<v Speaker 1>Jarre, you, Katy and Josh six one hundred.
<v Speaker 2>I was bowling this week and Josh, dude, it was fun.
<v Speaker 3>Uh. It spent some time because we were just really
<v Speaker 3>busy and on vacation, so I hadn't gone in a minute. Uh,
<v Speaker 3>right off the bat bowl to one eighty six. I'm
<v Speaker 3>really happy with that, and then it's good.
<v Speaker 2>It's honestly, it's really bumpers down.
<v Speaker 3>Oh, bumpers down, bro, It's honestly really fun to like
<v Speaker 3>get good at something that I had no earthly idea
<v Speaker 3>or cared about. Like a month and a half ago,
<v Speaker 3>I didn't care about it. I was like, bowling is bullying.
<v Speaker 1>It is funny that you're like on a bullet is
<v Speaker 1>it a league or is this.
<v Speaker 3>Yeah, it's a league. Actual, it's every Sunday, and it's
<v Speaker 3>so funny. How like I mean truly, I would go
<v Speaker 3>bowling maybe once a year, and then, by happenstance, me
<v Speaker 3>and my buddy were caught in traffic on C four
<v Speaker 3>seventy and I saw Littleton Lanes there and I was like,
<v Speaker 3>do you want to just like go?
<v Speaker 2>And he was like yeah, man, and we did okay.
<v Speaker 3>That time, like a month and a half ago, and
<v Speaker 3>then all of a sudden, we were like, let's just
<v Speaker 3>get really good at bullying, so we joined a league,
<v Speaker 3>you know what, friend, seriously, and it was so funny
<v Speaker 3>because the guy, I remember, the guy next to us
<v Speaker 3>was really good. The first time we went like it
<v Speaker 3>was strike, strike, strike, and I was like, I just
<v Speaker 3>feel like it's like when we see like a Guinness
<v Speaker 3>Book of World Records that all of us collective, You're like,
<v Speaker 3>we could do that.
<v Speaker 2>Nate and I my best friend, both looked.
<v Speaker 3>At that guy and like, we could probably do that,
<v Speaker 3>Like it's not that hard, which, by the way, bowling
<v Speaker 3>is hard, Like it's very hard to be consistent, but.
<v Speaker 1>My cheeks always sore the day after too.
<v Speaker 2>Okay, yeah, muscles the left yeah pretty so yeah, yeah
<v Speaker 2>you do.
<v Speaker 1>And then the way you kind of you know the move,
<v Speaker 1>You're like, man.
<v Speaker 2>My booty herd.
<v Speaker 3>But you know what's cool is we've now been going
<v Speaker 3>enough to where I'm like, I can feel the the
<v Speaker 3>muscles that I've never used. It's getting strict thin. So
<v Speaker 3>now I gotta figure out a bowl left because I
<v Speaker 3>do want to, yeah, I do. But it's so funny
<v Speaker 3>because we go there and we since we joined the league.
<v Speaker 3>We can play as many games as we want on
<v Speaker 3>Sunday nights and we just have little competitions with people.
<v Speaker 3>I will say I got handily beaten by like a
<v Speaker 3>ten year old yesterday, and it's so funny.
<v Speaker 2>Spin on it got the spammy.
<v Speaker 3>Had no earthly idea how to spin the ball, but
<v Speaker 3>the balls for some reason went so slow down the
<v Speaker 3>lane that when it hit the pins, they all just ripple,
<v Speaker 3>all just fell down.
<v Speaker 2>He bowled like to ten and I was like, this
<v Speaker 2>is the most humbling moment. Let's go the fight now. Yeah,
<v Speaker 2>but his dad, I'll beat you somehow. It was really embarrassing.
<v Speaker 1>You didn't do this for like a girl or to
<v Speaker 1>meet girls.
<v Speaker 2>This is just strictly you think you go bowling to
<v Speaker 2>meet girls. Maybe you don't know.
<v Speaker 4>If there was two little hotties who were driving past
<v Speaker 4>those lanes were like, hey, girl, let's start our bowling journey.
<v Speaker 4>And then you, guys, this is like where like the
<v Speaker 4>most random meetup could happen for you.
<v Speaker 2>Oh my god, I don't say it hasn't happened yet.
<v Speaker 4>No, you don't like those bowling alley babes.
<v Speaker 2>It's a lot of guys we know it's a dud.
<v Speaker 5>You always know when they're serious, when their own shoes
<v Speaker 5>and their own ball.
<v Speaker 3>Like, yeah, I'm not there yet. I used to place
<v Speaker 3>his balls and shoes. But the kid showed up, that
<v Speaker 3>ten year old, and he had his He had two
<v Speaker 3>of his own bowling balls, his own shoes, and his
<v Speaker 3>dad there just sitting watching him like a hawk, making
<v Speaker 3>sure he played well.
<v Speaker 2>So I was like, this is not Is there a
<v Speaker 2>bar there? Yeah? Yeah, there's the bowling only bars are
<v Speaker 2>the best you can get, the tall like the tower
<v Speaker 2>of beer. Yeah, and it's.
<v Speaker 1>Bush lights and a pack of smokes.
<v Speaker 2>We class, we go, course, we go.
<v Speaker 6>Course, like tap those rockies, Josh.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, there we go. There's water in it.
<v Speaker 6>Rights.
<v Speaker 3>It's fun though, dude, honestly, I really enjoy it. So
<v Speaker 3>it's it's it's a new little hobby of ours.
<v Speaker 4>I love that idea of just starting something for no reason.
<v Speaker 4>I mean, everybody should do it.
<v Speaker 2>I was.
<v Speaker 4>I was just talking with my wife yesterday about I
<v Speaker 4>should do kickboxing. I'm thinking about just randomly signing up
<v Speaker 4>for kickboxing than bowling. Bit more manually manly.
<v Speaker 5>But yeah, shu order to sell at a restaurants.
<v Speaker 2>Starting something new.
<v Speaker 6>Come on how could you do on things I don't
<v Speaker 6>want to eat?
<v Speaker 4>In kickboxing and pottery.
<v Speaker 2>Painting about it could be a wit.
<v Speaker 5>Like some kind of like active right, Like there's there's
<v Speaker 5>sumo wrestling for people who are of normal weight.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, but you got to wear the weird stuff.
<v Speaker 5>You get to the diapers, you get to wear the
<v Speaker 5>think I've.
<v Speaker 2>Ever seen a woman wrestler. I'm just trying to make
<v Speaker 2>it happen.
<v Speaker 6>I could do it.
<v Speaker 2>I could do No.
<v Speaker 3>I want to see you go against a real wrestler
<v Speaker 3>just to make this work. Yeah, I just don't see
<v Speaker 3>what happens.
<v Speaker 1>Most action you'd probably seen.
<v Speaker 6>In a line time. Actually exactly, that's my plan.
<v Speaker 2>In contact.
<v Speaker 4>I know that sweaty you might love me. All right,
<v Speaker 4>let's diving a pm I. We've got three stories for you,
<v Speaker 4>A positive, a minus, and something a little bit interesting.
<v Speaker 3>Who got the pee today? Oh my gosh, I got
<v Speaker 3>the pee today? And this was actually really cool. I
<v Speaker 3>read a about this over the weekend. Each time that
<v Speaker 3>you actively are resisting the urge to get angry at something.
<v Speaker 3>This could be at a partner, it could be at traffic,
<v Speaker 3>it could be anything situation that you are in that
<v Speaker 3>you actively are resisting the urge to get mad and
<v Speaker 3>upset about something. It actually physically rewires your brain to
<v Speaker 3>become more compassionate.
<v Speaker 2>It's really cool.
<v Speaker 3>Choosing to resist anger indeed, leads to rewiring your brain
<v Speaker 3>through a process called neuroplasticity. You really just wanted to
<v Speaker 3>say that nerolasticity. It's almost like when you're working out
<v Speaker 3>your muscles. You know, when you how to make your
<v Speaker 3>muscles bigger, they tear, that's why you become sore, and
<v Speaker 3>then they repackage themselves, they repair themselves and your muscles
<v Speaker 3>get thicker.
<v Speaker 2>Well, your brain does this.
<v Speaker 3>Your neurons actually do this, getting anger, angry and flying
<v Speaker 3>off the handle and doing this thing. Doing those types
<v Speaker 3>of things are it's a fight or flight response, essentially,
<v Speaker 3>and it's not necessarily good for your brain to do
<v Speaker 3>that all the time. So when you're doing that, you're
<v Speaker 3>not only strengthening your brain, but you're actually fixing it.
<v Speaker 3>You're rewiring it. And I thought that is such a
<v Speaker 3>cool thing. It helps you control things like emotional regulation, empathy,
<v Speaker 3>self control while simultaneously reducing activity in the areas that
<v Speaker 3>are associated just with the emotional responses. So you're actually
<v Speaker 3>physically giving a brain your workout when you are angry
<v Speaker 3>at something, but you choose peace, and not only does that,
<v Speaker 3>it saves relationships. You don't want to fly off the
<v Speaker 3>handle all the time. Do you know me that? Well?
<v Speaker 3>You don't want to be that type of person though,
<v Speaker 3>because it can break friendships, relationships or have you ever
<v Speaker 3>seen road range?
<v Speaker 2>That's what I never ends up in a good thing.
<v Speaker 5>That's what I was thinking, because when I'm driving and
<v Speaker 5>I get upset and I talk myself off that ledge,
<v Speaker 5>I'm like, no, you don't want to use that finger
<v Speaker 5>today case, yes, you know what I mean, Like, I
<v Speaker 5>do feel good about myself after that. When I don't
<v Speaker 5>respond to them, I'm like, look at you, you're.
<v Speaker 1>Rewiring journey.
<v Speaker 6>I really do. This makes total sense.
<v Speaker 2>That's exactly you said.
<v Speaker 1>Just let them go.
<v Speaker 5>This is not going to matter in two minutes. And
<v Speaker 5>I tell myself when I'm in that moment.
<v Speaker 3>And in those situations, Katie, you don't know, I mean,
<v Speaker 3>you really don't know what that.
<v Speaker 2>Other person is carrying.
<v Speaker 3>I mean, I have seen so many of those things
<v Speaker 3>where someone ends up getting shoe or ran off the
<v Speaker 3>road or in an accident that kills both the people.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, I mean, here's what I always do.
<v Speaker 1>I go, it's nuts, they've got an emergency. Somebody in
<v Speaker 1>the car. Somebody in the car is giving birth.
<v Speaker 4>That's like all you have to tell yourself, Like they're
<v Speaker 4>in a hurry because they got to.
<v Speaker 2>Get to the hospital, and then you want to be
<v Speaker 2>mad at them.
<v Speaker 1>And then you want to be mad.
<v Speaker 5>I actually heard a trick once too, because when I
<v Speaker 5>do feel that way, if somebody is doing something that
<v Speaker 5>irritates me, I think of Zoe driving. I think of
<v Speaker 5>a young person or even an older person who's just like,
<v Speaker 5>maybe there, maybe something happened, maybe they're not the best driver,
<v Speaker 5>and maybe you just need to give them some space.
<v Speaker 6>But immediately I put Zoe in that car, so then
<v Speaker 6>it just take care of the baby. Do you need
<v Speaker 6>anything to eat?
<v Speaker 2>That's good though.
<v Speaker 3>If it visualize things good, that's really good. So everybody
<v Speaker 3>practiced just being Zoe.
<v Speaker 5>Everybody, Yeah, she needs to get to where she's going, safety.
<v Speaker 4>Get baby and copy and boy mama.
<v Speaker 6>Yeah that's good.
<v Speaker 2>I like that. I love it. Yeah, Katie, the.
<v Speaker 5>Good story minus this minus is crazy today. So it
<v Speaker 5>all starts with the man who was getting on a
<v Speaker 5>flight to Europe right his name's Dan Smoker and his families.
<v Speaker 6>I know, dream tripped to Europe. It turned into a nightmare.
<v Speaker 5>So a cancelation happened, right, And what they told him
<v Speaker 5>is he needed to call the United Airlines customer service line.
<v Speaker 5>So he made a call to United Airlines and was
<v Speaker 5>on the customer service line. And here's the thing is, like,
<v Speaker 5>during this call that was three and a half hours long,
<v Speaker 5>somehow hackers grabbed a hold of the call and at
<v Speaker 5>the end of it, he got screwed for seventeen thousand dollars.
<v Speaker 5>Oh so now they can hack a call, but you
<v Speaker 5>hack a call because here's the thing is, like people
<v Speaker 5>when they found out about it, Like he went to
<v Speaker 5>United and he's like, oh my god. Like you guys
<v Speaker 5>said you were going to refund me the money for this,
<v Speaker 5>and what you did was took seventeen thousand dollars out
<v Speaker 5>of my bank account. They're like, well, did you google
<v Speaker 5>United Airlines customer service number and then get hacked. That's
<v Speaker 5>what they thought he did that he called the wrong number,
<v Speaker 5>happens they But here's what happened, is he called the
<v Speaker 5>right number and he was only the airline has a
<v Speaker 5>log of three minutes so he was on the call
<v Speaker 5>with United for three minutes, and then somehow the call
<v Speaker 5>went from United to the hackers, and again he was
<v Speaker 5>on this phone call.
<v Speaker 6>For three hours.
<v Speaker 5>They still don't know how it happened, and you're still.
<v Speaker 2>Trying to figure it out. Mimic his voice.
<v Speaker 6>Then they have no idea, They have no idea.
<v Speaker 5>All they know is it all was a charge for
<v Speaker 5>seventeen thousand dollars listed as the alias airline Fair. So
<v Speaker 5>even the bank isn't knowing where this money came, where
<v Speaker 5>it went?
<v Speaker 6>How it like they.
<v Speaker 2>United actually just stole it and they.
<v Speaker 4>Don't so yeah, like if they charged seventeen grand, it
<v Speaker 4>goes to United, right.
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, yeah, so then what No, it went the seventeen
<v Speaker 5>grand went Fair airline Fair.
<v Speaker 6>No like the airline. So it just was taken out
<v Speaker 6>of his account and they don't know where it went.
<v Speaker 2>How do you do that as a wire? How do
<v Speaker 2>you do that? Because seventeen thousand dollars has to be
<v Speaker 2>like a wire. I don't like this.
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, they're looking into it again, the internal law colonel,
<v Speaker 5>I'm sorry. The eternal call logue was for twelve minutes,
<v Speaker 5>not three minutes, but still for three hours this guy.
<v Speaker 6>What was he doing for the three hours?
<v Speaker 1>Just sitting on hold?
<v Speaker 6>He was on the phone. He was on the phone.
<v Speaker 5>He's trying to figure out United is who he thought
<v Speaker 5>he was talking to. It was three hours, but it
<v Speaker 5>wasn't the hackers, did gotcha?
<v Speaker 1>Now I get it all figured out.
<v Speaker 6>Yeah, so they actually because I thought.
<v Speaker 4>United was talking to the hackers, then they were using
<v Speaker 4>his voice, but instead he was talking to the United And.
<v Speaker 6>Here's maybe a little bit of a summary.
<v Speaker 1>See where I was confused?
<v Speaker 5>There we go confirmed that they logged several calls from
<v Speaker 5>Smoker's number, but they've lost internal review because they couldn't
<v Speaker 5>explain how it was transferred or why their own logs
<v Speaker 5>recorded a much shorter call. But what they had to
<v Speaker 5>do is he had to file a fraud report with
<v Speaker 5>his credit card provider.
<v Speaker 2>While he's away.
<v Speaker 6>This whole resolution because they still haven't figured out how
<v Speaker 6>it happened and transferred.
<v Speaker 3>Is the weirdest part, Like that, Katie, doesn't make sense
<v Speaker 3>to me. How do you get transferred to a whole another.
<v Speaker 5>So they said they've been in direct contact with the
<v Speaker 5>trust to understand. But they said that they are trying
<v Speaker 5>to find a fair resolution, but it is just so
<v Speaker 5>com but this is it's kind of scary.
<v Speaker 2>Scary. It's like you don't know who you're talking to.
<v Speaker 5>You don't know who you're talking to, and it's like,
<v Speaker 5>especially when it comes well and when it comes to
<v Speaker 5>giving out your credit card number, just be super super certain.
<v Speaker 6>I don't know what this guy could have done.
<v Speaker 4>We use one where you have like one credit card
<v Speaker 4>where we use for like these type of transactions are online.
<v Speaker 4>It's always smart to have just one that's like you
<v Speaker 4>can easily shut down and put on pause, you know,
<v Speaker 4>alerts on and yeah, it's good to have one credit
<v Speaker 4>card that does that. So gonna be funny if this
<v Speaker 4>guy worked for like Philip Morris though, like a tobacco
<v Speaker 4>company smoker.
<v Speaker 2>It's like one of those things, you know. I love.
<v Speaker 4>Nicole was telling me about her one of her middle
<v Speaker 4>school band teachers last night last night, and her name
<v Speaker 4>was like Melissa Horn or something.
<v Speaker 2>How perfect was that?
<v Speaker 5>Yeah?
<v Speaker 2>There he is, all right, let me get it.
<v Speaker 4>You have the interesting really quick. I love this story.
<v Speaker 4>I watched the video a couple times this morning because
<v Speaker 4>I just found it fascinating. A mechanic in Minnesota discovered
<v Speaker 4>a wallet under the hood of a twenty fifteen. Oh
<v Speaker 4>check that twenty fourteen Ford Edge that came into the shop.
<v Speaker 4>So this Ford Edge is eleven years old. He's in
<v Speaker 4>there tinkering on the carts, got over one hundred and
<v Speaker 4>fifty thousand miles on it, popping the air filter off,
<v Speaker 4>and in there doing a little tune up on it,
<v Speaker 4>and he discovers a wallet underneath the air filter.
<v Speaker 1>Oh yeah, I know right. He's like, what the heck
<v Speaker 1>is this?
<v Speaker 4>So he grabs the wallet, opens it up, and there's
<v Speaker 4>a badge in there for a Ford Plant worker named Richard.
<v Speaker 4>It sounds like Richard built this car at the Ford
<v Speaker 4>Plant in Michigan. He had the wallet in his front
<v Speaker 4>pocket because he had sweatpants on that day, so he
<v Speaker 4>had a shirt pocket with the wallet, bending over the
<v Speaker 4>engine doing things. The wallet fell out. He didn't realize
<v Speaker 4>it until an hour or so later, and they he's like,
<v Speaker 4>I watched the interveret. He's like, we had a couple
<v Speaker 4>thousand vehicles that we had worked on that day.
<v Speaker 1>He's like, how would I know where the heck this
<v Speaker 1>wallet is?
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, So eleven years later, one hundred and fifty thousand miles.
<v Speaker 1>A mechanic just happened to be working on this.
<v Speaker 4>Car and found this dude's wallet with his badge cat
<v Speaker 4>in the wallet, credit cards, two hundred and fifty dollars
<v Speaker 4>worth of Kabella's gift card.
<v Speaker 2>Oh my god.
<v Speaker 4>So he did a quick Facebook search and found this
<v Speaker 4>guy who is now actually retired from the Ford plant.
<v Speaker 2>That's crazy.
<v Speaker 4>The car has been driven around for eleven years, one
<v Speaker 4>hundred and fifty thousand miles, and this wallet is still
<v Speaker 4>sitting in the engine.
<v Speaker 2>The first time he got his air filter change?
<v Speaker 4>God, right, Ford, she's probably a chicks car.
<v Speaker 2>First change to my changine. It's the first two hundred
<v Speaker 2>thousand right.
<v Speaker 1>Oh, it hasn't our air filter.
<v Speaker 2>This thing is charred and there's a wallet in it.
<v Speaker 4>Have you seen that video where the woman pulls up
<v Speaker 4>to like an advanced Auto parts or whatever she's like.
<v Speaker 4>She goes inside and gets the oil, pops the hood
<v Speaker 4>and just dumps the oil all over the engine. Somebody
<v Speaker 4>told her the engine needs oil, so she just she's
<v Speaker 4>out front and just pouring oil all over her engine.
<v Speaker 6>Then you laugh, Right, what else can you do?
<v Speaker 2>What else?
<v Speaker 6>And that has to be fake?
<v Speaker 2>Come on, I hope.
<v Speaker 1>So anyway, I posted the entire video of the auto.
<v Speaker 4>Workers Lost Wallet on our Facebook page. If you want
<v Speaker 4>to go check it out. It's worth a watch. The
<v Speaker 4>whole video is pretty good. It's worth a watch. I
<v Speaker 4>can find that at Jeremy Katie Josh on Facebook. There
<v Speaker 4>you go, there's your PMI with j k J
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