Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 228: Our First Memories | Ear Biscuits Ep. 228

Episode Date: February 17, 2020

Your first memories might not be what you think they are. Listen to R&L talk about their very first memories and other notable childhood memories in this episode of Ear Biscuits! (02:18) - conversati...ons around the Lost Years episodes (07:03) - welcome to the new EarBiscuiteers (13:53) - Lando's first memory (23:18) - Rhett's first memory (29:51) - Link's first memory (34:25) - Link's second (or potentially first?) memory (37:35) - Rhett's memories from Thousand Oaks (38:29) - Link destroys Rhett's happy memory (sunflower bit) (39:29) - the first time R heard the f-word (40:22) - L's memory on profanity (41:27) - L's memory on a discussion on the female anatomy (42:45) - L's traumatic babysitter memory (50:23) - advice based on science to parents with kids under 7 (52:53) - home videos of R (53:18) - home videos of L (54:56) - R's 360 degree camera and creating photographic memories for his kids (58:07) - R's rec To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:53 Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Link. And I'm Rhett. This week at the round table of dim lighting, we're going to be talking about our first memory. And in general, the nature of first memories. Yes. So yeah, we'll take a trip down all the way to the beginning of memory lane, I guess you would call it.
Starting point is 00:01:13 Let me just say that you listening, and maybe us talking, it isn't unlikely that your first memory didn't even happen. So if you don't wanna be disappointed, I know my first memory happened. There's no doubt. Well, a lot of people think that. It's just, because it's so real to me.
Starting point is 00:01:34 And I've, you know, I had an interesting conversation with my kids about this that led to a practice. A realization? Oh, a practice. A practice that I think can be applied to any, any parent or mentor or if you have influence on a certain type of person. Oh, that sounds sinister. I'll just leave it at that. But you know, we should acknowledge
Starting point is 00:01:59 and I wanna acknowledge the last four weeks and our Lost year series. Now, a full disclosure, we're recording this just a few days before my episode, which is part four, comes out. So as we're recording this, we don't really have the benefit of experiencing the response to my episode.
Starting point is 00:02:23 So I'm still anxiously awaiting that. Everybody hated it. But I do, that's your prediction. But I do think that, but I mean, yours has been out, we've been processing that, we've been talking about it a lot. Lots of people. A lot of you using hashtag your business.
Starting point is 00:02:38 I mean, I think that we've gotten, I think it's very safe to say that we've gotten more engagement and reaction to this series. So far, even without your episode, your episode is only gonna help. Just, there's a conversation that's happening and there's lots of questions, thoughts that are being put out there
Starting point is 00:02:59 and we have every intention to continue the conversation. So I think that, you know, us talking about our spiritual background and where we're at now, and this is now a part of Ear Biscuits in general. And so we're gonna return to that conversation. So it's not just this, hey, we talked about it and we're never talking about it again. So we're gonna, we'll use your questions and comments
Starting point is 00:03:22 kind of as a springboard to get us back into that conversation, but that won't be the end of it either and we can't, I don't know exactly when we're gonna do that. It won't necessarily be next week, but. Yeah, I'll say it'll be sooner versus later. We do want to continue that conversation while so many of you are, we just have to process
Starting point is 00:03:42 my episode and then gather up everything that you've said using hashtag your biscuits, which we've been doing. So there's still time for you to submit questions or your responses. And it's kind of a new experience to have this level of a conversation going on around the show. I mean, the fact that, I think the first reason that we did it was for ourselves.
Starting point is 00:04:09 And even without my episode not being out yet, I can honestly say that it crossed a big threshold in me even just recording it. And I know, so it was very meaningful to just, for us to put this out there for ourselves and just to know that it resonates with so many people and or it conflicts with some people even, you know, and it creates that dialogue and a conversation.
Starting point is 00:04:43 I just think we're honored to have a community of listeners that are, the vast majority, it's cordial, it's loving, it's positive. And I will say, yeah, I definitely, and I tweeted that out as a result of just the initial reaction that I got to my story. The vast majority of people,
Starting point is 00:05:09 regardless of where they're at spiritually, whether that's more similar to what we used to be or more similar to what we are now, everyone has been, mostly everyone has been, mostly everyone has been like really. Civil. Civil and respectful. And kind.
Starting point is 00:05:30 And kind and understanding. And I think that that is, again, we didn't talk about this to create some sort of division. I understand that anytime you talk about religion or politics, you're just stepping right into it, especially just sort of the climate of our country right now. You're asking people to fight. And thankfully, that really hasn't happened.
Starting point is 00:05:52 It happened a little bit, but we just wanna say that this is not about creating an us versus them, an in-group and an out-group kind of thing. We just wanna have a dialogue. We're trying to have an honest dialogue. And thank you for being a part of that. But let's just remember, keep it cordial, keep it curious. And respectful.
Starting point is 00:06:15 Respectful and we'll keep the conversation going. I also thought it was cool that the number of conversations that we're having with like our friends from college, we're now having an ongoing conversation with them about all this because I mean, they shared so many of those experiences with us and like if you listen to our conversation about digital relationships
Starting point is 00:06:40 or conducting friendships over text, that was instrumental in us reconnecting with those friends and now it's a really rewarding conversation that we're having with them over this topic. And there's people coming out of the woodwork who we haven't heard from in years who are saying that they're listening. It turns out being on the Tonight Show doesn't do it.
Starting point is 00:07:05 It's just talking about your background. That's where you get all the phone calls and texts. And you know what? There's also a number of people who, I think their introduction to us has been this series. Well, that's just based on simply looking at the numbers. Yeah, there's people who are listening, I guess, right now that weren't listening five episodes ago.
Starting point is 00:07:29 So welcome, welcome to Ear Biscuits. If your first introduction to this podcast or us was the series, we just wanna say, welcome, welcome to the herd of mythical beasts, that's what we call ourselves. We invite you to stick around and listen to this podcast every week. Or if you wanna watch it, you can watch it on YouTube
Starting point is 00:07:50 the following, what is it, Saturday, Sunday. Well, let's talk a little bit about what the podcast is. I mean, I think it's also just a moment to kinda recognize for all of you who've been listening for a long period of time. I think you've seen an evolution in this show from interviewing YouTubers years ago to doing just a bunch of miscellaneous stuff
Starting point is 00:08:21 to kind of settling into this place where it's just two guys who grew up together, who now work together, who are still best friends, just doing life together and processing it and talking about it. Sometimes it's personal and I think that's how we got to telling our stories is that we had told you so many things about our past and our experience
Starting point is 00:08:43 and the way that we see things. And we had never gotten into that specific sort of giant part of who we were. So it just sort of, there was just a lot of critical mass building towards this, hey, let's just let you guys in on this part of ourselves. But it's really because of the nature of the show. That's what it's become.
Starting point is 00:09:03 It's become a very personal sort of processing podcast. Yeah, I mean, it's a big part of us conducting our friendship, you know, and also like just reporting and processing everything that's going on in our lives. So is this podcast just gonna be about our spiritual perspectives moving forward? No, but it is, I think now that we've unearthed it, that it'll much more readily be a part of the conversation
Starting point is 00:09:36 on any given week, which we were starting to feel that tension that there were certain things that we could speak about but that we weren't quite there yet. So I do think it, the Lost Year series impacts the overall complexion and the, I won't say the tone, but like the subject matters of what we're gonna talk about. But hey, basically, we're just here to hang out
Starting point is 00:10:04 with each other and to hang out with you, so keep doing it and keep coming by. We'll still be here. Sounds like the end of the podcast, is that it? All right, see you next week. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. We haven't even done anything yet. And so sometimes we talk about things
Starting point is 00:10:19 that are just interesting to us, but we usually try to find a personal connection and that's why we're talking about the nature of your earliest memories. Oh and we should also say if you really don't have a point of reference for us, we have five videos a week on a show called Good Mythical Morning and every day there's a Good Mythical More episode,
Starting point is 00:10:37 you can watch that too. Every Saturday we do a vlog where it's, sometimes it's like a video version of Ear Biscuits in terms of a lot of the stories that we'll tell. I think a lot of those we're capturing for our Saturday release on our Rhett and Link channel. So check that out if you haven't checked out our vlogs,
Starting point is 00:11:00 youtube.com slash Rhett and Link. Is that enough of the plugs? Or should we just go full in with, like, ads? We should just go straight to an ad. What was the last thing that filled you with wonder that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic? Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is...
Starting point is 00:11:17 Anime! Hi, I'm Nick Friedman. I'm Lee Alec Murray. And I'm Leah President. And welcome to Crunchroll presents the anime effect It's a weekly news show with the best celebrity guests and hot takes galore So join us every Friday wherever you get your podcasts and watch full video episodes on crunchyroll or on the crunchyroll YouTube channel so I know we're gonna share like and we
Starting point is 00:11:42 We have done this at some point. We talked about everything but I don't know. We probably mentioned what our first memories are but I don't remember what yours is. I don't remember what yours is. I've already forgotten your first memory so that'll be fun to. You should remember your friend's first memories.
Starting point is 00:11:58 I think that they don't mean as much to someone else if they're to remember them as if you as you remembering them yourself. And I don't know, maybe we'll unpack that there's, when we go through the specifics of our memories, that there is more meaning in it than we even realized. And it's funny because the other night I was tucking, I was tucking Lando into bed. He's nine years old.
Starting point is 00:12:24 And that's when we get some good quality time. He has this like hammock seat, hammock chair thing hanging beside his bed. Sometimes I'll sit in that and just dangle and we'll just have a little conversation. That's an odd word to use there. And I don't know what prompted this conversation, but I was like, Lando, what's the first thing you remember?
Starting point is 00:12:48 I was just curious at his age. And we got into talking about that and we landed in a place where I feel like I got a big idea. You Lando'd in a place? I Lando'd on a big idea. So we can get back to what his memory is or whatever, but where do you wanna start? Oh, that's, well, you sounded like
Starting point is 00:13:07 you were gonna tell a story. No, I'm just saying, that's kinda why I wanted to talk about this. You're not gonna disclose his first memory? I can. Well, he's, like I said, he's nine years old, and when we moved to Los Angeles, he was one, you know? So I was like, how long did we stay in that first apartment?
Starting point is 00:13:25 We only stayed there six months. There's no way he remembers that. I'm like, and I was like, Lando, you don't remember living in an apartment in Los Angeles. Right? He was like, no. I was like, yeah, you were in a crib. There's no way you could remember that. And like, I was like, and then our,
Starting point is 00:13:41 we had this house after that where we moved and we stayed there for three years and I started to describe the place. I was like, there was, the driveway was blue. Do you remember that? He was like, no. I was like, there was a hammock in the backyard. Remember that hammock that we got from like,
Starting point is 00:13:59 Cthulhu's was a sponsor and it was like this weird, like self-supporting hammock. He definitely remembers this place. And I was like, do you remember that? And he was like, no. And I like called Lincoln in there. Like, am I crazy? Do you remember this?
Starting point is 00:14:11 I was like, you remember all this. You remember. You mean in Encino? Yeah, in Encino when I lived there. And then I started describing the inside of the house and he was like, hold on. I remember my bunk bed. Cause did we have bunk beds?
Starting point is 00:14:24 I was like, yes. And he was like, and I was on the bottom because I remember I would have to reach up and grab and hang stuff from the slats, but I had to force my hand in there because Lincoln was laying on the mattress. And I was like, there you go. Do you remember our purple couches?
Starting point is 00:14:42 He's like, no. Yeah, he's not gonna remember that. Not gonna remember that. I was like, and then Lincoln came in there and he was like, do you remember that neighbor who you'd go over to his house and play and he had a dog who was deaf? And Landon was like, yeah, I'll call him all the time.
Starting point is 00:14:58 And he would never respond. Because he was deaf. Yeah, he couldn't hear. And it was like, and he had a rabbit. And when they would go out of town, he was like, yeah, we'd go over there and we'd feed the rabbit and they had a trampoline. And that is what we determined is his first memory.
Starting point is 00:15:15 A rabbit on a trampoline? A deaf dog, a rabbit, and a trampoline. Wow. Three totally separate things. Sounds like an adult swim show. Yeah. Yeah, if you combine those three things, you're in for a good time.
Starting point is 00:15:28 Well, it's interesting that the way that you got him to remember that because that's kind of, that's one of the, in one of the articles that I read from psychcentral.com entitled, What's Your Earliest Memory? From August 2018 by Janice Wood. Got a great last name. So there were these guys at Emory University.
Starting point is 00:15:51 Would you like to remember your first memory? Researchers at Emory University. So I'm just gonna quote some of this. Few adults can remember anything that happened to them before the age of three. Now a new study has documented that it's about age seven when our earliest memories begin to fade, a phenomenon known as childhood amnesia.
Starting point is 00:16:12 So you don't, now. So everything up until, everything from four years old to seven years old, you remember and then after seven, you start to lose stuff. I would say three to seven. Because in this other article, and this is very pertinent, because so many people think that they remember things.
Starting point is 00:16:33 Interestingly, my first memory comes from age three. That's early. Which is they say that's about the earliest that you can do it. Let me see, what does it say? Okay. About four out of every 10 people have fabricated their first memory, according to researchers.
Starting point is 00:16:50 This is another article at BBC, the bbc.com called "'Can You Trust Your Earliest Childhood Memories?" But basically, okay. They examined the first memories of 6,641 people and the scientists found that 2,487 of the memories shared, such as sitting in a prom. I don't know, I'm not familiar with English terms. Sitting in a prom?
Starting point is 00:17:17 Yeah, but P-R-A-M. Oh, a pram? A pram. It's like some kind of like. I don't know what that is. Some vehicle or something? A pram is, I think it's like a large, like little carriage to put a child in. Oh, okay, like a carriage.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Oh, you're talking about a bassinet or like a stroller. Yeah, okay, yeah, yeah. So 2,487 memories, which is almost half, were from before the participants had reached the age of two with 14% of participants claiming to remember an event before their first birthday and some even before their own birth. Oh gosh.
Starting point is 00:17:55 But the fact is- People trying to be overachievers. It's like you saying your first memory is when you were 3 because you know that scientifically the earliest you can so you're trying to achieve. These people don't know the science and they're lying too. It basically just says that your brain is not capable, it doesn't have the structures that it needs to form
Starting point is 00:18:17 the kinds of things that you would carry on and you may be like, well, I was special and I remember being, there are people who think they remember being in their mother's womb or they think they remember their own birth and then a lot of people think, in fact, Freud taught this, that you do have all those old memories
Starting point is 00:18:31 but you've suppressed them. Listen, Freud, all he did was grasp at straws and make stuff up, man. But there's a good. By the way, I know nothing about him except, he makes stuff up. Okay, here you go. So young children tend to forget events when reveling.
Starting point is 00:18:48 Now I will say newborns do have memories of being in the womb. They will respond to things on the outside based on what they heard on the inside. Like somehow science does say that. No, no, I'm not saying, but you don't have the ability to retain those memories and bring them into adulthood. She says, this one researcher says,
Starting point is 00:19:14 "'Memories are like orzo,' which is a pasta, referring to the rice grain size pasta, little bits and pieces of neural encoding. Young children's brains are like colanders with large holes trying to retain these little pieces of memory. As the water rushes out, so do many of the grains of orzo. Adults, however, use a fine net
Starting point is 00:19:32 instead of a colander for a screen. Then you get to be our age and that net gets a bunch of holes in it. So basically, but the childhood amnesia thing is the idea that you've got these memories that you remember from about age three, and then once you turn seven, on average, you begin to lose those memories
Starting point is 00:19:54 unless you've got some mechanisms to continue to remember them, right? Yeah. And a lot of times that can be a picture or a video. Yeah, I think a lot of people are just, they're first, they're remembering something they projected on a picture that they've looked at in a photo album for years afterward.
Starting point is 00:20:18 Well, yeah, because a lot of times you're constructing the memory. And if you got a photo from inside of a womb. I've got lots of those. You are a freak. I've got a whole folder. You are a freak. I've got a whole folder. You're a freak. It's just called sonograph. I don't wanna know what it's called.
Starting point is 00:20:30 I don't, oh. Right, is that what it's called? No. When you get, what's a sonogram? What do you get when you go to the- Sonogram. Sonogram? Yeah, that's not what I'm talking about.
Starting point is 00:20:39 I've tried to remember all, I've tried to forget. You're talking about as if a baby took a Polaroid from the inside. That's what they're doing now if a baby took a Polaroid from the inside. That's what they're doing now. You pass in a Polaroid? It's not. And then the baby takes a picture? Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:20:52 Well that's not what happens. And I don't even know how we got on this. It's not very pertinent because it's. People will see a picture from a point in their past and then they will construct a memory around it. That's what happens a lot of times. There's all kinds of ways to implant false memories but I don't wanna go too much more into it
Starting point is 00:21:11 because I wanna talk about what our memories are but essentially if you think you remember something before the age of three, you probably don't. If you think you remember it before the age of two like when you were like one or younger, you definitely don't remember it. And you need to come up with a new memory. And you know what, we still accept you.
Starting point is 00:21:29 You know what, you don't have to remember stuff from way back then for us to love you. I love you. I love you if you don't remember anything, you know? Dang. What's your first memory? I was three. Dang.
Starting point is 00:21:43 What's your first memory? I was three. It was Halloween, which means I had just turned three, which is pretty unusual, but you know, I'm one of those guys. Maybe you had just turned four. No, because it was in Georgia. Okay. I have to talk to my mom, maybe I turned,
Starting point is 00:22:03 but it was in Georgia, and I think I turned four in California when we moved to Thousand Oaks. Maybe I just turned four, but I think I just turned three. But this is my earliest memory. Halloween, I had decided to be Big Bird for reasons that should be obvious. I'm big, I like birds. Do you remember being hypersensitive
Starting point is 00:22:25 to being the tallest kid at that age? Of course that might've been your first memory, so. I don't ever. Like in kindergarten. No, I've never had a sense of being, like a real sense of being that much bigger and taller than people until people keep telling me that I am, right? So I don't think I was very self-conscious about it. Even though you look at the pictures,
Starting point is 00:22:50 you're like, why did they let this eighth grader into this preschool class? Is he a teacher's assistant? Because he looks a little young for that. I guess choosing Big Bird does reflect like a certain either confidence or at least an ambivalence to your height. But I mean, Big Bird's tall.
Starting point is 00:23:08 So if you're choosing Big Bird, it's like I know I'm tall and this will work. Well, let's be clear here. If I was three years old, I did not select Big Bird. Big Bird was selected for me. Oh, this is your parents shaming you. Which this might need to be something that I explore in therapy is that.
Starting point is 00:23:24 That's right. My mom most likely, and my dad's not picking out Halloween costumes, I know how he is. My mom decided for me that I should be Big Bird. Now, I remember being very excited about being Big Bird. So maybe I- Is that your first memory?
Starting point is 00:23:44 Being excited? No, I'm- Was that your first memory, being excited? No, I'm gonna tell you the first memory. The story only makes sense in light of me actually being excited about being Big Bird. Okay. Because I wanted to go trick-or-treating, I was excited to go trick-or-treating, I was gonna get to go with my brother who was three years older than me.
Starting point is 00:24:00 Was he Wile E. Coyote? I don't even remember what he was because this isn't his memory, it's mine. You didn't even care, huh? I feel like he might've been a robot, but I honestly don't remember. I was Wile E. Coyote one year and I'm not even lying and it might've been the same time.
Starting point is 00:24:16 I'll have to, I know there's a picture of me as Wile E. Coyote and I've never realized this until this moment. But Wile E. Coyote is like a Warner Brothers character. Oh shoot, I'm getting Big Bird confused. Are you confusing the Sesame Street universe with Looney Tunes? I'm getting Big Bird confused with the Road Runner. Hey man, that would have been a good coincidence.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Hold on, you were the Road Runner? I was Wile E. Coyote. Oh, so okay, and if I was the Road Runner, I would have made it. Right, right. But otherwise I was Big Bird. I screwed it a big bird. If I was a roadrunner, I would've made it. Right. But I wasn't, I was a big bird. I screwed it up, man. I thought that would've been serendipity. Back to your story.
Starting point is 00:24:50 And of course this was 1980 probably, which meant that my costume consisted of like some sort of vinyl, you know what I mean? Plastic. It was very plastic and if you recall. It's like a plastic tarp with a hole that your head goes through and then a mask. If you recall your memory of Big Bird,
Starting point is 00:25:10 you might not remember his legs. Remember the color of his legs? Orange legs with pink rings? Yeah, I would have just said it was orange and pink striped legs, like horizontal stripes that go up the leg, pink and orange, yeah. And that's what I remember. I'm not gonna bring up a picture of Big Bird
Starting point is 00:25:29 because I want this to be a pristine thing in my mind. Okay. And literally the first step out the door, I tripped on something, fell down and fell on my knee and ripped a hole in the vinyl and also kind of skint my knee up. And at that point it was that I'm embarrassed
Starting point is 00:25:52 because my costume has a hole in it. Yeah, I think you knew if people looked at your knee, they would know there's a human. They're like, that's not Big Bird. I can see a human knee under there. Yeah. And so the whole plan had fallen apart. And I just stayed in, what I remember, again,
Starting point is 00:26:10 I don't know what part is constructed and what part actually happened. I remember staying inside and they had to like bring, you know, like my brother would bring me some of his candy. Like I had to use some of his candy because I didn't actually go outside. So you just stayed, you stayed back with your dad probably. Your mom took your brother out.
Starting point is 00:26:30 Don't remember those details. I just told you everything that I remember. Okay, so that's your first memory. There's a little trauma there. Maybe a lot of trauma. Seems like a lot. I'd be interested in what your parents say about this. When I was walking across the parking lot this morning,
Starting point is 00:26:45 you were sitting in your car on the phone. I thought I heard your mom's voice. You did. You were talking to your mom in the car? You should have asked her about this. I didn't. She's not gonna remember. You talking about something else?
Starting point is 00:27:01 What else is there to talk about? My dad called me last night, this is a side note. I mailed him, I finally, I mailed him Lost Cause of Bleak Creek, finally, and I also gave him one of our records, you know, Mythical Society when we covered Merle. And it comes, you know it comes with that sticker in it that says Mythical Recording.
Starting point is 00:27:23 And my dad was talking about the record and he said he liked the album cover and all that stuff and how if you turn it over with that sticker in it that says Mythical Recording. And my dad was talking about the record and he said he liked the album cover and all that stuff and how if you turn it over it's the reverse. And then he said, and now, you know that little thing that says Mythical Recording on it? If I were to peel that off, would that stick on something if I were to peel that off, would that stick on something or would that mess it up?
Starting point is 00:27:55 And I was like, yeah, it's fine, Dad, it's a sticker. It is a sticker, I think that's the word you're looking for, he's like, well, I knew what a sticker was, I just didn't know if this was a sticker. It sounds like you had a much more interesting conversation than I did with my mom. We didn't talk about stickers at all. Well, so do you wanna hear my first memory
Starting point is 00:28:13 and then we'll analyze both of them. Okay. My first memory was, let's see, before I went to preschool, so I went to preschool when I was like six and then, or five, no, I went to kindergarten when I was six, preschool when I was like five. So from the age of like two to four, I stayed at Retter's house.
Starting point is 00:28:35 Loretta, you met her. She's my first babysitter. She only kept me and my first best friend, Brad, that I talk about in the book of mythicality. And so my first memories are at her house where I would spend the day. I remember one day we would always stay at her house, we would rarely leave.
Starting point is 00:28:58 And maybe that's why I remember this because it was very unusual because we did leave, we went to a friend of hers house and it was maybe a mile or two away, still away in the country and there was this, we were playing in the backyard and there were some other kids there. I remember being very afraid of other kids,
Starting point is 00:29:19 like even in preschool. I don't know, I liked the people that I knew, man. And but I was- What were you afraid of? I don't know. What was gonna happen? I don't know. Just the people-ness of them. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:29:35 I haven't gotten into that. But I do remember I was in the backyard and I was on this swing set thing and you know they got like normal swings but in there like metal swings, but you've got this certain type of swing that it's got two benches that face each other. And then so and as it swings, it kind of stays parallel.
Starting point is 00:29:57 You don't talk about like a very old timey type swing, but it's two people facing each other on this thing. You never been on one of those? And you stay- We were probably too tall. You stay in the same height? You stay parallel to the ground, but you move up and down, because it's kind of like a rowboat kind of vibe.
Starting point is 00:30:19 I don't know, it's kind of, there's two- I think you're making this up. I think even the swing is a fabrication. There's two bars I think you're making this up. I think even the swing is a fabrication. There's two bars that come down, one in front of one person and one beside the other person. Oh it's not on a chain. No it's on bars and they're fixed and you're facing the other person.
Starting point is 00:30:38 I was on it by myself and I was holding on to the bars and I remember. Facing no one. It like, I'm pretty sure it pinched or the way I would have said it at the time was, it pinched me. It pinched my hand and cut it and there was blood. And my recollection is that there was a lot of blood and I remember running into this stranger's house
Starting point is 00:31:01 and trying to find Redder. Well, first of all, before you continue, I will say that they don't make jungle gym equipment like they used to. Oh no. I actually believe, everything is so safe now. I think that there should be like a way that a kid could come away from a piece of equipment bleeding just as a life lesson. Maybe one less ear.
Starting point is 00:31:24 Yeah, I mean, I think that every piece of playground equipment that is manufactured now should have like one really unnecessarily sharp point. Yeah, like a jagged edge. So that at least once a year, one kid really gets snagged on that thing. And then the custodian should come out with a paintbrush of tetanus
Starting point is 00:31:42 and just kinda like brush it on. Well, tetanus is probably overkill, but I think you gotta have some blood and some scars. What else are you gonna remember as we're demonstrating here? So I run into Redder and I love this woman. She's very short. I think I bond with people who are of extreme heights.
Starting point is 00:32:05 My wife's pretty tall for her height. For her height. For her age, I don't know what I was gonna say. You're pretty tall for your height, baby. For her sex. Okay. You can say pretty tall for a woman. Okay, yeah, yeah, she's a woman.
Starting point is 00:32:22 That's beside the point. Loretta is very short. Sometimes the way out is a lot easier than you make it. Loretta's like 4'10". She was like the most approachable person to a kid. And she made me feel better. That's my first memory. Did she kiss it?
Starting point is 00:32:44 I don't think. Did she kiss it? I don't think. Did she kiss your boo-boo? She cleaned up the boo-boo. And I don't remember Brad being there, but I remember my second memory, and again, it may have come first, I really have no way to know, was the one I tell in the Book of Mythicality,
Starting point is 00:33:00 and that's I go into the bathroom right after he came out of the bathroom and he forgot to flush, and there was a turd in there that was bright orange. Yeah. And I will never forget that Cheeto colored turd. Yeah. It shocked me.
Starting point is 00:33:16 You gotta have something sensational, like orange turd is definitely something that's not gonna leave your brain. It was like a guy directing traffic around a construction site on the street, you know? You gotta wear the most fluorescent orange vest type situation. What if it was?
Starting point is 00:33:33 It was like he crapped a construction vest. But what if it wasn't a turd? Have you ever thought about that? It was a turd, man. You sure it wasn't just like a giant Cheeto or like a cheese puff of some kind. You talking about a- That he was like, I don't wanna eat this,
Starting point is 00:33:46 and he threw it in the toilet and it expanded to turd size. You talking about a Cheeto the size of a baby's arm? That's how big it was. Yeah, man, I'll never forget it. So one of those two are my first memory and they're equally traumatic. And I think that's the common denominator here between our two stories.
Starting point is 00:34:11 Right, and I don't have any other memories from Georgia, which is where I spent my first three years. It's funny because I would have told you that I remembered when it snowed that winter when I was three years old. But I don't actually remember it. I've just seen the pictures because I do. Yeah. I've seen the pictures of my mom.
Starting point is 00:34:33 I've seen the pictures of me and my brother with plastic bags tied over our feet. It's funny like we were in South Georgia. You're very ill prepared. We're in South Georgia and my mom's idea of keeping us safe in the snow is to put slippery plastic bags around our feet and send us out into the snow.
Starting point is 00:34:54 You don't want your feet to get wet. Right, you just wanna fall and break something. I think when you're a parent, especially, I'm not gonna, I'm gonna project this on your mom and assume that she wasn't actually thinking this, but especially back then, you know, you'd put your kids out the front door and you'd say, don't come back for a couple of hours.
Starting point is 00:35:12 Matter of fact, there's a couple of times that I've even said that to my kids now. I'm like, you know what, I'm fed up with these screens. Go outside and do not come back in for, and I'll say an hour, An hour's a long time. But like 15 minutes later, they ring the doorbell. Well, if you send them out in the snow and you don't put bags over their socks and shoes,
Starting point is 00:35:36 then once those socks get wet, I gotta come inside, Mom. It's Rhett. It's your big bird boy. First of all, I was three, I'm pretty sure she didn't leave me. And it was snowing in Georgia, which was very unusual. And I think that's why I thought that I remembered it,
Starting point is 00:35:51 but I think it's just a picture. You think your mom put plastic bags around her own shoes? No. It's like Reeboks that are back. I don't think so. In style now. The things, the additional things that I remember is that there's sporadic things
Starting point is 00:36:07 from my time in Thousand Oaks, California. What's your first memory from there? So this will be your second memory. I honestly cannot put these in chronological order. I don't know. Because I remember being taught how to ride a bike and falling. And falling a few houses down
Starting point is 00:36:33 and then my pants getting caught in the chain and not being able to move and having to yell for my dad to come after me. And that's probably, I probably combined two memories because there was when I was learning to ride my bike and then me riding my bike, probably by myself and that happening. I remember a giant sunflower.
Starting point is 00:36:58 What? Yeah, this is the only good, this is the only good memory that I have from back from really early. You know what, if you really look at a giant sunflower from up close, I would argue that it's actually pretty damn scary. They're kind of wicked.
Starting point is 00:37:12 When was the last time you stared down a sunflower? It's like the black part in the center is just, is a lot bigger than you feel like it should be. And it looks, and the stuff that's coming out of it, the seed stuff, to me it's like, it's gross looking. But how do you remember it? Well, I think of it differently now that you said that. To me it's like staring at a beautiful sun
Starting point is 00:37:35 that you can look at without looking away. I guarantee it was twice as big as your head if it was a good one. In my recollection, it was eight to nine feet tall. Right. It was pretty tall for its height. But you weren't afraid of it. See, that's the thing for me as a kid,
Starting point is 00:37:53 I would have definitely been afraid of that flower. And I also remember the first time I heard the F word. Oh really? From Rochelle. Who's Rochelle? Rochelle was the coolest kid in our neighborhood. She was probably like five to six years older than I was. Okay.
Starting point is 00:38:09 And I heard her say it and then I went up and whispered in her ear and I said, I just wanted to make sure I got it right now, I was like, is a bad word? And she was like, what did you say? And I said. is a bad word? And she was like, what did you say? And I said. What did she say? She said, she started laughing and said,
Starting point is 00:38:33 yes, it's a bad word. You can't say that even though I just said, whispered it twice into her ear. So she just said it in conversation. Yeah, yeah, I mean, this is like 1981 and you got this girl just saying the F word in front of four year olds. I don't remember the first time I heard the F word.
Starting point is 00:38:51 I remember when the Beastie Boys cassette License to Ill came out with like Fight for Your Right to Party on it. By this point my babysitter's name was. Why do you only remember things in the context of being babysat? Because I was babysat a lot. I mean, my mom was working.
Starting point is 00:39:09 My mom was working, man. I know that, but like you also, you did have a home and a mom. I think, yeah, and we do, I have memories. I'm saying, but my mom didn't use the F word, homie. You would have remembered it if she had. My mom didn't say, hey, let me open up the liner notes of this Beastie Boys album and I'm gonna highlight
Starting point is 00:39:28 every single naughty word so you can learn it. That's what Joe, the older boy, did over that summer. He would literally point to every single nasty word and he would also tell me about the female anatomy. Well, you need to know about that. Like in detail. You know, there's like certain things you can say in general about down there.
Starting point is 00:39:53 And then you can also go like really anatomical. Right. Like imagine the most anatomical conversation. And I guess I was, I don't know, you know, I might've been 10. Oh, so you know, you know, I might have been 10. Oh so you fast, hold on so. But I mean. You fast forwarded all the way to 10.
Starting point is 00:40:11 Well I mean if we're talking about like. This is pretty sporadic. What's my first memory of being taught something illicit is now what we're talking about. Oh okay. My first illicit memory is then. And you know what, a few days later, Joe's younger brother got sick and he was laying on the floor,
Starting point is 00:40:30 the same floor that we laid on when we were trying to hide the Beastie Boys liner notes, and he started to vomit. And the kid started to vomit and instead of rolling over on his side or standing up or running to the bathroom, he rolled over on his back and he was projectile vomiting straight up in the air
Starting point is 00:40:49 and you can die from that, you can easily choke. And I remember that too. Like a fountain, like a vomit fountain. Yeah and so I think somebody came and pushed him over. It's like did a log roll, it's like you just can't, you just can't let a kid. Do that sideways, man. Before talking about, I told you the story
Starting point is 00:41:06 about my babysitter trying to dare me to pull the wart off her finger. Oh gosh, you have so many, you're, you're, Like she was, she, I mean, Screwed up, man. God rest her dead soul, but we would sit in the swing and wait for my mom to come to show up and I would always be the last one
Starting point is 00:41:24 to get picked up because my mom worked late. She was a hard working woman. And I was so anxious. I had this separation anxiety. And I was afraid that my mom wasn't gonna pick me up. So while you're waiting, you can try to get a wart off an old woman's hand? We would sit in the swing and she'd look up
Starting point is 00:41:42 and she'd say, she'd look down the street, this long, long driveway. She'd look down the driveway and she'd look up and she'd say, she'd look down the street, this long, long driveway. She'd look down the driveway and she'd say, there she don't come. That was her joke, there she don't come. And it was like, I could tell by the look on her face, it was like, oh, my mom's coming. And then after screwing with me.
Starting point is 00:41:59 Hold on, just stop for a second. Well, I'm just gonna pile it all on and then you can unpile it. So then in that same scene, she would say, in order to occupy my time while I was waiting for my mom and she was taunting me, she would say, let's see if you can pull off this wart from my finger. And it was a big wart.
Starting point is 00:42:16 It was like, this one was like a witch. It was the size of an infant's pinky. She was a witch, man. And it was on the side of her index finger. Like between the second and final knuckle, there was a wart, man. And it was on the side of her index finger, like between the second and final knuckle, there was a wart on the side, and I would grab this wart and pull. And I actually, sometimes I would dig my fingernails
Starting point is 00:42:37 underneath it, and that would make me happy because I knew that I was hurting her a little bit. But she would just grit her teeth and she would not, she wouldn't, it was like a game of mercy. I think she thought you might actually pull it off one day. She either wanted that thing off or she didn't want to admit that I was yanking her hard on that wart.
Starting point is 00:42:59 Okay, let's talk about this a little bit. I remember all that, y'all. These are my memories. Link. Anatomically detailed. This woman was a witch. Do you remember what she looked like? No.
Starting point is 00:43:15 She picked me up one day, she had this, why are we talking about this woman? She had a long Cadillac but it was two doors but the doors were as long as what would normally cross like a stretch limo's worth of three doors. It was the longest door. A kid couldn't open the door. A teacher had to come when she pulled up,
Starting point is 00:43:31 open the door for me and let me get in the back seat. And then she had the window rolled down. I remember I put my hand out the window one day and I was sitting behind her as she was driving. And she's leaving Buies Creek Elementary School and she starts rolling up the window and I tried to take my hand out
Starting point is 00:43:52 but the window rolled up so quickly that my hand got stuck and I was like, oh my hand's in the window, my hand's stuck and she rolled it down a little bit and as I was about to pull it out, she rolled it up again. She kept my hand in the window, dude. Just to screw with me. She was demented.
Starting point is 00:44:12 Hold on, but why do you have, you don't have fond memories of her. You have horrific memories of her. I don't understand why that hasn't registered. This is not Retter. I loved Retter, I still love Retter. She's still alive and she's a beautiful four foot 10 inch woman.
Starting point is 00:44:30 And I'm not exaggerating, that's how tall she is. With no warts on her hand. No warts, beautiful small hands. Big hair though. Because when I think- She had the hair of a giant. When I think about those days, again, my first memory was traumatic,
Starting point is 00:44:45 but like when I think about- I bottled all that shit up too, man. I never once told my mom about any of that. Yeah, that's a problem. Yeah. Like four, five, six, I remember there was a guy in our neighborhood who had a pit bull who would pull him at very high speeds
Starting point is 00:45:03 while he was on a skateboard barefooted. What? That's Cali. That's Cali for you. Yeah, but that's the kind of, I mean, I've got good memories. Did he have a wart? You have good memories?
Starting point is 00:45:14 I remember when the Santa Ana winds would come and my brother and I would put on giant jackets and go and hold them open and lean completely into the wind so it would hold us up. Like I'm not saying I didn't have bad memories, but there were no women with warts that were trying to get me to pull them off and there was no evil woman trying to get my hand stuck
Starting point is 00:45:35 in the window or getting my hand stuck in the swing. I mean, do you remember anything good? Nobody made me get my hand caught in the swing, okay? Do you have any good memories? But the other two things that happened were both the same woman. So at least they were the same woman. I mean, if those are two different women, that would suck.
Starting point is 00:45:55 I did have another babysitter who would say, go outside. She'd make me go outside for the hour that she was watching The Bold and the Beautiful or whatever soap opera she was into. And I hated it because it was just like, I would sit on the steps waiting for her show to be over so I could go back inside. That's not babysitting.
Starting point is 00:46:16 Yeah, it's horrible. And you didn't think, I think I need to tell my mom. I don't, I think I did complain about that woman and then I stopped going there. Good for you. Stopped going there. How do we get on this? So, I mean, clearly the trauma,
Starting point is 00:46:35 I have good memories too. I have good memories from my childhood. Name one. I remember the wart didn't come off. Yeah, I could probably come up with some good memories, but what's the fun in that? Well, okay. Kind of getting back to what you talked about with Lando.
Starting point is 00:46:57 Yes. In this same article from Psych Central, this is pretty interesting. Research is showing that infants do not have the sophisticated neural architecture needed to form and hold onto more complex forms of memory. Okay, for their experiment, the researchers recorded 83 children at the age of three while their mothers
Starting point is 00:47:17 or fathers asked them about events that they had experienced in recent months, such as a trip to the zoo or a birthday party. Bauer explained that parents were asked to speak as they normally would to their children, prompting them with questions such as, "'Remember when we went to Chuck E. Cheese's "'for your birthday party?
Starting point is 00:47:35 "'You had pizza, didn't you?' The child might then recount details of the birthday party or divert the conversation to another event, such as a visit to the zoo. The researchers noted that some mothers might keep asking about pizza while other mothers would ask about the trip to the zoo. Parents who followed a child's lead in these conversations
Starting point is 00:47:56 tended to elicit richer memories from their three-year-olds according to Bauer. This approach also related to the children having a better memory of the event at a later age. Okay, and then in this study, because I read about this too, years later, they went back and asked them about those same memories to see what was retained
Starting point is 00:48:16 and what wasn't. Yeah, because it says, while the children between the ages of five and seven could recall 63 to 72% of the events, the children who were eight and nine years old remembered only to 72% of the events. The children who were eight and nine years old remembered only about 35% of the events, the researchers reported. So if you've got kids.
Starting point is 00:48:32 Yes, this is what I'm getting at. First of all, I'm just gonna go ahead and tell you. There's an opportunity here. The youngest child between the two of us is nine. Right. So you've already missed the window. Well, here's what I. You should have been doing this at five and seven.
Starting point is 00:48:43 So only if you've got kids who are younger than seven years old, listen up because I think we've got a technique for you. Yeah, this is exactly what occurred to me when I just happened to be talking to Lando about this. I was like, dude, and I didn't know about the seven and nine but I was like, okay, you're nine years old. You're so much closer to all of these memories
Starting point is 00:49:03 than I am to my memories or even the older kids are to theirs. I can help you remember more details. We can sit here, we can talk about the details of that house in Encino, riding the scooter all the way around it, getting in that hammock. He started to remember stuff about the rabbit and like all the stuff in that kid's house
Starting point is 00:49:21 when we would go feed the rabbit. I was like, you know what? Now that's your first memory. It doesn't involve a wart, it doesn't involve bleeding. And this is a gift that parents or mentors or cool uncles or aunts can give- Short babysitters. Short babysitters.
Starting point is 00:49:39 You can give to your progeny here. You can help them, you can establish richer first memories. I mean, there's the gift of like, our parents gave us the gift of all the pictures that we have, you know, the plastic wrapped around your legs, your feet. You don't really remember that, but you almost could have. And if you would have talked about it at age seven
Starting point is 00:50:07 and then kept talking about it, we've talked about how the act of remembering creates the memory again and makes it more memorable. More rewrites it as well. Rewrites it. So, hey, this is another weighty thing that you might interpret as pressure. That's what I would do as a parent to say,
Starting point is 00:50:25 you can instill first memories into your kids. I think the technique, well, I think you're taking it a little too far, but. This is sensational. No, what I'm saying is that you gotta use this technique though. And I think it sounds like you did this, whether it was intentional or not.
Starting point is 00:50:43 It was just two years too late. When Lando started talking about his memory, when they bring up something like the rabbit, well, follow the rabbit, like literally follow the rabbit and ask them questions about the rabbit. Like let them lead it and they'll be recalling it and also constructing it. It solidifies a rich memory that then when they're 41
Starting point is 00:51:05 and 42 years old and they're talking about the good old days, they'll have less traumatic things to talk about than we had. Well and I think the video component is a big one because I don't, I think that the first video of me that's available is definitely not before middle school. I mean we didn't, nobody was taking any video of me that's available is definitely not before middle school. I mean, we didn't, nobody was taking any video of us.
Starting point is 00:51:30 My parents got a video camera when I was already in high school. So we didn't have a family video camera. And it was just like school projects. The first video footage that I have of me is my aunt Tisi. She was big into these camcorders and she would always bring that to Christmas
Starting point is 00:51:51 and she would like, she'd set up the tripod and she'd have it in the corner of the room and then she'd come around and film everybody. So every Christmas starting like, yeah, when I was in like, you know, when you start getting those big shoulder mount cameras, I don't know what year that would be. I would have footage of Christmas at Nana and Papa's house
Starting point is 00:52:12 and I would take that camera and not tell her and I would film stuff at Nana and Papa's house. I'd film like little videos and I filmed this time travel movie that involved flushing the toilet and this filming that was like zooming in on the water and then like voicing that over as like a time travel portal and then I think that was pretty much the only scene.
Starting point is 00:52:39 I remember that. Okay, do you think you can get hold of this footage? I bet she still has all of it, but it's just like all of us opening presents. You mean me and filming a toilet? Well that. I think that was pretty much it. Don't you think that you should like digitize,
Starting point is 00:52:56 if she has footage of you as a kid, like I think that you should get that digitized. You should talk to her about this. Yeah. Those VHS tapes are not gonna hold up forever. Already degraded quite a bit probably. I mean it was definitely grade school. It wasn't middle school.
Starting point is 00:53:14 It might have been. Well I don't know if I told you this but. Sixth grade maybe? Because you know I got that 360 degree camera right? And so one of the things I started doing on like our vacations is at every city that we went to when we were in Scotland and England,
Starting point is 00:53:30 I would take a number of these pictures and I put them up, I think I talked about it and I posted it. But now I can put on my Oculus and I go to that website while I've got my Oculus on and I can enter into those photos and see, and there's 360 video which with the camera that I got is not very high res but the photos are great.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Because I could be like, oh I remember when we were on that hike and we stopped and we took that picture and there's Locke, there's Shepherd, and there's my nephews and nieces. Because sometime in the future, it's just gonna be much easier than putting on an Oculus to just explore that photo and you'll have some of the early ones.
Starting point is 00:54:09 Well, that's exactly what I'm talking about. So, and I still haven't, I kind of regret that I haven't done this yet, but the good news is my kids' rooms haven't changed substantially in the past couple years since we've moved into this house. But you know, you're like, what was it like in my room as a kid?
Starting point is 00:54:27 So what I'm gonna do is go in there and just like, you know, stand in the middle of the room, hold the thing up and take a 360 photo or let them do it so it's not dad holding it and then you've got this photo that forever, like for the rest of their lives, they can be like, what was it like in my room when I was 11 years old? Oh, I can go there right now.
Starting point is 00:54:50 Oh, and there's the book that I was reading and I think that this is- There's my Garfield phone. It's like, that's something that I would love to be able to have, you know, I would love to be able to do that personally, right? But, and this is like a pretty easy- There's a side benefit of this too, you know, for insurance purposes.
Starting point is 00:55:10 Like if your house burns down, I don't want my downer today. When your house burns down, you can, if you've uploaded those to the cloud, then you can just send them to the insurance company and say, I want all of this back. Well, that's actually, that was actually my first idea when I got this camera. I was like, I need to take pictures
Starting point is 00:55:29 of every room in the house so that I can actually show the insurance company in case of a fire. But then I was like, oh, but this also creates like a literal memory palace that my kids can go into That's right. with an Oculus. So what are we concluding here?
Starting point is 00:55:45 Your first memories, you might have made them up. But if you have influence over a seven year old, they're at the perfect age to just to cultivate out what Rhett said, a verdant memory garden of first memories. That's the influence you can have over the next generation. You can thank us for it. And you know what, when you're talking to a seven year old, say, hey, you know what, you should listen to Ear Biscuits.
Starting point is 00:56:18 That's where I learned this from. You might be into it. It's our target audience, seven year olds. And you know what, I can make a recommendation here based on the camera that I have. Okay, is this your official rec in effect? Yeah, this is my official rec. Okay.
Starting point is 00:56:40 It's got 348 ratings on Amazon, four stars, so I guess, it's been fine for me, like I said the- It looks like a USB drive with a lens on the end of it. This is the- Is it that small? I don't know if, is that Ricoh? R-I-C-O-H, Ricoh. Yeah, Ricoh. Theta, Ricoh Theta. SC360 video and still camera.
Starting point is 00:57:06 Comes in four colors, I have the white one. Jessie just got this for me at some point. How much is it? The white one's 180 bucks. Well, what's the cheapest color? No, for a 360 camera? You said the white one. The rest of them are 200, everything else is 200 but the white one is cheaper.
Starting point is 00:57:26 Okay. Because it shows dirt. And again, like I said, at least the last time that I, now that camera that we used on the. Going back to Buies Creek for the documentary. Jake, do you remember what kind of camera that was? That 360 camera that we used when we crossed the river? Because that one was much more pricey.
Starting point is 00:57:44 That was more of a video camera first. This feels more like flip phone. Is it 4K though? No, I mean, well, it's, let's see what it says here. I don't know what the video resolution is. It's, like I said, this is basically for pictures. Like the pictures are adequate to like capture a memory. If you just wanna, you don't have to have any,
Starting point is 00:58:05 you can actually then upload them to a website and go into it and look at them or whatever. It was just a GoPro. Oh, it was a GoPro. It was the new 360 GoPro, which is, that thing for video is awesome. But you don't have to go, because that's more expensive. I'm surprised you can't
Starting point is 00:58:19 just get a phone that has backward and forward-facing lenses just hold that thing up and there's a program where you can just push a button. Well, it probably is. That probably is a thing that exists. Probably not quite as good as this though. Yeah, this one is like pretty seamless. You know what, if you don't wanna take Rhett's rec,
Starting point is 00:58:37 just wait a little bit and your phone will probably start doing it. Well, I just think in the distant future, everybody is gonna have like some sort of head wear. Even if it's in your glasses and it's gonna be like, little antenna goes up and now you've got the 360 and you're like, I wanna remember this moment, I wanna remember everything about this
Starting point is 00:58:56 and I wanna be able to enter into the physical space. Sure. I want the sights and the sounds of this situation and you'll just be able to do that. Yeah. We should invent that. In the meantime you can buy this. Let's call it Google Glasses.
Starting point is 00:59:10 All right. We'll partner with Google. Okay, we're gonna provide the glasses. Yeah, we're just gonna provide the antenna with a camera on the end of it. Well actually we're not gonna provide that at all, we're gonna provide the idea. You just heard it, Google Glasses.
Starting point is 00:59:22 If you like the idea of us having an antenna installed on your Google Glasses. If you like the idea of us having a antenna installed on your Google Glasses, hit us up and we'll tell you all about it. It's an antenna with a camera on it. Or if you want to hit us up in general, hashtag Ear Biscuits, let us know, join the conversation. What's your very first memory?
Starting point is 00:59:38 I think this is something good, it's a good icebreaker conversation for your family, friends, loved ones, ARCA conversations on a plane, what have you. We're here for you. And we'll be back next week. Like I said, we'll still be talking about the lost years in some capacity.
Starting point is 00:59:54 Yeah, thanks for listening. Thanks for sharing this episode with a friend who you wanna remember, or you want them to remember their first memory. Tell them about our show. We are in your debt. Don't forget, remember to tell them about our show. We'll speak at you next week.

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