Dear Hank & John - 3: Pain Demands to be Felt
Episode Date: June 22, 2015In which Hank and John discuss pain, the Istari, eschatology, and the slowness of apocalypses. Thank you to all of the many people sending in questions!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,
the podcast where John and Hank Green
answer your questions, provide dubious advice,
and share with you all of the vital news from Mars
and AFC Wimbledon.
Yeah, welcome.
We're gonna have a good time today.
Are we gonna have a good time today?
I just wanna make sure.
I think we're gonna have a good time,
but as comedy podcasts go, Hank, it might get dark. That's what that's how we like it. Can I start today with a
short poem a very very short poem? That would please me greatly. Can I look up
the short poem that I I gotta I gotta find a short poem real quick Hank. You
forgot about that part? I forgot about that part.
But fortunately, I am a veritable fount of short poems.
Is it Fount or Fount?
You're the writer.
Anyway, this poem is by Mary Oliver
from her wonderful book of thousand mornings.
It's called, I go down to the shore.
I go down to the shore in the morning
and depending on the hour, the waves
are rolling in or moving out and I say, oh, I am miserable. What shall, what should I do?
And the sea says in its lovely voice, excuse me, I have work to do.
Mary Oliver, her poem, I go down to the shore
from her book, A Thousand Mornings.
And it brings us nicely to our first question, Hank,
in this hilarious comedy podcast.
It's from an anonymous listener who lives with chronic back pain
and has been for many years and quote,
I have been told I need to accept it and keep moving forwards.
And I'm sure the people telling me this are right,
but moving past it is difficult because it's not like a linear thing.
Like when my parents got divorced, I could accept it and move on
because there was a linear point that I could move away from.
It happened, it sucked, I can deal with it and put space between it and me
and not have it crush me.
But pain is different, it's part of me. It's stuck with me, probably forever, as there are
a few options for me at this point. You've both struggled with chronic pain, and I was curious
how you have gone this far because it really is awful. It's a great question.
One that I think about a lot, especially when I'm in pain,
the first thing that I would recommend Hank
is reading this book that I don't know if you've read,
but it's my favorite book on the topic of pain.
It's called The Body in Pain by Elaine Scari.
Are you familiar with it?
I am not.
It's like an academic book, and it can be dense at times,
but at the very beginning, she makes this brilliant observation
that completely clarified
all of my thoughts about physical pain, which is that to be in pain yourself is to have certainty,
and to observe or hear about the pain of others is to have doubt, because you can never really
understand what other people's pain looks like or feels like.
Whereas when you are having pain yourself,
it is this absolute undeniable certainty.
I remember hearing, I think it was on a podcast,
probably Radio Lab, about how awful our pain scales are
and how they're not very useful.
When someone goes into the doctor and the doctor says,
you know, tell me you're paying on a scale of one to 10.
Like what people self-report is not helpful at all.
And many people experiencing more pain will
this lower on the scale because they can think
of things that are much more painful
than the thing they're experiencing right now.
What tends to be more helpful, and this was really interesting, was having people say,
what would you give up to get rid of your pain?
Would you get a really bad haircut to get rid of your pain?
Or would you take 10 years off your life to get rid of your pain?
Right.
I actually have a friend who has been studying the sort of not just the human lifespan, but this
new sort of concept of like, can we measure sort of global quality of health, not just
amount of life but quality of life?
And pain is very high and chronic back pain in particular is the sort of thing that they, in their research, look at as something that takes away
a significant amount of livable years.
And it's similar, like one year of living
with chronic back pain in their research,
the way that they measure that is kind of like saying,
like it's sort of like 75% of a healthy year.
And so it's very difficult, I think,
to communicate that to people who have not had that pain.
And I certainly have not had that pain.
And all of my pain has had the potential
of going away someday, and that hope is very powerful.
And when that hope is not there,
whether that's a real lack of hope,
and there really is nothing that can be done,
even with fingers crossed,
like future research,
but, or if that hope is just because
it becomes very difficult to hope
when you are in serious pain. That's very difficult.
Yeah, there's a great David Foster Wallace line that I'm probably going to butcher in
Infinite Jess.
He's talking about psychic pain, but a character points out that no single moment is unbearable.
It's the collection of all past moments combined with the pain of the present moment, combined
with hopelessness about ever being free from this pain in all future moments combined with the pain of the present moment, combined with hopelessness
about ever being free from this pain in all future moments that's so unbearable.
So what I guess I would encourage this person to think about or what I find helpful
is, you know, things like A, talking to not just traditional doctors, but also psychologists and psychiatrists
about pain and pain management and be trying to live in now instead of
catastrophizing and assuming that this pain can never get better. I know that's
incredibly, I mean I know from personal experience that's incredibly, I mean, I know from personal experience, that's incredibly
difficult to do on a minute-by-minute basis. But that's the only way I've ever found
any kind of like piece or relief inside of physical pain.
The other frustrating thing about physical pain is that it defies language, like it's
very difficult to describe pain. I have a theory that one of the reasons we invented
metaphors in the first place
was as a way of dealing with physical pain
because you can't describe it except metaphorically.
It's like an ice pick behind my eye.
It's like being stabbed in my jaw.
It's like, you know, it's always like something.
It always, yeah.
I have some chronic pain in my leg and I, it's like, you know, it's always like something. It always, yeah. I have some chronic pain in my leg,
and it's taken me a long time to be able to describe it,
and what I say now, and what it actually does feel like
is someone is rubbing my muscle with sandpaper.
It's not like the worst possible feeling,
but that's what it feels like.
It's like a hot friction, someone is grabbing
and rubbing the bottom part
of my quadricep with sandpaper.
And to me, it's like, yeah, that's exactly what it feels like.
And people are like, oh, okay, that sounds awful.
There's some communicability in the power of metaphor
when it comes to pain.
But still, I think that ultimately pain does the fire language.
And hopefully, all I can hope for you is that you're
surrounded by people who love you and who understand that your pain is real and please
know that it is real.
You never have to doubt that.
You never have to doubt that what you're experiencing is true.
Yeah, and going to see a psychiatrist or psychologist does not mean that you're going to get your psychological
pain treated.
It means that you are going to find ways to deal with your real pain.
Yep.
You've got to find psychological ways to deal with physical pain when there are no physical
solutions to physical pain.
Oh boy, it's another hilarious start to this comedic podcast.
All right, Hank, let's move on to a question from Olivia, who asks,
Dear John and Hank,
if there was an epic battle between Gandalf and Dumbledore,
who would win and why?
Okay.
I mean,
I've got nothing against Dumbledore.
He's, he's,
this is not a difficult one.
He's coming and he's powerful and he knows a lot of stuff
and he's not afraid to manipulate small children
and use them in ponds in his deadly games to protect.
He's a fantastic headmaster of a boarding school.
Yes, well, I mean, he's more than that.
He's more than that.
He's trying to save the world at least Britain
as far as I can tell.
It's weird how the effects of whatever weirdness
is happening in the Harry Potter world
never reaches past the boundaries of a very small island.
But,
Dumbledore is just a human who has some special powers, and he's been trained in the magical arts.
Gandalf is not, that is not what wizards are in Middle-earth.
Gandalf is a god essentially.
Well, he's more of an angel.
He's an angel, he's more of an angel. He's an angel, he sort of created by God.
He's like a direct creation of Illuvitar,
the God of Middle-Earth.
He made him.
So the question of who would win a epic battle
between Gandalf and Dumbledore, to me,
there's only one answer.
It's obviously Gandalf.
Hank and I agree about this.
But Hank, let me ask you a secondary question that I think is gonna be a little more difficult for you
Yes, yes, if you could either be Gandalf or Dumbledore who would you want to be? Oh
No, I
Don't feel like I have a simple answer to that question. Oh, I do. It's easy. This is not a difficult question
the answer is
Dumbledore. It's easy. This is not a difficult question. The answer is Dumbledore.
It's better to be Dumbledore.
Every day of the week, it's better to be Dumbledore.
For one thing, just life is better.
Life is better for Dumbledore than it is for Gandalf.
For another thing, you're a better company.
He does seem to have a much better time.
And Gandalf smokes.
And I find smoking a despicable, reprehensible habit,
and something that Dumbledore would never take him.
Yeah, Dumbledore just eats candy a lot.
Yeah, exactly.
Would you rather be a guy who can blow very fancy smoke rings
or just a guy who enjoys candy?
But, you know, I think Gandalf has a good time too.
He seems like when things are going okay,
he seems like a jolly guy. You know he like has fun fireworks shows and he hangs out with the
hobbits and does cool stuff people like him. Let me submit that things are rarely going okay over
there. Whereas at Hogwarts things are often fairly good. Well you also have to look at where each
of them is at the end of the story.
And we won't talk anymore about that.
Well, yeah, I guess on that front there is a front runner.
Let's move on Hank.
To a great question.
Oh, I realize I'm asking all the questions.
Yeah, you never let me ask questions.
All right, so Fias says,
Dear Hank and John,
what type of apocalypse would you most like to happen?
No kind, I would prefer a zero kind of apocalypse.
I just don't like what?
Mm.
Why does there have to be an apocalypse?
No, I don't, I want my apocalypse to be
the heat death of the universe,
the inevitable unavoidable moment
when there is no more distribution of energy
unequally throughout space time, which is going to happen,
but it's the longest time it could possibly take.
Well, Hank, you'll be surprised to learn that I am looking
forward to the apocalypse and spend a lot of time thinking about it.
I actually own the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Eschatology,
which is the study of people's thoughts about the end of the world.
And I have a tremendous amount of what's called
Eschatological Anxiety worry about the end of the world.
I'm a big believer in at least human,
the human apocalypse coming in the form of a,
you know, not a bang, but a whimper.
I think there will be a series of sort of like minor bangs
over the period of like maybe the next 5,000 years
and then will be reduced to to maybe 10,000 mating pairs,
and then we'll just kind of fight it out until there's none of us left.
Well, then at 10,000 mating pairs, you really have the opportunity to do the whole thing over again.
But we won't. Why not?
And it's just not like us.
I want to say a couple things.
First, I've never heard the word eschatological, and I like it, and I like that it includes the word
scat. It makes me think of poop, and it makes me think of that wonderful musical genre,
or musical technique. Well, if you looked at the, if you looked at the word
in the dictionary, you would see that it in fact does not contain the word scat. How is it spelled? Is there a Q? Is it ESQUAT?
CH?
S-
S-
That's a logical one.
You didn't make it very, you didn't make it very funny.
Needless to say, Hank did not participate in the script how it's spelling the...
Eschatology is not a hard word to spell.
Well, I've never heard it before.
Well, it is a Christian-specific term and you come from a broader road, just background. So the other thing I want to say is when
I was in college, I wrote a song called Rome didn't fall in a day. Yeah, because everyone
says Rome wasn't built in a day and then everybody looks at everybody looks at America or Rome and says like, you know, like, and sort
of the imagined crash comes like immediate and like in a matter of days or weeks or months.
When really that's not how it works.
Rome took hundreds of years to fall and so did all great empires for the most part.
So I mean, in fact, you could argue that there was something of a Roman Empire
until like World War I.
I mean, it all depends on how you define Romanness
and you could argue that there's a Roman Empire now
seated at the Vatican city that extends, you know,
I mean, beginnings and ends in general
are extremely undramatic. I found this with almost without exception because
everything that seems like it's going to be an event turns out to be a process. Everything
that seems like it's going to be a revelation turns out to be like something that happens
over years. Yes. I think we've got a question from Kathy, this is a very important question. Dear John and Hank, it's hot.
I am too hot.
What are some good ways to cool off?
I have a song about this.
You do, it's called, it's too hot.
Yes, it's called it's too hot.
I have a song about everything, apparently, the- the- the end of the world.
I should write more songs about the end of the world.
I sure do talk about it a lot.
Today's podcast is sponsored by Hank's Songs.
Available now at dftba.com.
Thank you, Hank Songs, for your continuing patronage of our little podcast.
Today's podcast is also brought to you by the Fall of the Roman Empire.
It took not, it wasn't an immediate process. It took many hundreds of years,
and lots and lots of people died.
Thank you, Fall of the Roman Empire, for your support of the world as it is today.
We'd love to thank our sponsor for today's podcast, the Archduke Franz Ferdinand,
whose assassination in 1914 sparked World War I, the event that once and for all ended
any argument over whether there was still a Roman Empire.
Sponsoring this podcast, Gavrilo Princip,, who shot the Archduke Franz Verden and after walking out of a sandwich shop, because he really didn't like the idea of the
Austro-Hengarian Empire.
And we'd also like to thank the Archduke Franz Verden and his idiot uncle, the Emperor
Franz Joseph, who never even really liked his nephew, but still got angry enough about
the assassination to go ahead and start World War I. Thanks for sponsoring our podcast. Emperor Franz Joseph of the now non-existent Austro-Hungarian
Empire. Let's not include this. I'm not sure how much of that is going to end up in the podcast,
but in case it got cut at some point, hey can I just spend 20 minutes going back and forth trying
to prove which of us knew more about the start of World War one
Oh, I know a great deal about the start of World War one. Yeah, so do I that's why it took 20 minutes for us to have the debate
Okay, Hank
If I could go back to the question which is not about the start of World War one
But instead about the fact that it is currently hot outside,
at least in much of the Northern Hemisphere,
what are some good ways to cool off?
You can go and get some ice cubes and put them in your pants.
There you have it, ladies and gentlemen.
Oh, no, hey, I don't think there's a need for a second piece of advice.
That should suffice.
So there you have it, Kathy. Another thing that I used to do, even though I know that that's the only piece of advice, that should suffice. So there you have it, Kathy.
Another thing that I used to do,
even though I know that that's the only piece of advice
we really need to share,
is I used to put my hat in the freezer every night
and I would wake up in the morning and put my hat on.
That's a good idea.
Yeah, that's when I lived in Chicago.
I find that in general,
just having something cold is extremely helpful.
You wouldn't really think it, but just like holding on to a cold thing.
Cools down your whole body quite a lot.
There's a lot of blood vessels in your hand.
Hank, speaking of your knowledge of science, we've got a question from James who writes,
Dear John and Hank, if the universe has no edge, how is it expanding?
Ah, it's a great question.
I have no idea because I do not understand even after it has been explained to me by both
my brother and Neil deGrasse Tyson, how the universe can possibly not have an edge if it
is also expanding.
What is it expanding into?
So take your shirt and stretch it.
Okay.
I've got it. Stretch your shirt. Just so you know Hank, I'm wearing an AFC Wimbledon shirt. I've got it. And stretch your shirt.
Just so you know, Hank, I'm wearing an AFC Wimbledon shirt.
I'm stretching it.
I'm wearing an Andrew Huang shirt.
So you're stretching it.
Oh, well who loves Mars?
Not you.
Ha ha ha.
Stretch it and there's, the fabric doesn't, so like ignoring certain things.
The fabric doesn't expand into anything.
It just expands. It just gets bigger.
Disagre the fabric expands into the air.
Don't think about the air. Just think about the fabric.
If the fabric were all of space time, if the fabric were three-dimensional and four-dimensional,
then it would just be expanding and it wouldn't be
expanding into anything. It would just be getting with more space between it.
Right. Okay. That's a great explanation. I really appreciate it. I still have a couple
of questions. The first thing is that when I expand, when I expand my shirt, I can't
help but notice that my shirt has an edge. I'm holding it right now and
it's most expanded capacity and there does seem to be an edge of it and after the shirt,
there is what I would call air. Well, imagine that, but the fact that there is an edge to the shirt does not affect how the shirt expands.
If you had an infinite piece of shirt and you stretched it, what would happen?
I cannot imagine, first of asking me to imagine an infinite piece of shirt is a big ask.
I was just having this conversation with my five-year-old son, actually, because he said
that he was having an argument at camp over whether infinity was the biggest number or
whether infinity plus one was the biggest number.
And I had to explain to him that first off, not all infinities are of the same size.
And secondly, infinity is not a number. Like infinity is not a very large number.
It's just a countlessness.
Yeah.
And so you're asking me to imagine an infinite shirt, right?
Yes.
All right, I think I have it.
And then stretch the shirt.
I'm stretching it.
So what happened?
Well, first off, I can't notice that even in my mind,
the infinite shirt does have edges,
but I know that that is a weakness of my mind,
because the infinite shirt can't have edges,
because the infinite shirt is not very, very big.
It's infinite, which is different from very, very big.
So I'm trying to train my mind to imagine that.
Okay, now the infinite shirt is stretching.
So two points on that infinite shirt,
just got farther apart.
The two points on that infinite shirt got farther apart.
Quick question, what did that infinite shirt expand into?
I think that the problem is not with the expanding.
I think it is with the infinite.
I think that's the part that we really have a hard time with.
Because it doesn't need to have expanded into anything,
because it was infinite, it can't expand anything.
It can't expand into anything.
It was already as big as it could be.
So what you're saying is that the universe doesn't have
an edge because it's infinite,
and it's able to expand, but there's nothing on the other side of that
expanse because it has no edge.
Kind of. Yeah. Oh man. I mean, there's not, there's not an
expanse to be on the other side of. Oh my god, this is such a funny comedy
podcast. Um, Amy asks, dear Hank and John, why do we have individual fingerprints? What
practical purpose could they possibly have evolved to serve? I know the actual answer to
this question. John, do you want to take a guess? I do want to take a guess, Hank. Thank
you for the opportunity. We evolved individually distinct fingerprints so that every person could grip slightly different
objects well.
That is my guess.
Is that correct?
I mean, no, but I love it.
I love the idea that like, that like there's just over the broad spectrum of humanity.
There's a person that can hold everything perfectly. Like, like no one like this. There's a person that can hold everything perfectly.
No one like this. There's one person who has the perfect fingerprints for the iPhone 6.
There's only one person who has the perfect fingerprint to, like, I don't know, hold a trillium flower.
There's only one person who has the perfect fingerprint to hold the particular club that killed the first mastodon.
Yeah, okay. I love it.
The answer is that fingerprints are there because they help us grip things.
They increase the surface area of our fingers and they do increase the friction between our fingers and surfaces. So they're helpful.
So I was right.
I was right.
You're welcome, Amy.
You can tell that by rubbing your legs.
Thanks for listening.
The tops of your fingers on your desk,
and then rubbing the bottoms of your fingers on your desk,
your fingertips will stick more.
And as for why we evolved to have individual different
fingerprints, every person has different fingerprints,
we didn't evolve to individual different fingerprints. Every person has different fingerprints. We didn't evolve to have different fingerprints.
That is just a weird consequence of how fingerprints
are made when we are in the womb.
And partially, or, or, or, I was right.
One of those two things are the truth.
Hank, if the universe has no edge,
how is it expanding exactly?
Like, what is it expanding into?
This question is from Eric.
Eric says, dear Hank and John, I just got my first job
as a go-kart maintenance person.
I don't know the actual job title,
and I'm feeling the pressure.
With school and friends, I'm having trouble balancing it all.
How did you manage to transition into the workforce
from your first jobs?
First off, Eric, let me just say that
as first jobs go, go-cart maintenance person is amazing.
It's pretty cool.
You're learning about people
because you've got to work with customers,
but you're also learning about engineering
and you're also probably learning about co-workers
and managers.
It's like, to me, it's like the perfect first job.
Also, I am a massive go-kart enthusiast.
Tanks you know about my go-kart enthusiasm.
It's an extension of my love for race cars.
Yeah, yeah, a little bit.
Yeah, I love go-karts.
They're amazing.
I don't know, what was your first job, Hank?
I don't remember.
Walmart.
Oh, right, Walmart.
Yeah, you did the carts.
Yeah, I did the carts among other things.
I did find it difficult to manage my social life
and my academic obligations alongside my early jobs.
I worked at a warehouse and then I worked at stake
and shake and a couple of other restaurants.
I think the key for me was understanding that my job
in some ways had to come last.
Like I needed to be there when I needed to be there
and I needed to pay attention and do a reasonably good job.
But in terms of my emotional energy,
that needed to go toward my friends and my family
and my academic.
I actually, luckily enough, worked with a lot of my friends
at Walmart.
So there was a bit of a social component to it.
And in fact, that is why I worked at that Walmart.
There was a closer Walmart to my house
that I chose not to work out,
because I didn't know anyone who worked there.
And I think that a lot of people have
good social experiences at work.
And I don't know if that is an option open to you
at your go-kart place,
but it might be worth exploring.
And yeah, I mean...
I'll tell you what, from my steak and shake experience, sometimes it is not worth exploring.
Because as you know Hank, my main coworker, he murdered someone and now he's in prison.
But that's a story for a different podcast.
I have a short poem that is relevant to this.
I can't wait.
You're such a great reader and student of poetry.
I cannot wait to learn what poem is relevant.
It's very relevant. It's by Kenneth Koch.
It's called You Want a Social Life with Friends.
Oh, you only know about this poem because of me!
Probably.
I was introduced to this, I have to say, I was introduced to this poem by Amy Kraus Rosenthal,
and it's on my list for short poems to use in future podcasts, but go ahead, use it now, Hank.
I know about this poem because Alan Westofka did a kinetic typography video to it.
It is called You Want A Social Life with Friends by Kenneth Koch.
You want a social life with friends, a passionate love life, and as well to work hard every day.
What's true is that of these three you may have two, and two may pay you dividends, but
never may have three.
Yeah, I'm afraid that might be true.
I mean, it's definitely difficult
to balance all of the things.
And there are other things to balance too,
like there's your personal health,
which becomes a bigger deal as you get older,
like maintaining that.
And there's family obligations
and making sure that you take care of the people
who have taken care of you.
And there's lots of, lots of ballots.
There's also Game of Thrones, which is on every Sunday.
And if you miss it even by like two hours,
Twitter spoils it for you.
So there's a lot to manage in this life.
And it's not easy, but I would just encourage you
to always try to watch the shows that you love live
because otherwise, people will ruin them for you.
Sorry, what are we talking about?
Ha ha ha ha ha.
Time management is hard.
Hank, do you ever pause to consider the fact
that our father worked on fishing boats in Alaska?
And like,
It is difficult to perceive,
to like see that in my mind's eye, yes.
And he like mused dogs in Alaska
and he hiked most of the Appalachian trail
and he like froze camping in the Grand Canyon
and look at us, just a couple of guys
sitting in comfortable chairs.
It was a very nice chair.
Actually my dad bought this chair for me.
He took me to the office store
and he was like, you're getting a real chair. Dude, you know what's funny about that? Mom bought my chair for me. He took me to the to the office store and he was like you're getting a real chair.
Dude, you know what's funny about that? Mom bought my chair for me. She even paid for it.
It was my 27th birthday present, this lazy boy that I'm sitting in right now.
It may have been my 27th birthday present. Oh man. We didn't know that 27 was chair birthday.
All you 27 year olds out there, make sure to ask your parents for a very special birthday
gift, chair.
Chair is very important to your happiness.
Okay, Hank, one more question before we get to the news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon, the
most important portion of the podcast.
This is from a 12 year old harem, hypothetically,
how much would it cost to move AFC Wimbledon,
the greatest football club in the history of the world,
to Mars, a cold dead rock in the vacuum of space, for a day.
How much would it cost, Hank, to move AFC Wimbledon to Mars for a day?
And I'm going to go ahead, I'm going to give you, I'm going to, I'm going to help you out with some numbers, okay?
Oh wow.
We're not going to move AFC Wimbledon's stadium, that's unreasonable.
And we're not going to move anything, we're not going to move anything more than is absolutely necessary for AFC Wimbledon to play a match on Mars, right?
So that is a goal, a 11 players, including autobiocconfenwa, and the manager, Neil Ardley,
along with all the clothes and the cleats necessary to play soccer on Mars. Those are your requirements, Hank,
how much would it cost to move AFC
Wimbledon to Mars for one day? How many players are there on AFC Wimbledon? Well, I think
we're going to go ahead and not bring any substitutes. And so just the 11 starters.
11. Yeah. A goalkeeper in 10 outfield players. Have you just never watched a soccer game in
your entire life?
So how are they gonna how are they gonna play a gamer? They can they play like like five on five or something? No, they're gonna play against a team that
That lives on Mars. Yeah, they're gonna play against a team that is currently on Mars. Okay
And there they can they only go for a day or can they stay for a while?
Is it cheaper to stay?
Yes.
Can you briefly explain to me why it is cheaper to stay on Mars than it is to just come and go?
Because you have to sort of launch at the time when Earth is closest.
And so when we launch the Earth mission, it will be at a time when Earth is closest to Mars.
And by the time they get there, Earth will be far away from Mars.
So you have to wait for Earth to get close again.
Wow.
All right, so we will amend her Reams question.
AFC Wimbledon will be taking a, how long, how long, what kind of, what kind of Mars?
I don't, I don't know.
Like probably a year.
By year?
By year?
Probably months.
Months? Hank, AFC Wimbledon has a game
every single Saturday.
We can't take months away.
What will happen to our position in League 2
with autobioweck and Fenwa on Mars
instead of playing in England?
Sorry, I'm getting upset.
I sometimes stutter when I'm upset.
I bet we could get sort of the cost down to like one and a half billion per person.
Million or billion.
But I find that question funny.
It's billion with a B.
Billion with a B per person? It's a long trip.
You think the cost of moving AFC Wimbledon to Mars would be 1.5 billion dollars per person
times 11 is...
God, I'm so bad at math.
What is it?
16...
We're at work at...
16.5 billion dollars is your proposal for getting AFC Wimbledon to Mars.
Does that include the...
I don't know, that seems low to me.
Now that I've said it out loud.
Well, I also, I forgot Neil, I forgot Neil Ardley,
the manager, so that's 18 billion.
Yes.
Okay, if any of our listeners have more precise information
on how much it would cost to get AFC Wimbledon to Mars.
Go ahead and send us emails with your calculations at Hank and John at gmail.com.
That's also where you can email us your questions.
Thank you to Hareem and everybody who asked a question today.
Hank, it's time for the news from Mars.
What's going on in Mars these days?
Geologists have discovered glass on Mars, which is not in itself super surprising
because glasses formed here on Earth
when meteorites impact the Earth.
So it was likely that glass would be
around on Mars.
The news, however, is though that they are able to,
for the first time, detect where there's a lot of glass
on the surface of Mars
from orbit using some spectroscopy techniques that are brand new.
And the cool thing about that potentially is that here on Earth, when glass is formed
by natural events, you can actually, it actually captures some of the atmosphere in the glass, and so you can look inside the glass and see
what the atmosphere was like when that glass formed on earth, which gives us a little bit of insight
into the history of our planet, and that will also, potentially, give us insight into the history of
Mars, which is great, because a lot of the ways that we here on Earth figure out what the world was like a long
time ago might not work as well on Mars, but this should work just fine and could potentially
tell us if one day in the distant past Mars had life on it.
Hank, quick question.
You're saying that glass contains the history of the atmosphere from when it was made?
Yeah, like traps little bubbles of air.
I mean, I like to make fun of your Mars news, but that is actually pretty awesome news.
Dang it!
I never know what you're gonna be excited about. I really don't. That's fascinating. Well,
I think that my favorite thing about it is that, unlike most of your Mars news,
it actually is happening on Mars.
So then the news from AFC Wimbledon this week.
Hank, as you know, AFC Wimbledon is a club that was formed by a group of fans after
Wimbledon FC departed for the town that shall not be named in the greatest scandal in the history
of English football.
It's a fan-owned club, a fan-controlled club, but it's also a very charity-oriented club.
They have a great foundation, the AFC Wimbledon Foundation, and they also partner frequently with an organization called War Child, which is an organization
that works with children who are refugees from war or living in places of conflict, a great
organization based in the UK.
And right now, if you Google AFC Wimbledon earphones or AFC Wimbledon, yeah, just Google AFC Wimbledon earphones, or AFC Wimbledon earphones, you can get these amazing
AFC Wimbledon earphones that I'm actually using to talk to you right now, Hank.
They've got a great mic on them, and the sound quality is excellent.
And the money raised is split between a war child the AFC Wimbledon Foundation. I mentioned this in no small part Hank because
You are not currently using earphones with a mic on them and it makes podcasting unnecessarily difficult
So I have bought you a pair and I've also bought a pair for everybody who asked a question that was used on today's podcast
But they're really great. I genuinely great earphones, and they
got the little AFC Wimbledon logo on them, which is cool too, but it's a great way to
support charity.
So, AFC Wimbledon launched that this week, and I wanted to let you know about it, and the
history of that, and everything else will apparently be trapped inside of my window.
So, that's cool. Just probably a lot less air trapped inside of your window then and naturally formed glass
that is formed in pretty chaotic circumstances, not so much like the way that your window
glass is formed.
You're really harsh on my buzz here, Hank.
Sorry about that.
You can. That's kind of the Hank Green story, though.
I have some, like Hank tells me a little bit about science.
I make some kind of broad, metaphorically resonant conclusion
about it, and then Hank is like, yeah,
but no, not actually.
If you have a question for us again,
please email us at Hank and John at gmail.com,
an email address clearly invented by Hank.
And thanks again for listening to our podcast.
What did we learn today, Hank?
Oh, goodness.
We learned a lot about the history of the beginning of World War I, thanks to our sponsor
for this podcast and the follow the Roman Empire.
Not to mention the fact that we learned the importance
of putting ice cubes in your pants and the fact that we'd rather be dumbledore than Gandalf
at least until book five. No, no. Yeah, yeah, at least until book five.
Thanks for listening. And as we say in our hometown of Nerdfighteria, don't forget to be awesome.
Don't forget to be awesome.
So hard to do when you're doing it.
Don't forget to be awesome.