Explicit Episode 10: Unexpected Windfalls and Neighborhood Woes
Ep. 10

Episode 10: Unexpected Windfalls and Neighborhood Woes

Episode description

In this episode, Slim calls in with news of a life-changing lottery win, while Sandy deals with an escalating dispute with her next-door neighbor. Laurie opens up about her search for genuine community, Keith shares the strain on his marriage, and Darlene drops a bombshell about quitting her job. Plus, Leon talks about going back to school, and Lucille has big news about her daughter.

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0:00

LUKE: Alright, welcome back to Luke at the Roost. This is the Colin radio show

0:05

where you call in and tell me what's on your mind. My name is Luke,

0:10

I'm your host. If you'd like to call in, our number is 208-439-5853. That's 208-439-Luke.

0:16

Let's get the show started and our first caller today is going to be Slim.

0:21

Slim, welcome to the show. What would you like to talk about today?

0:26

SLIM: Hey Luke, yeah thanks for taking my call. So look, I won 50 grand

0:31

on a scratch ticket on Monday and I haven't told a single person yet. Not

0:35

my wife, not the church, nobody, and it's eating me alive because I'm a youth

0:40

pastor, right? Right?

0:44

LUKE: Wow, congratulations on your 50 grand win, what are you going to do with

0:47

the money?

0:50

SLIM: Well, that's the whole thing, Luke. I don't know. I mean, part of me

0:55

wants to just pay off the truck, maybe fix the AC at the church because

1:01

it's been broken since September and the board keeps saying there's no money.

1:06

LUKE: Well, here's a question for you. If you're a pastor and you work at

1:10

a church and you win the lottery, do you have to pay tax on that

1:14

lottery winning?

1:18

SLIM: Oh, yeah, absolutely. The state already took their cut when I claimed it, walked

1:22

out with about 37 after taxes.

1:25

LUKE: Oh, you've already got the money and you haven't spent any of it yet?

1:31

SLIM: Nope, it's just sitting in the bank like a damn time bomb. I keep

1:35

thinking about how my dad used to say, money's like a deer. You spook it,

1:39

it's gone. And I'm standing there with a rifle full of buckshot, trying not to

1:44

move.

1:48

LUKE: Wow, that's one of the most confusing analogies I've ever heard in my life.

1:53

But congratulations to you for your win. I can't imagine it's going to cost you

1:57

37 grand to fix the AC in your church.

2:02

SLIM: No, you're right. Probably three, four thousand tops, but see, that's where it gets

2:07

tricky. The second people find out I have this money, it's going to be slim.

2:12

Can you help with the new himmels or slim? My sister's kid needs braces. I've

2:17

been doing this job for 12 years, Luke.

2:22

LUKE: And what is your lord and savior say to do with the money?

2:27

SLIM: Man, that's the question I've been wrestling with all week. I keep going back

2:32

to the parable of the talents. You know, the guy who buried his money in

2:37

the ground got reamed for it. But then there's also, don't let your left hand

2:42

know what your right hand is doing when it comes to giving. I've been praying

2:46

on it every night this week, honestly.

2:51

LUKE: Well, I think you're probably going to come to the right, uh, right decision

2:57

and do the right thing with the money. Actually, you know what, I don't know

3:02

if there is a right thing to do with the money. It wasn't there before.

3:07

You wanted in the lottery. Good for you. Do you play the lottery a lot?

3:13

How much are you, were you down to win this 50 grand?

3:18

SLIM: First ticket I ever bought actually. Yeah, sure. I was at the circle K

3:23

getting gas and just, I don't know, impulse five bucks. My wife doesn't even know.

3:28

She thinks gambling's a sin. And honestly, I kind of agreed with her until I

3:34

scratched that thing off in the parking lot and nearly dropped my coffee.

3:39

LUKE: Well, you know, what the man with no sin throws stones first or whatever.

3:44

Uh, good for you. Good for your congregation. I hope that the money goes to

3:50

good use. And, um, and yeah, I don't think you have to feel bad about

3:55

winning. Just do something good with the money and it's all good.

4:00

SLIM: Yeah, you're right. I appreciate that, Luke. I think I've been making this harder

4:04

than it needs to be.

4:07

LUKE: For sure. And speaking of money, I got a question for you. How about

4:12

you tell us about something that you bought once that you regret? Uh, something you

4:17

spent money on and wished later that you hadn't.

4:22

SLIM: Oh, man. That's easy. About eight years ago, I bought this used jet ski

4:27

off some guy in Lord'sburg. Thought I'd take it out to Elephant Butte. You know,

4:31

make a whole thing of it with the youth group.

4:36

LUKE: You bought a, uh, Lord'sburg jet ski. How did that work out?

4:41

SLIM: No, no, Lord'sburg. It's a town about an hour west of here. Oh, yeah.

4:46

But yeah, the jet ski paid $2,200 bucks for it. Drove it up to the

4:52

lake exactly one time. Thing broke down in the middle of the water. Had to

4:57

get towed back to shore by some guy on a pontoon boat.

5:02

LUKE: Hey, well, now I guess the good news is you get 37 grand.

5:07

SLIM: You know, the thing's been sitting under a tarp behind my garage for seven

5:12

years. I think my wife would actually divorce me if I put another dime into

5:17

it. She brings it up every time I want to buy anything. Remember the jet

5:22

ski slim? It's like my personal scarlet letter back there.

5:27

LUKE: All right. Thanks for the call slim and, uh, congratulations on your big lottery

5:32

win. Uh, just don't take it back to the casino and you should be all

5:37

right. Next up on the line, we have, uh, Sandy. Sandy, welcome to the show.

5:42

What's what's on your mind today, Sandy?

5:47

SANDY: Hey, Luke, thanks for taking my call. So I got into it with my

5:51

neighbor tonight, like physically got into it. And I'm sitting here trying to figure out

5:56

if I need to call the cops or if that's just going to make everything

6:01

worse. We've been going back and forth for months now, but this time she actually

6:06

shoved me in my own driveway.

6:11

LUKE: shoved you how just to like a little pusher where you actually injured in

6:16

some way, where you did you fear for your life in this altercation?

6:21

SANDY: No, I mean, I didn't fall or anything, but it wasn't like a little

6:26

tap either. She put both hands on my shoulders and pushed me back hard enough

6:31

that I stumbled. The thing is I'm honestly more pissed off than scared, you know?

6:36

But that's what's got me worried because I shoved her right back and now I'm

6:41

thinking if I call the police, she's going to say I started it. This whole

6:45

thing kicked off because her dog keeps shitting in my yard and she refuses to

6:50

pick it up.

6:55

LUKE: Okay, so the dog shits in your yard, she's not picking it up and,

6:59

uh, and how does that turn into an altercation? You obviously confronted her about the

7:03

dog shitting situation.

7:07

SANDY: Yeah, so tonight I'm coming home from a birth. I was up for like

7:12

16 hours and I step right in a fresh pile getting out of my car.

7:17

I lost it, walked straight over to her place and knocked on the door with

7:22

the bottom of my shoe still covered in it.

7:27

LUKE: I should have kicked her in the face.

7:30

SANDY: Ha, I mean, I was tempted, but no, I just told her this is

7:34

the third time this week and she needs to keep her damn dog on her

7:38

own property.

7:42

LUKE: Well, yeah, that's annoying, it's never fun to step in and pile a dog

7:48

poo. But, uh, dogs do roam around and it is, uh, the outdoors and I

7:53

understand that people own their yards and stuff and it's, that's not fun, but the

7:59

same time it's kind of hard to control wild animals from doing wild animal things.

8:04

SANDY: See, that's the thing though. This isn't a wild animal. It's her dog. She

8:08

lets it out in the morning without a leash and it comes straight to my

8:13

yard every single time.

8:17

LUKE: Would it make any difference if it was a wild dog?

8:21

SANDY: I mean, yeah, because then I couldn't go knock on someone's door about it,

8:26

but this is her dog. She's responsible for it and honestly, if she just apologized

8:30

once or picked it up, we wouldn't even be here. Instead, she tells me I'm

8:35

being dramatic and that dogs go where they go. That's when my driveway and she

8:39

followed me.

8:44

LUKE: Okay, well, um, that's, that's no fun. It's never good to have a shitty

8:49

situation with your neighbor. What are you going to do about it?

8:54

SANDY: That's why I'm calling you, Luke. I don't know.

8:57

LUKE: Well, uh, you could put up a fence, you could move, you could, uh,

9:03

complain a lot at the town meeting. I don't, you can't really physically assault the

9:08

woman. You can't call the police on her. I guess you could call animal control

9:13

if you actually catch the dog in your yard. Are you positive that it's her

9:18

dog? Have you actually caught the dog in the act?

9:23

SANDY: Yeah, I've seen it. Walked outside two mornings ago and watched it squat right

9:27

by my mailbox while she's standing on her porch drinking coffee. And I did call

9:31

animal control last month.

9:36

LUKE: All right. Thanks for the call, Sandy. Good luck with your, uh, your dookie

9:40

shoes. And next on the radio show, we've got Keith. Keith, welcome to the show.

9:45

You're calling back. What's up today, sir?

9:49

KEITH: Hey, Luke. Yeah, I'm back. So I got an update on that video situation

9:54

and I'm not going to lie. It got weird real weird. I ended up taking

9:59

your advice kind of and I talked to her last week. Turns out she's been

10:04

coming to the cemetery because her apartment is too quiet. And she likes hearing the

10:09

highway noise from where I work.

10:13

LUKE: See, I told you it wasn't real weird. That's not weird. What's weird about

10:16

that?

10:19

KEITH: Well, okay, that pot's not weird. You're right. But here's the thing. After we

10:24

talked that first time, she started showing up on my shift specifically. Like she knows

10:29

my schedule now and two nights ago, she brought me coffee. Just walked right up

10:34

to the shed with two cups from that circle. K on Hudson and sat down

10:39

like we were having a planned meeting.

10:44

LUKE: Okay, that still doesn't sound very weird to me, sir. Let's get to the

10:47

weird part.

10:50

KEITH: All right. So last night, she asked if I wanted to come over to

10:56

her place after my shift ends. Just straight up asked me. And I'm sitting there

11:01

thinking, this woman is maybe 60, 65. And I'm married to Teresa. And I don't

11:06

even know this lady's actual name. I've just been calling her this whole time.

11:12

LUKE: Okay, so you got to let her down a little bit easy. Sorry, I'm

11:17

married. It's not that weird that a lonely widow is looking for some companionship at

11:23

the cemetery. I mean, maybe that's a little weird, but it's not that weird.

11:28

KEITH: Yeah, I mean, you're right. It's not that weird when you say it like

11:33

that. But here's where I messed up. I didn't say I was married. I panicked

11:38

and told her I had to go check on something by the North fence. And

11:43

I just walked away like a coward again.

11:47

LUKE: Okay, well, why is that? Is it because you actually want something to go

11:52

on with this widow? Is that what's the eating you up?

11:57

KEITH: No, man, that's not look. I don't want anything with her. But things with

12:02

Teresa have been so damn cold lately. We barely talk anymore except about bills or

12:07

whose turn it is to take the trash out. And here's this woman who's actually

12:13

interested in talking to me, bringing me coffee, asking about my day.

12:18

LUKE: Yeah, I understand that. It's nice to feel wanted and seen and heard and

12:22

all that. And it's okay for you to have other friends. I mean, you can

12:27

befriend this woman without doing anything shady at her house behind your wife's back. There's

12:31

nothing wrong with that.

12:36

KEITH: You're right. I know you're right. But I'm not going to lie. Part of

12:41

me keeps thinking about what it would be like to just say yes. Not even

12:45

for anything physical. Just to sit in someone's living room and have a conversation where

12:50

the other person actually wants to hear what I have to say. Teresa used to

12:54

be like that.

12:59

LUKE: Yeah, well, it sounds like you've got a couple things going on and I

13:04

don't think it's that weird to go over somebody's house and have a cup of

13:09

coffee and talk if you're seriously not into anything romantic or pursuing that relationship behind

13:14

your wife's back. You might want to talk to Teresa about that before you start

13:19

going over a strange woman's house though.

13:24

KEITH: Yeah, that's the problem though. How do I even start that conversation? Hey, Teresa,

13:29

there's this widow at the cemetery who wants to hang out. Is that cool? Yeah.

13:35

She's already pissed at me half the time about stuff I don't even understand. Last

13:40

week, she got mad because I didn't notice she rearranged the living room. I walked

13:46

right past the couch in a different spot three times before she pointed it out.

13:51

LUKE: Yeah, well, I mean, that sounds like marriage. So, I mean, you're in it.

13:57

But I think that's exactly the way that you deal with it. Hey, I met

14:02

a new friend. I'd like to hang out after work one day, have a cup

14:07

of coffee and talk about stuff. It's not a romantic thing. I'm not interested. She's

14:13

65 years old and I'm married to you. Teresa, the love of my life who

14:18

I would never have eyes for anyone else. And just make sure she knows that

14:23

and she's got a problem with it then deal with that problem.

14:29

KEITH: I hear you, but man, I don't know if I can say love of

14:34

my life right now and have it sound real. She'd see right through that.

14:39

LUKE: All right, well, if that's the truth then you and your wife need to

14:44

sit down and have some hard conversations and figure out if you want to continue

14:49

on living the way you're living because that's that's no good and you might be

14:54

better off with this widow or, you know, somebody else.

15:00

KEITH: Yeah, I've been sitting there thinking about that too. Maybe that's why this whole

15:04

thing is eating at me so much.

15:08

LUKE: Yeah, it could be. I mean, relationships are tough and if things have been

15:12

downhill for a while and you don't see them moving in a positive direction, it's

15:16

time to have some hard conversations.

15:21

KEITH: The thing is, we used to be good, really good. I don't know when

15:25

it changed exactly. Somewhere between the second mortgage and her mom getting sick and me

15:29

taking this graveyard shift, no pun intended. We just sort of stop being on the

15:34

same team.

15:38

LUKE: I think that happens. I think there are ways that you can get back

15:43

on the same team if you both want to, but you might also find that

15:48

neither one of you even, you know, likes each other anymore and it's time to

15:54

split up and that's okay too. I'm not going to lie.

15:59

LUKE: Let's see. What's something you believed in 10 years ago that you don't believe

16:02

anymore?

16:05

EARL: Oh man, that's a hell of a shift. 10 years ago I thought the

16:09

tea party was going to actually change things in Washington.

16:14

LUKE: Well, things did change in Washington.

16:16

EARL: Yeah, but not the way we thought. I mean, I was all in on

16:21

that stuff. Smaller government, fiscal responsibility, the whole deal. Now I look at it, and

16:26

I'm sitting there thinking none of these people actually meant any of it. They just

16:30

wanted their turn at the trough.

16:35

LUKE: Yeah, man, you're living you learn. That seems to be the way. No matter

16:39

who is in the office. They do not give a fuck about you. All right,

16:44

thanks for the call. Talk to your wife. Don't be a pussy. Next up on

16:48

the line, we have Laurie. Laurie, welcome to the show. How can we help you

16:53

today?

16:57

LAURIE: Hey, Luke, thanks for taking my call. So I've been working from home doing

17:03

data entry for like three years now. And honestly, it can get pretty isolating. But

17:08

I'm also really into open source technology. And I spend a lot of my free

17:13

time in these online communities, you know, contributing to projects, helping troubleshoot stuff.

17:19

LUKE: I do know. I do a lot of that myself. So what are you

17:22

working on?

17:25

LAURIE: Oh, nice. Right now I'm actually contributing to this documentation project for a Linux

17:30

distribution. Nothing glamorous, but it's stuff people actually use. And I've been learning rust on

17:35

the side messing around with some smaller tools. But here's why I called. I was

17:40

watching the Lost Finale the other day, right?

17:44

LUKE: Oh, yeah, I just watched the Lost Finale a couple weeks ago or maybe

17:49

a couple months ago now. But yeah, what about it?

17:54

LAURIE: Okay, so it really got me thinking about community and how people come together

17:58

around something bigger than themselves. And with Valentine's Day coming up, I'm sitting here alone

18:03

most days, just me and my computer screen. And I realized, these open source communities,

18:08

they're the closest thing I have to that feeling of belonging, you know? Like actually

18:13

being part of something that matters.

18:18

LUKE: Yes, I do know I totally understand that. And when I was a kid,

18:23

I used to hang out in IRC in the on the free node network. And

18:28

we had a channel called Linux people. And we did tutorials and wrote articles and

18:33

helped people that were trying to learn Linux. They would pop into IRC and ask

18:38

their questions. And we all tried our best to help them out. And I still

18:43

talk to some of those people today. That's been over 20 years. People that I've

18:48

never met that I met in those communities. So I don't think that's a bad

18:53

thing at all.

18:57

LAURIE: Yeah, exactly. That's what I'm talking about. And honestly, Luke, I think people don't

19:02

get how real those connections are. Like my family thinks I'm just sitting here alone

19:07

all the time, but I'm collaborating with people in Germany and Brazil and wherever working

19:11

on actual things that help people. But I guess what's been eating at me is

19:16

is that enough?

19:21

LUKE: Do you feel like it's enough? I mean, I usually do, sometimes I don't,

19:26

but most of the time I do feel like it's more than enough. That's a

19:31

very personal question. How do you feel about it? It's obviously bothering you.

19:36

LAURIE: I mean, most of the time, yeah, it feels good. But then like Thursday

19:41

night rolls around and Valentine's Day is coming up. And I'm 29. And I look

19:45

around my house and it's just quiet.

19:50

LUKE: Quiet's very nice though. And 29's not all that old. You get plenty of

19:55

time to do whatever you like. So I applaud you for spending your time doing

20:00

productive stuff with the type of people that make you better at what you do.

20:05

I think that's a good way to deal with your loneliness and to find some

20:10

community and camaraderie out in the world.

20:15

LAURIE: Thanks, I appreciate that. I guess part of me worries though. Like, am I

20:19

using these communities as a substitute for something else? Or is this just what connection

20:23

looks like now?

20:27

LUKE: Yeah, there's probably some of both of that. Now connection can be, it can

20:32

look like a lot of different things. You don't have to be in bed with

20:37

somebody to have a connection with them. You could, you know, have a very good

20:42

working relationship and friendship with somebody over the internet in Brazil. That's not all that

20:47

strange or weird, especially today. I mean, 20 years ago when I was doing it

20:52

and I was 12 years old, that was a little bit odd. But I don't

20:57

think it's very strange now.

21:02

LAURIE: You're right. And honestly, I heard Sandy call earlier tonight and I felt like

21:06

she was holding something back about that whole neighbor situation.

21:11

LUKE: Yeah, you know what, I think she was too. I certainly got that impression,

21:16

but she wasn't going to spill it. So we're just going to have to go

21:21

with her go with what she wanted to divulge. Anyway, Laurie, thanks for the call.

21:26

Keep it up with your documentation project. And if you want to find somebody to

21:31

hang out with on Valentine's Day, I'm sure you can do that. You sound like

21:36

a very nice lady. You enjoy the remainder of your night, all right? Hey, Gus,

21:41

Gus, welcome to the show. What's happening?

21:46

GUS: Yeah. Hey, Luke, so my ex showed up at the pawn shop today with

21:51

flowers like a whole bouquet and my girlfriend was there picking me up for lunch.

21:56

She saw the whole thing through the window before she even came in. Now she

22:00

won't talk to me and I don't know what the hell I'm supposed to say

22:05

to fix this.

22:10

LUKE: Your ex brought you flowers on Valentine's Day at your work?

22:14

GUS: Well, not quite Valentine's Day yet. It's Thursday, so we got a few days.

22:19

But yeah, just showed up out of nowhere. I haven't talked to Melissa in like

22:24

eight months. And she walks in with these roses talking about how she's been thinking

22:29

about things. My girlfriend Sarah sees her through the window. And by the time she

22:34

comes inside, Melissa's already gone, but the flowers are sitting right there on the counter.

22:40

Sarah just looked at me, turned around and left.

22:45

LUKE: Well, which one of them would you rather be with? Melissa or Sarah?

22:50

GUS: Sarah? I mean, it's Sarah, no question. Melissa and I were done for good

22:54

reasons. She couldn't handle that I work weird hours. Always wanted me to be someone

22:58

I'm not.

23:02

LUKE: Yeah, well, then problem solved. Just tell Sarah, hey, I didn't ask her to

23:06

bring me these flowers. There's nothing going on here. I'm not interested in her anymore.

23:11

And it's a free country. You know when somebody wants to bring your flowers, then

23:16

all right, you wasted your 24 bucks.

23:21

GUS: Yeah, I tried that. I called her like three times. Center text saying exactly

23:26

that. I didn't ask for this. I don't want Melissa back. The whole thing.

23:31

LUKE: Here's what you do. I got it figured out. So you take the flowers

23:36

that Melissa gave you and you bring them home. And on Valentine's Day, you give

23:41

those same flowers to Sarah and say these are for you.

23:46

GUS: Oh, man, that's, I mean, Sarah's not stupid. She saw those exact flowers. They

23:52

were these yellow roses with some kind of purple things mixed in. Real specific looking.

23:57

LUKE: Yeah, well, I think she'll appreciate your frugality. There's no use to wasting the

24:03

money on new flowers. If you already got something, you're not going to use. You

24:08

might as well get some use out of them. That's what I say.

24:13

GUS: I don't know, Luke.

24:15

LUKE: I feel like showing up with the same flowers my ex brought me is

24:19

going to make things about 10 times worse. Sarah's already pissed enough. Last thing I

24:24

need is her thinking I'm too cheap or too clueless to get her her own

24:28

flowers.

24:32

GUS: Well, I mean, that's what I would do. I would, I would take the

24:37

flowers that were given to me that I don't want and give them back to

24:43

her and be like, here, here you go. I was thinking of you.

24:48

LUKE: You know what? Maybe that works for you, but I think Sarah would throw

24:52

them at my head. She's not the type to find that charming. She'd see it

24:57

as me being either lazy or rubbing salt in the wound. I'm already in the

25:02

doghouse here. I need to figure out how to actually fix this, not make it

25:07

worse with recycled roses.

25:11

GUS: Well, you didn't do anything wrong. So you really don't have anything to fix.

25:16

If, uh, if there's jealousy going on there, then that's, that's really on her. You

25:22

can just say, hey, I let her know. I did not prompt this in any

25:27

way. There's nothing going on behind your back. I can't control what she does. She

25:32

came and dropped off flowers and you saw it and that's unfortunate, but there's nothing

25:37

going on there and you're the one that I want to be with and commit

25:42

to her in that way. And if she's got a problem with it, then, uh,

25:48

then you got to, then you got to deal with that and then you might

25:53

be better off going back to Melissa.

25:58

LUKE: I hear you, but it's not just jealousy. Sarah watched my axe walk into

26:02

my workplace flowers and a whole speech about how she misses me and wants to

26:06

try again. That's not nothing.

26:11

GUS: It is nothing. It's nothing that you did. I mean, you can control that.

26:16

LUKE: So yeah, but I didn't shut it down fast enough either. I just kind

26:21

of stood there like an idiot while Melissa went on and Sarah saw that. I

26:26

should have cut her off right away, told her to leave.

26:31

GUS: Well, it sounds like you're a pussy either way. You can either stand up

26:36

to your current girlfriend or you can stand up to your former girlfriend, but one

26:41

way or the other, you're going to have to stand up.

26:46

LUKE: You're right. I've been trying to keep everybody happy, and I'm just making it

26:51

worse. I froze up with Melissa because I didn't want to be a jerk, and

26:56

now Sarah thinks I was actually considering it or something.

27:01

GUS: Just sit her down and have that conversation, and if that's a problem, then

27:06

it probably shows how long you've been with this chick, Sarah. How long?

27:11

LUKE: About eight months, we moved in together maybe two months ago, which I know

27:17

was probably too fast, but rents expensive, and we were spending every night together anyway.

27:22

GUS: Okay, well, you don't know this woman at all. So if something this small

27:28

is going to cause strife in your life, maybe it's time to find another roommate.

27:33

LUKE: That's the thing though. It's not really that small when you think about it.

27:39

My ex showing up with flowers isn't like some random thing, and Sarah and I

27:44

were solid before this. She's been good to me, better than Melissa ever was.

27:50

GUS: All right, well then talk to her and get it worked out, and if

27:54

she's a reasonable person, she'll come around. If she's not a reasonable person, then you're

27:59

an idiot for dealing with that, but that's your choice, and that's my advice, and

28:03

I'm sticking to it.

28:08

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29:00

All right. Okay, let's see, we've got Darlene on the line. Hey, Darlene, what's the

29:06

weirdest thing you've ever found in your car?

29:11

DARLENE: Oh man, Luke, that's okay. So about three years ago, I'm cleaning out the

29:16

bear's truck, right? And I find this whole rotisserie chicken, like the entire thing from

29:21

the grocery store, still in the container, wedged under the passenger seat. It had been

29:26

there for God knows how long, completely mummified.

29:31

LUKE: What's the bear's truck?

29:32

DARLENE: Oh, sorry, the bear, that's David, my husband. We've called him that since high

29:37

school. He's got this big beard and he's just, you know, bear shaped. His truck,

29:42

the one he drives to the plant every day.

29:47

LUKE: All right, yeah, that's a little bit weird. You found a whole rotisserie chicken

29:52

under the seat of your husband's truck. That was there for months and months.

29:57

DARLENE: Yeah, and the thing is, he swore up and down, he had no idea

30:02

how it got there, like who buys a whole rotisserie chicken and just forgets about

30:07

it. But that's David. He'll stop at the store on the way home, get distracted

30:11

and half the groceries end up living in that truck for weeks. But listen, that's

30:16

not why I called.

30:21

LUKE: Well, before you get to that, did you eat it?

30:25

DARLENE: What? No.

30:26

LUKE: Okay. All right. Why did you call darling? How can we help you?

30:31

DARLENE: So I've been sitting on this resignation letter for two months now. Two months,

30:36

Luke, I work at the DMV and I just, I can't do it anymore.

30:42

LUKE: All right. So what's holding you up? Why are you sitting on it?

30:47

DARLENE: I don't know what comes next. I mean, I'm 46 years old. We've got

30:52

the mortgage. David's hours at the plant aren't what they used to be. And it's

30:57

not like I have some big plan, you know? I just know I can't keep

31:02

going in there every day, feeling like this.

31:06

LUKE: I fully support that. Do you have any ideas as to where you're going

31:12

to go or what you're going to do after you submit that letter?

31:17

DARLENE: That's the problem. I don't. I mean, I've thought about it. Believe me. Maybe

31:21

something with people that actually feels like it matters, you know? Not just processing renewals

31:24

all day.

31:28

LUKE: Well, are you looking to do work that matters or are you looking to

31:32

get paid?

31:35

DARLENE: Oh man, that's the question, isn't it? I mean, we need the money, obviously.

31:39

But Luke, I've been doing this for almost 15 years and I just feel like

31:44

I'm disappearing a little more every day.

31:48

LUKE: Yeah, I understand that. And I think that's why I'm asking which you're looking

31:53

to do. You can do both, but I think if you need the money, then

31:57

you should focus on finding a job that's going to make you some money without

32:02

distress and then take care of the importance or the fulfilling part after work in

32:07

your personal life.

32:11

DARLENE: Yeah, that makes sense. I guess I've been thinking it has to be one

32:17

big thing, you know? Like the job has to be the answer to everything. But

32:22

you're right. I could find something that pays the bills without making me miserable and

32:27

then do something that actually means something on my own time.

32:32

LUKE: Yeah, there are definitely jobs that can be both good money and fulfilling, but

32:37

they're few and far between. And especially if you're leaving a job without another one

32:42

lined up, I think my focus would be more on the salary with low stress

32:48

and then find the community service aspect elsewhere because I don't think there's a lot

32:53

of good paying community service oriented jobs that aren't stressful. I think when you add

32:58

those three requirements up there's a there's a dearth of opportunity.

33:04

DARLENE: You're right. I've been building this up in my head like it has to

33:09

be perfect or else I'm just trading one trap for another. Maybe I just need

33:14

to get out of the DMV first and breathe a little. Find something stable that

33:19

doesn't make me want to scream and then figure out the rest.

33:24

LUKE: There you go. Take yourself a little sabbatical, a couple of weeks off, figure

33:28

out what it is you want to do. Find something, you know, maybe it'll fall

33:33

into your lap.

33:37

LUCILLE: But if you continue just hanging on at the DMV where you hate your

33:42

life every day, it's not going to get better and the days are going to

33:48

go by and you're going to find yourself there at 60 wondering why you didn't

33:53

leave when you thought of it the first time. God that's what scares me the

33:59

most. David keeps saying just give it another year but that's what I said last

34:04

year and the year before that. I don't want to wake up at 60 still

34:10

sitting behind that same desk with that resignation letter still in my drawer, you know.

34:15

LUKE: Well, hand the letter in and jump off. I don't want to say jump

34:20

off a cliff but, you know, take the leap, the leap of faith I guess

34:24

and spend some time to figure it out and see what happens. What's the worst

34:28

that could happen?

34:33

LUCILLE: I mean, the worst is we can't pay the mortgage, right? But we've got

34:38

some savings and David's got his job at the plant. We're not going to starve.

34:44

And that's the worst. The worst is you can't pay the mortgage and lots of

34:49

people have got into a situation where they can't pay the mortgage. There's financial assistance.

34:54

You could live in a cheaper place. You can move. So if the worst is

35:00

that you can't pay the bank, then you know, is that worth being miserable for

35:05

the rest of your life for? No, no, it's not. You're right. I've been so

35:11

scared of what could go wrong that I haven't even thought about what could go

35:16

right. Maybe I finally sleep through the night again without grinding my teeth.

35:22

LUKE: Well, I wish you the best of luck because being miserable all the time

35:27

is not good for your health and you may not make it to 60 if

35:32

you, if you stay stressed out about a job that you hate for a long

35:37

time. Leon, Leon, welcome back to the show. How are you today?

35:43

LEON: Oh, man, I'm doing all right, Luke. Thanks for having me back. So listen,

35:48

I actually did it. I reached out to UNM yesterday about that computer science program.

35:54

LUKE: Hey, congratulations. Good work. Did you reach out to the bank about the loan

35:57

for that computer science program?

36:01

LEON: Yeah, well, hold on. I haven't gotten that far yet. I just sent an

36:06

email to the admissions office to see if they even still have programs for, you

36:11

know, older students coming back. But here's the thing that's got me twisted up. Amber

36:16

thinks I should just do one of those online boot camp things instead. Says it's

36:20

faster and cheaper. And Manny's telling me I'm overthinking it and should just apply to

36:25

the full degree program like I was going to do back in 96. I don't

36:30

know who's right.

36:35

LUKE: Well, I don't know who's right either, but I can tell you I'm not

36:40

a fan of traditional schooling and I think it's designed to take your money and

36:46

not provide you the value that that maybe you think. So my recommendation would be

36:51

to not do that and take advantage of the learning opportunities that are free and

36:57

all around you, like the whole of human knowledge that's available at your fingertips and

37:02

just buckle down and learn on your own. But I recognize some people don't operate

37:08

that way and if you need the structure of the college course, then then and

37:13

you can afford it. Make sure you can afford it. Then do that.

37:18

LEON: Yeah, see, that's kind of what's eating at me though. Like I said, I'm

37:23

not great at the self-teaching thing. I've tried watching YouTube videos about Python and all

37:28

that, but I just end up clicking around and not retaining anything. I need somebody

37:33

to tell me what to do next, you know. But the money part, that's real.

37:38

Amber and I sat down with the numbers last night and between what I've got

37:43

saved and maybe cutting back on some stuff, I could swing a boot camp without

37:48

taking out loans.

37:53

LUKE: Well, that's fantastic. Then that's no brainer, you know, and don't bet the farm

37:58

on it, but if you're just going to take a boot camp, that's not a

38:03

four year degree, then absolutely go for it and congratulations on taking that step.

38:09

LEON: Yeah, I appreciate that Luke. I'm still nervous as hell about it, but my

38:13

daughter, she's the one who found that old letter. She keeps texting me asking if

38:18

I've done anything yet. It's like she's holding me accountable, which is weird because I'm

38:23

supposed to be the parent, you know.

38:28

LUKE: Hey, you know, whatever works if she's holding you accountable and it's working for

38:32

you and moving your life in a positive direction, then I'm for it. Good for

38:35

you.

38:39

LEON: Yeah, it is what it is. I guess I'm just calling because I wanted

38:44

to tell somebody outside my circle, you know, like making it real. Man, he's been

38:50

busting my balls about it for 20 years, so telling him doesn't count.

38:55

LUKE: All right, well, I appreciate that you reached out to let me know. Uh,

38:59

hey there. I got a question for you. What's something that you bought that actually

39:03

changed your life?

39:07

LEON: Oh, man, that's a good question. Let me think. Honestly, it was my Subaru.

39:13

LUKE: It was your Subaru. How did that change your life?

39:17

LEON: Well, I bought it used about five years ago right after my old truck

39:21

finally died and it sounds stupid, but having something reliable, like something that actually starts

39:26

every morning and doesn't leave me stranded. It changed how I felt about my job.

39:30

I could take longer halls. I wasn't stressed about breaking down with somebody's car on

39:35

the hook.

39:39

LUKE: All right, that's a good one. Congratulations on your Subaru. Change your life. That's

39:45

fantastic. And now it's time for another word from our sponsors. Stress, sore, skeptical, doesn't

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wellness is a feeling and feelings can be purchased. All right placebo leaf and we're

40:40

going to take one more call tonight and our lucky last caller is Lucille. Lucky

40:45

Lucille. Welcome to the radio show. What would you like to talk about today?

40:51

LUCILLE: Hey Luke, it's Lucille.

40:52

LUKE: That's what I said. Close enough.

40:55

LUCILLE: So my kid just told me they're getting engaged to someone they met on

40:59

the internet three weeks ago. Three weeks, Luke.

41:03

LUKE: Your kid? You sound like you're about three weeks old.

41:07

LUCILLE: I'm 30, Luke. My kid's 19. Yeah, I got married young myself right out

41:13

of high school to David. So I'd get it, but this is different. They met

41:18

this person online and have never even been in the same room together.

41:23

LUKE: And they're getting married? How's that going to work?

41:27

LUCILLE: Well, that's the thing. They're planning to meet in person for the first time

41:32

next month, and apparently that's when they want to get engaged for real. Like the

41:37

online part was just the warm-up. I don't even know if I should say something

41:42

or just let them figure it out, you know?

41:47

LUKE: I think the more you say, the more likely they are to do stupid

41:52

things so you might want to just let them figure it out.

41:57

LUCILLE: Yeah, that's kind of what David said too. But, Luke, I'm sitting here thinking

42:01

about all the ways this could go wrong. Like what if this person isn't who

42:06

they say they are? What if my kid flies out there and gets hurt or

42:11

worse? I know if I push too hard, they'll just dig in. But doing nothing

42:16

feels like I'm failing them.

42:21

LUKE: Well, you could just have a conversation. That's usually my advice for everybody is

42:26

sit down with the person that you need to talk to and talk to them.

42:31

Let them know that you're concerned, but you support their decisions. And if it goes

42:36

wrong, be there to pick them up when they fall.

42:41

LUCILLE: You're right. I know you're right. It's just hard because I married David when

42:46

I was 20 and everyone told us we were too young. And here we are

42:51

10 years later still figuring our shit out in therapy.

42:55

LUCILLE: So part of me wants to say, I get it. Follow your heart. But

43:01

the other part is screaming that at least David and I knew each other in

43:06

person, you know? We had history. This feels reckless even by my standards.

43:11

LUKE: Well, you know, just because his reckless doesn't mean it's wrong and you don't

43:15

necessarily know best and they could fly out there and meet and have it work

43:19

out perfectly.

43:23

LUCILLE: That's probably not going to happen. And I think anybody with any life experience

43:28

would know that. But but stranger things have happened like stranger things this show.

43:34

LUKE: Ha, yeah, I guess so.

43:36

LUCILLE: I mean, I don't want to be the mom who ruins this for them

43:41

if it actually is something real. Maybe I'm just freaked out because Valentine's Day is

43:47

coming up and they keep posting about how romantic it's all going to be. I

43:52

think I just need to hear someone say it's okay to be worried, but still

43:57

let them make their own mistakes. That's what you're supposed to do, right?

44:03

LUKE: That is what you're supposed to do. It's okay to be worried but you

44:07

still got to let people make their own mistakes.

44:11

LUCILLE: Yeah, God, that's hard though. I keep thinking about what I would have wanted

44:15

my parents to say to me back then. And honestly, I probably would have ignored

44:19

them anyway.

44:23

LUKE: Of course you would have. We all did. That's part of growing up is

44:27

ignoring your parents good advice.

44:31

LUCILLE: You know what's funny is I heard Sandy call earlier the one with the

44:36

neighbor and the dog shit situation and I kept thinking she needs to just have

44:41

a direct conversation instead of letting it build up. But here I am doing the

44:46

same damn thing with my own kid just avoiding the uncomfortable talk.

44:51

LUKE: Yep, you're going to have to have that talk with your kid and if

44:57

you don't, that doesn't really matter either. She's going to go do what she's going

45:02

to do and deal with the consequences. So you can you can be there for

45:08

or you can be domineering and overpowering and pusher in the arms of a stranger.

45:13

They can lope and vegas because they're mad at you. So better off to just

45:19

have a hard to hard conversation. Let her know your concerns and let her know

45:24

that you support her. So Lucille, what's the dumbest way you've ever injured yourself?

45:30

LUCILLE: Oh Jesus, okay random turn but I'll bite. I was showing a house last

45:35

year and tried to demonstrate how sturdy the deck railing was by leaning on it

45:39

real hard and the whole thing just gave way. Though right into the bushes in

45:44

front of the clients, sprained my wrist and had to finish the showing covered in

45:49

mulch. They didn't buy the house.

45:54

LUKE: That's too bad. All right well thanks for calling in. We appreciate we appreciate

45:59

it. I hope everything works out with your daughter and her new husband and you

46:04

don't worry about it too much. You know you've got your own relationship to worry

46:10

about. That's the end of our show folks. Thanks to everybody that called in and

46:15

we'll do this again tomorrow. So think about what you want to talk about and

46:20

call in. You can call in the numbers 208-439-5853. That's 208-439-Luc.