that no marriage is an island, and I think that it is important.
It was important to me that I had important people in my life there to witness me making
that super important, most important promise I've ever made, and that I've needed support from outside of my marriage to make my marriage
work.
And I think that's, I think that's true for everyone.
And so it's good to recognize that marriage is about more than just the people getting married
and a good way to do that, not the only way to do that is by having those people there
at the ceremony.
And then in addition to that,
in addition to the practical needs of the people
getting married, there are also like,
you know, it is about more than just the two of you
in a way.
And I think that like if I was a parent
and my child was like having
the most important day of their lives,
I would wanna be there for that.
And I feel bad about not being able to be there.
My counter argument is that it's not one
of the most important days of your life,
that in fact like the day of your wedding
is not one of the most interesting
or important days of your marriage, right?
It's the day that you make a commitment to a marriage, but all the interesting cool stuff that happens in a marriage.
And I completely agree with you that no marriage is an island and that marriage is every marriage, every successful marriage requires more than the support of more than two people.
But like, I don't think that the wedding is that important.
Like looking back on my wedding day, I just don't,
I just don't think it's that important.
But how would you think that our mom would answer that question?
How do you think she would react to not being at your wedding?
Poorly.
Because it's really like, yeah, the question,
there's the question of like, what is it for
Renee and Renee's partner?
There's also the question of what is it for their parents and like how devastated are
they?
I don't know the answer to that question, but I think that my parents would be crying in silence.
Yeah, I guess my advice would be to sort of follow the path of least resistance because
I don't actually think that unless it's going to be super stressful and miserable to have
family there because it's broken or unapproving relationships or unhealthy relationships or
whatever, I really, you know, obviously you need the day,
you need that day to be about you and your partner
and the commitment that you're making,
and you want that day to be special and fun
and as unstressful as possible.
But if the family relationships are healthy and functional
and positive, I would just be like,
you can come, but can you make it as unstressful
for us as possible?
That's what I would say.
Yeah, and in a lot of ways, it may end up being
more stressful to not have them there just because
you're creating.
Right.
In striving for a stress-free marriage,
you may end up creating drama.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, it's very, it's sometimes it's
very difficult to know what is the path of least drama.
It's always the path I try to follow.
But you just, sometimes you don't know which path it is
But I guess like my advice to people who are getting married is always to think oh to try to focus more on the marriage than on the wedding because
Weddings pass and marriages if you're lucky don't pass until you do oh
It's all about death here under your handkerchief. Sorry. I just I noticed that we'd almost answered an entire question without talking about the universality of death.
Alright, John, give us another question.
Alright, this question comes from Matt
who writes, dear John and Hank,
I've been thinking a lot about the intelligence of animals
compared to that of humans.
I realized that every day my cat knows where to get its food
and knows to eat it, but there's so much it could never know.
No matter how hard it tried, its brain could never possibly comprehend
the company that manufactures the food
or the nutritional value of the food
or the fact that I buy the cheaper kind
because student loans are a thing.
Anyway, I'm rambling.
My point is, are we just cats?
Are you staring out into the universe
looking right out at something
that we will never actually be able to comprehend
no matter how hard we try?
That's my kind of question, Matt.
That's like, I was looking at my cat today and I realized that maybe we know nothing. Well, I do think that we know more than of question, Matt. And I was like, I was looking at my cat today,
and I realized that maybe we know nothing.
Well, I do think that we know more than your cat, Matt.
No disrespect to your cat, but, you know,
this is a matter of degrees of gray, I think.
The great thing about humans is that we can collaborate
and not just, you know and not just in simple, straightforward
ways, like me saying to Matt, Matt, if we work together to pick up this log, we can pick
it up, but neither of us can pick it up alone, but also collaborating across space and time,
being able to collaborate, for instance, with Socrates.
That's a huge, or like being able to know the laws of Hammurabi.
It's a huge advantage that no other species enjoys.
And that does make us special.
And I don't think that we are just cats.
But I do think that we are looking out at the universe
and seeing it through very limited eyes, of course, and also seeing it in
a kind of human-centric way.
And that seems to me inevitable and not particularly tragic or horrifying or anything.
It's just part of being a person is that you're sort of stuck inside of personness.
Yeah, it's often very jarring to me when I realize that the way that I've been understanding myself and my place in the universe and my relationship with the people is much more
influenced by my culture and by just sort of the lizard brain ways that we operate and
see the world than it is on my constructed and beautiful psyche
and whatever my ego is,
whatever the thing that I think I am,
turns out to be a lot simpler
than the thing that I actually am sometimes.
But we are also pretty cool.
I mean, I don't know what we're missing,
but we figured out a lot, and we continue to figure out stuff. We have been like, I don't know what we're missing,
but we figured out a lot and we continue to figure out stuff. And I feel like that path is going to continue
getting developed for a long, long time
and we will not stop learning things.
And in a way, our sort of like looking at it,
the universe is maybe a little bit of like looking at it, the universe is, you know, maybe a little bit like,
like cats looking at food and not thinking
about where the food came from.
But really the complicated things,
the really difficult problems aren't the universe.
They're all going on in our own brains
and in the interactions between brains.
And that's where all the cool stuff is
and also where all of the mystery is in a lot of ways.
Hey, do you ever think about the fact that your brain
is made of meat?
Like, your brain is edible.
Everything, all of your hopes and dreams,
I could eat them.
You, well, you could eat the thing
in which the hopes and dreams,
the platform in which they exist,
but you couldn't eat them themselves.
They would cease existing before they got into your mouth.
I think our culture around zombies and stuff really boils down to that.
Our contemporary obsession with zombies is about two things.
First, the feeling that we may in fact not be running the show in quite the way that we
think we are, that we may not be in control of our own thoughts and desires in quite the same way that we think we are.
And then second, that our ourselves or what we think of as the self, which is located
in the brain, is edible.
Yeah, I mean, that is, each your brains, the eating of brains is definitely a, definitely
comes from there in a lot of ways.
Comes from the place of realizing that our, the meat that contains ourselves is just meat.
God, this is a funny podcast.
Let's have another question.
It's a really funny podcast.
I know.
I'll give you another question, John.
I really liked this one and I want to talk about it.
You won't maybe have much to say,
but I'm interested to see what you do say.
Owen asks, dear Hank and John,
this might be a mostly Hank question.
If my body temperature is about 96 degrees,
then why does 96 degree weather feel so hot?
Why doesn't it feel neutral?
I hope that makes sense.
Well, first off, oh, and I am concerned because your body
temperature is unusually low. It should be at least 97.5 degrees.
And the fact that it is 96 degrees has me worried.
All right. Now that we've gotten through the insufferable pebb and
sufferable petted entry
What's your actual answer? No, I'm not being pedantic. I am as a hypokondriac genuinely concerned
I cannot tell you how many times I have taken my own temperature and found it to be between 96 and 97 degrees and called my physician
I am hypothermic at me that is not a joke. Oh, okay.
Anything else for Owen?
Um, again, I really think that that's worth checking out.
Okay, but anything else, any actual answer to the question,
assuming that Owen means that Owen's body temperature
is 98.6 degrees.
Ah.
No, I can't get past my concern. Ah!
That's not true, John.
You can't get past your concern.
You just don't want to because you don't want to admit
that you don't know the answer because I'm smarter than you.
No, we're just different kinds of smart.
All right.
My mom's been telling me that my whole life. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Oh man, so John, let's start out by saying, is there any situation you could imagine being in
and something that was, you know, maybe say like 90 degrees,
but it doesn't feel hot to you.
Well, yes, of course.
What's that?
90 degree water.
Correct.
So what's the difference between water and air?
Well, there are a number of differences.
What is the...
You pedantic...
What?
What?
In this case, what do you think might be the difference
that causes that difference to be...
Oh my God, I'm being reminded of how much
I f*** hated middle school science
because it was full of rhetorical questions
asked by a know-it-all teacher who was like,
and what do you think?
And I'm just like, you know the answer, just tell me.
So I were gonna have to bleep a bunch of that
because I got really genuinely angry at Hank.
Well, I like walking through the process of figuring it out.
What is different between water and air?
A number of things.
But I bet that the inside of my body has a ton of water in it,
whereas the inside of my body has relatively ton of water in it, whereas the inside
of my body has relatively little air.
Yeah, that's kind of the thing.
There's far more water in water than there is air and air.
There's a massively large amount of molecules in water compared to the number of molecules in air.
So when you're in the air, your body is always, no matter where you are, your body is always
trying to cool itself off because the existence of a human being in the world requires the consumption of energy and the consumption of energy always produces some heat.
And that heat continues to raise your body,
and if you didn't have any way to cool down,
you would overheat and die.
And that is why, and the body has been designed
to operate optimally in 70 degree air,
because actually, because that's sort of the average
temperature of the earth.
But as we have anything to say about it, we are going to get that number up.
People are always like, oh, human beings, like we don't reach for the stars, but we are
reaching for the stars by destroying the atmosphere and raising the temperature of the planet. We are literally getting closer to the stars.
What?
Didn't make any sense to me, but I'll let it be.
But am I wrong that if we just thin out the atmosphere just a little bit that will be closer
to the stars?
Well, we're not thinning out the atmosphere at all on, we're making it thicker, that's the problem. Two, no, it wouldn't make be closer to the stars. Well, we're not thinning out the atmosphere at all and we're making it thicker, that's the problem.
Two, no, it wouldn't make us closer to the stars.
We're getting further from the stars.
Oh, we're...
Ha ha ha ha ha.
I'm not an astronomer, I'm just reaching
for a metaphor here.
So, your body...
So the answer is that there isn't that,
we're always trying to cool ourselves off
because we produce heat and there isn't that, we're always trying to cool ourselves off because we produce heat, and there isn't that much air in air.
Yeah.
So you're always trying to cool off, and so you need molecules to touch you that are
colder than you are, so that you can dump your heat into those molecules.
That's why when it's windy, there are actually more molecules hitting you, and also the sort
of layer of molecules that have already sucked
your heat out, blown away, and are replaced by new molecules that are more of the original
temperature, which is why fans work.
But if you're in water, there's just so many more molecules that it's much easier for
your heat to disperse to them.
So if you get in water that's 98.6 degrees, it basically feels like nothing is touching
you at all, which is fascinating. Thanks for the question Owen. Sorry that John hated it so much.
I liked the question Owen. I'm not, I'm, I didn't like Hank's answer. I wanted to work through it.
My issue is, I like it when it's a story. My issue is not with Owen. My issue is with that like,
the like rhetorical,
know-it-all approach to answering questions.
Like, when we are discussing poetry,
do I ever say, like, Hank, what is the rhythm of your heart
and start from there?
No, I just, like, well, from my perspective,
I think this is important.
So I apologize for continuing to talk about it,
but from my perspective, I like to think about how people figured this out in the first place or how I might
figure it out without having someone tell it to me. And so when I was asked that question
from Owen, I didn't know the answer to that question, but I did know that getting in 90
degree water feels cool. So starting from that, I wanted to figure out like what is it about
90 degree water that makes it cool, that might make me give me insight
into why 90 degree air seems hot.
Uh-huh.
I still feel like a middle school student,
which is the way I like feeling least in the whole world.
That I can understand that completely.
Let's move on to a new question.
This question is from Daniel who asks,
Dear John and Hank, is there a way to enjoy slow books?
In other words, books that have a droning
and otherwise uninteresting tone?
I'd love to read Lord of the Rings,
but I've heard that it's very slow and easy
to lose focus while reading it.
That question took an unexpected turn for me, Hank,
because when I think of slow books,
I think of this wonderful book
that I read in college called Islamization and Native Religion in the Golden Horde, which
is about how the Uzbek people came to identify as Muslims, and it's about 800 pages long,
and it's definitely got some slow parts. It's got some really enjoyable footnotes, but it's
a dry read, and it took tremendous focus for me to read it,
and yet it's still one of the most important books
I've ever read, like I think about it all the time.
Word of the rings on the other hand,
I found to be a pretty rip-roaring kind of read,
but I think that,
I think maybe this speaks to something
that's changed in the culture in the last 15 years
and changed about the
Kind of attentiveness that that humans specialize in
having kind of been altered by the internet
Yeah, I or or just by the
Constant availability of things to enjoy more than more than the internet itself right right by the constant availability of things to enjoy, more than the internet itself.
Right, right, by scrolling, the idea of scrolling, being able to permanently scroll
through entertainment. Yeah, I think that it is important to be able to take
some steps back from the consumption of media
and to be inside of your own brain for a while.
And maybe if that is something that you are interested
in doing, it might make slower experiences more enjoyable.
I love to read a lot, but it took me a long time
to get to there.
And I think that I that there's an amount of just letting it be and saying, okay, well, this is what
I'm going to do for the next hour.
And if you read in your mind wanders, then that's okay.
Let your mind wander.
And when you notice that your mind has wandered, bring it back.
And if it takes you an hour to read a chapter, or if it takes, I don't know how long a chapter of the Lord of the Rings is anymore, but if it takes you, what you
would consider to be too long to be enjoying this thing, but remember that you also spent
time with your mind wandering, with your mind doing things and working out problems and
considering what happened to it today.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
Yeah, I mean, I completely agree with you.
I don't think reading is something that you are born
knowing how to do, obviously.
And it's not something that you,
it's something that gets better with practice
and gets much worse without practice.
I've found that in my own life.
Like since Henry and Alice were born,
I spend the last time reading than I used to.
And as a result, my reading has gotten worse.
My reading comprehension is worse. My reading comprehension is worse.
My reading speed is worse.
I read fewer books per year, and I think I read them less well,
less generously than I used to.
And, but I don't think that's just because I have kids now.
I also think it's because I spend too much time passively
ingesting media, and then the active work of reading
feels much harder for me than it used to.
So that's something I think a lot about and I do, it does concern me. I love the internet and
I appreciate the enjoyment that distraction culture provides me, but I do worry a little bit about the
fact that I feel like overall I kind of lead a less engaged life than I used to.
And reading is one strong place where I see that.
I like our answer.
I have a question from Maddie that I think is important, but it's going to be no fun.
Maddie asks, dear Hank and John, my younger sister recently graduated from college with
a degree in marketing and PR.
She elected not to go to grad school right away.
And instead, wanted to work for a year
and decide whether she wanted to get a master's degree.
However, instead of looking for a job,
she got involved in a pyramid scheme.
She talks passionately about it to everyone
who will listen and manage to convince most of the people
she knows to spend lots of money
and buy into the program.
Her degree combined with her personality
makes her a great salesperson.
She's spending a lot of money every month on the program
and is spending more and more time trying
to build her business instead of looking for a job.
Do you have any advice on how I can talk to her
without upsetting her and making her understand
that her decision to stay in that business
might not be the best one for her?
I really hate pyramid schemes.
So I wanted to answer this question.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know what to say.
I think that it's extremely difficult when you are
inside of a pyramid scheme a lot of times to understand that you are inside of a pyramid scheme.
There's also something of a fine line between a pyramid scheme and direct sales programs, right?
Like, I guess, maybe we should start off by defining
what a pyramid scheme is. So here it is in its basic form. I say to my brother Hank, Hank, if you
give me $10, I will teach you how to get people to give you $10.
And then Hank goes forth with that knowledge.
And then also if you could just send me one of the dollars that you make every time you
get someone, you teach someone how to make $10.
And then Hank teaches two people how to make $10.
Well, I have now made $12 just by teaching Hank how to make $10.
And then, but if more people convinced more people how to make $10,
I will make much more than $12 because I am at the top of the pyramid.
The people at the bottom of the pyramid, which will be a progressively larger number
of people, will eventually find that they are unable to find people to teach how to make $10. But a lot of times pyramid schemes
or pyramid shaped businesses aren't just about
like that basic fraud,
they may be about selling something,
selling some physical good, you know?
Health bars.
And that's where it gets complicated.
You often find that the physical good that's being involved in the pyramid scheme is basically
just sort of there as a way to make it seem more legitimate, and so it will be ridiculously
overpriced in some way.
And really it's about, you know, people trying to get other people to give them money, because
there's this dream of getting rich.
And that is why they are often called
get rich, quick schemes.
They're also called multi-level marketing schemes
because the idea is that you're marketing
at all these multiple levels and sort of sending money up.
And if the sooner you can get in on the game,
the better it is for you.
It's very difficult to,
like these things are designed in really clever ways.
And it can often be something that,
like it's almost like something you should imagine
as like it's something that happened to a person,
like getting hit by a car,
that it's very difficult to control,
and then it makes them sort of like,
you know, more difficult to deal with for a while
because they are, that was a bad example.
Yeah, it's more like buying into a cult
than it is like getting hit by a car.
I can't think of a single way in which it's like
it's like a hit by a car.
Yeah, what I'm trying to say,
it's a little like something that just,
that happens to a person and it's very difficult
to have it unhappened to them.
And especially because once they get involved and they start recruiting friends and family,
they have to admit to themselves that they have gotten their friends and family involved
in this thing that is in fact, you know, very bad for them.
And like admitting that, especially when you've got all of this psychological cool hookiness
that these schemes use to convince people that they are, in fact, a legitimate business enterprise,
admitting that becomes very difficult and it tends to come in the form of eventual failure
when you no longer are making money from the scheme.
And then embarrassment in shame, which comes along with having previously alienated yourselves
from all of your loved ones who you tried to get involved with the scheme and either got annoyed
with you or bought in but then failed sooner than they did because it tends to fail upward. So it fails from the bottom up.
And that is just a terrible thing to have happen.
But because of the psychological hooks of the multi-level marketing scheme,
it's like arguing with people about it tends to make them get even more obsessed
and interested in it and sort of believe in it, especially once
they've bought in enough that they're spending a lot of their own money and they don't
want to admit they've made a mistake.
And also they've gotten their friends and family involved and they don't want to admit
to themselves that they've done a bad thing to their friends and family.
As a sister, like basically what you can do is to be supportive in a difficult time.
Like that's kind of what this is.
It's a difficult time and just because they haven't realized it's a difficult time. Like that's kind of what this is. It's a difficult time.
And just because they haven't realized
it's a difficult time doesn't mean that it isn't.
And then it will in the future be a much more difficult time
as they come to realize the difficulty
and sort of like that they've spent a lot of their time
and energy on something that was a bad use
of their time and energy and money. Yeah, I mean, I think in general, you know, there's lots of situations in life where you have to
love people who are making mistakes. I mean, you also have to accept, of course, that you might be
wrong, that this might be a completely legitimate business enterprise. It probably isn't, but it is in her mind.
And so you just have to lovingly not support someone, which is very difficult to do.
But I think it's, when it's going to be really important, is when it all falls apart for
her to know that you still love her. And anything that can kind of decrease the shame spiral
decreases the power of not just pyramid schemes,
but lots of different things that prey on human psychology
and human emotion.
So I think loving someone and not judging them
is incredibly powerful.
I agree, John.
OK, we have another question.
This one is from Brenna, who writes, dear John and Hank, so my roommate and I just moved
into an on-campus apartment, and we are cooking dinner
for ourselves for the first time.
My question is, at what point in adulthood do you get
over the fear of giving your dinner guests salmonella?
Not there yet.
Yep, I'm not there.
I do not know.
Um, you definitely passed 38.
That's all we can say for sure, Brenna.
I can't say it to the future.
But I worry, I mean, I spend a lot of time
cleaning cooking surfaces and trying to make sure
that no raw food has been touched in any way
without extensive hand washing.
Yeah, I think that the number one way
to get over this fear
is to work in a commercial kitchen,
either at a restaurant, probably is the most likely
circumstance that you would be doing that.
And then you would know a great deal
and you would have a lot of experience
with not giving people salmonella.
And but without that.
Well, but also having worked at a restaurant hank,
I can tell you that you don't always learn how to not give
people a seminar.
You got to make the mistake.
Go ahead.
Unfortunately, I don't mean to crush all your dreams,
but you should worry when you go out to eat.
You should make sure that that hamburger is well and truly cooked. I had, I had norovirus a few years ago, this 24 hour vomiting and diarrheal illness that
we were talking earlier about how my wedding day, I don't remember it as a particularly
important day in my marriage. I do remember my day with Norovirus as a particularly interesting and important day in my marriage.
Because- Me too, actually.
Yeah, no, there is- you don't know true love until you've suffered through Norovirus with your partner.
And, you know, looking back on that day, I often think like, am I overreacting about food safety?
And then I think, no, no, I'm not.
I, it was an amazing day for me, my norovirus day,
because I was just laying in bed.
And then I, and then I burped.
And then I was like,
Kevin, I don't feel well.
And then I sat up in bed and then I exploded.
And she handled it just so well.
Yeah.
Like I got out of the bathroom a half an hour later
and the room was for the most part cleaned up.
And I was just like, wow, you just frickin did that.
You were like, okay, time to take care of stuff.
It's done, yeah, wow, I was super impressed.
And yeah, hadn't gotten that chance
to really see what she was made of until then.
I remember that I ate a bowl of chili.
Wonderful.
Oh, God, I'm cooked chili.
I'd had whole food sushi for lunch.
And then I had a wonderful bowl of chili.
And I was just going downstairs to I had a wonderful bowl of chili. And I was just going downstairs
to get my standard second bowl of chili.
Um, which I've never in my life eaten
just one bowl of chili.
What's the point?
And so I was going downstairs
to eat my standard second bowl of chili.
And I thought to myself,
you know, there's something a little weird
in my stomach right now.
And maybe, just maybe,
I should hold off on this second bowl of chili.
And then I thought, nah, I'm fine, I'm probably fine.
And I ate about five bites of my second bowl of chili,
and then I was like, I am going to throw up,
and not like, eventually, but like, in the next 10 seconds.
Yeah.
I didn't even get that much forwarding.
It was literally the day after Thanksgiving.
So I had done the thing where you eat all of the Thanksgiving.
Leftovers.
Oh God.
So I was just full to the top with cranberry juice and stuff.
Potatoes.
Yeah.
No, I remember the whole food sushi. seaweed from the whole food sushi like at the end
You know at the bottom after everything after all the chili
Oh, man John this episode needs a trigger warning. Oh came back up in order. It was brutal
Oh, man, thank God we finally found something funny in this stupid humor podcast.
Oh, neurovirus.
Anyway, neurovirus is not caused by contaminated food usually.
So it's caused by eating someone else's poop.
Or puke.
Or...
That's right.
Usually poop though.
So if it makes it feel bad to think that like,
oh god, I definitely ate someone's poop.
There's a chance that you ate someone's poop.
Yeah, I mean, one of the things that really gets to me
about being a person who, you know,
like has this mind and ostensibly this soul
but is stuck inside of a physical body is that I,
I mean, like how many people's poop have I eaten?
Hundreds? Thousands?
Seriously, that's not a rhetorical question.
You told me how many bacteria there are in my body
a few episodes ago.
I'm asking you now how many people's poop have I eaten?
I mean, a lot, right?
Like more than five.
Probably, probably over a hundred. A bunch of strangers. I. Probably, probably, probably over a hundred.
A bunch of strangers.
I would say, I will definitely over a hundred.
I mean, most, I'm sure that the vast majority of times
you eat someone's poop,
there's no negative consequence at all.
And you probably eat your own poop every single day.
Just cross contamination is too common.
You know, the other thing I was thinking recently, Hank,
is I was kayaking in the White River.
The White River is a beautiful river in Indianapolis. but when it rains more than a quarter of an inch in the city,
they just directly dump all of the poop in the sewers into the river.
And that's not an exaggeration. That is a fact. It happens maybe like 50 or 60 times a year.
And I was kayaking and I was going up something of a rapid and a large
amount of water entered my mouth.
Like probably I would say between three and six drops of water entered my mouth simultaneously
and I obviously I tried to spit it out as much as possible.
But I mean there could be hundreds of people's poop just in those three drops of water.
Oh, almost certainly there was.
What I'm saying is that like, if you, like me,
have a fear of contamination, it's not irrational.
Like, it's not one of the things that really bothers me
about people.
Well, it's a little bit irrational and that it's unavoidable.
And that it is usually fine.
Well, no, but the fact is I am contaminated.
So it is incorrect for, like, for instance, a psychotherapist to tell me that my fear of
contamination is irrational.
When, in fact, I am constantly contaminated with hundreds of other people's stuff.
Oh, well, it's not the fear.
I'm saying that your, your, the reality that you are contaminated is absolutely true.
Oh, God.
The fear of it is what is irrational.
Let's move on to the last question.
Oh no, no, we have to, we have to let everyone know that this episode of Hank, dear Hank
and John is sponsored by other people's poop.
Other people's poop?
It's everywhere and you eat it.
Oh God, this episode of Dear Hank and John
is also sponsored by your wedding.
Your wedding.
Yeah. T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T- company. The Hankenjohn magical lip balm company $14 lip balm, but boy is it good.
Send it our way and we'll teach you how to sell other people magical lip balm.
And of course this episode of Dear Hankenjohn is brought to you by middle school science teachers,
middle school science teachers knowing it all since the beginning of time.
Okay Hankenk, we have time for one last question before we get to the news from Mars and
AFC Wimbledon.
It's a vitally important question.
It comes from Sarah who writes, dear John and Hank, is honesty really always the best
policy?
Or are there some situations in which discretion is best for everyone?
Sarah, this is such an important question because I can't tell you how much I wish I could
go back in time to the time before Hank told me that most of the cells in my body are not
mine.
It's impossible for me to express the blissful ignorance that I enjoyed for the first 38
years of my life assuming that most of me was in fact me and not microorganisms.
So yes, honesty is not always the best policy.
Discretion is often the best.
Yeah, I agree.
I do enjoy being honest when others think that it is not a good idea.
I also enjoy that when other people do it.
And I think that it can cut to the chase a lot,
especially in business,
and when there's a lot of posturing going on,
or in other circumstances where there might be
a lot of posturing going on,
but I think in normal every day.
Well, Sarah's question to be fair is about affection,
you know, like a romantic interest.
It was, she did not originally intend it to be a question
about the human bio.
But at this point, I can't read any other question,
I can't read any question in a different context.
But yeah, I think in the world of affection,
it's often quite useful to get to honesty quickly,
but of course there is a real and undeniable risk of loss.
Yeah, especially if you know that that person is already in a relationship or that they
are definitely not interested in you or any of the other, you know, if they are interested in people of a different gender than you are, then, you know,
that is a, it's often like, you know,
my suggestion is not like, oh, don't be honest,
but yeah, don't be honest, but also,
figure out a way to not be so affectionate toward them.
I often like to examine people.
What?
I don't agree with this advice, sometimes you should be it depends on the situation. Oh yes I agree. Take
away all of the things I said. You're basically just told Sarah like don't
know, don't tell them, don't tell the person you like that you like that well
maybe tell them. Depends on the situation Sarah. Honestly don't don't take any of
our advice seriously. Do you know how many people's poop I've eaten, Sarah? Hundreds.
Ha ha ha ha.
I was misunderstanding the question.
I apologize.
I didn't, I didn't, yes.
Oh, I am surrounded by a terrible darkness.
Hank, what's the news from Mars?
There are pebbles on Mars, John.
Oh my God, are you serious?
Yeah, but-
Pebbles? In addition to there being pebbles, they
are pebbles of a certain size and coarseness that indicate that not only did they exist
inside of a river, but they existed inside of a river that flowed for miles and miles
and miles and those rocks flowed down with that river for miles over a long period of
time, not over a short period,
not in a mass flood event, but in a circumstance that looked a lot like one we might have here
on Earth.
That is incredibly exciting.
I don't even know what to say.
I'm breathless to know that there are pebbles on Mars that look a little bit like the pebbles
that we have right here on Earth, including in South London, where AFC Wimbledon play almost every Saturday.
Well, Hank, the news from AFC Wimbledon is about as interesting as the news from Mars this week.
AFC Wimbledon last week played Oxford United.
You know, Oxford, that's where they have that fancy college in England.
I've never thought much of the football club that hails from Oxford, but they did beat
AFC Wimbledon one to nothing.
It was a distressing game.
And indeed, you can't help it be a bit worried
by our lack of goal production.
But we're taking on more cam this weekend,
which will be in the past as we listen to the podcast.
So let us hope that we have a glorious victory
to celebrate because I want the narrative
of AFC Wimbledon to be a club on the rise, but then
I would also accept the narrative of AFC Wimbledon to be a club in comfortable stasis.
But the lack of offensive production is a bit worrisome, particularly given how much
talent we have up front with the likes of autobioloc and Fenwa.
So yeah, that's the news from AFC Wimbledon.
What, why do you think, why do you think that is, John, why do you
think that, that the, the, the Wimbledies are having a hard time getting, getting the,
ball in the net? I appreciate you, you're famed interest first off. I just like to say that.
But so I haven't been able to watch a game this year on account of how they, believe it or
not, they don't put forth tier English football on TV in the United States.
But my understanding from fans and from reading everything on the website and from listening
to the games on the radio is that we just don't have a lot of control of the ball in midfield.
So really the game of soccer is a game of think of it as a game of three thirds, right?
You've got your defensive third, you've got the middle third of the pitch, and then you've
got your attacking third.
The ability to get it from the defensive third when you recover possession through the
middle third into the attacking third, that's the entire game.
Like the whole game is actually played in midfield.
So we have good finishes at the ball,
but we just haven't had a ton of luck
getting sustained possession in that attacking third
because it requires traveling through the midfield.
Does that make sense?
It does, it does.
Yeah, so anyway, I'm sure that there are brighter days to come.
I mean, at least I hope so, because this has been one depressing comedy podcast.
Well, it's been a depressing comedy podcast in which we learned what, John?
Well, like we learned that Norah virus can teach you more about your marriage than your
wedding can.
Yeah, we learned that there's something about the number of molecules that hit your body
that controls how well you can cool off, and the cooling off is important,
and that John does not want to be back in middle school in any way at all, ever, at all.
And of course, we learned that the rivers that no longer flow on Mars once made pebbles,
which is sort of beautiful now that I think about it.
This has been Dear Hank and John.
If you would like to send us questions,
you can do so at DearHank and John at gmail.com.
Isn't it just Hank and John at gmail.com?
Oh, you're right, you're right.
Sure, no, it's fine.
You can send it to DearHank and John at gmail.com too,
just we won't read them.
That's not our email address.
This podcast is edited by Nicholas Jenkins.
It is a theme music that you're hearing now is from the remarkable Gunnarova, and as they
say in our hometown, don't forget to be awesome.
you