SPEAKER_00
0:00
Welcome
back
to
Brain's
Gone
Bold.
We're
happy
to
have
you
with
us
as
always
as
we
explore
some
topics
that
we
think
are
interesting
to
us.
Hopefully
you
will
too.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03
0:14
That's
the
hope.
Yeah.
And
you
know,
I
knew
I
feel
like
we
sound
like
broken
records
when
we
say
this,
that
we
want
to
hear
from
them.
But
if
they're
crap
topics
and
you're
like,
why
are
they
even
talking
about
this?
Tell
us
that.
Like,
I
want
to
hear
it.
What
would
be
a
better
topic?
SPEAKER_00
0:28
You
want
negative
feedback?
SPEAKER_03
0:29
It's
not
negative,
it's
constructive.
SPEAKER_00
0:32
It's
like,
hey,
I
you're
asking
the
internet
to
give
us
negative
feedback.
SPEAKER_03
0:38
Listen,
I
I
honestly
sit
in
a
butt
pucker
every
single
time
our
episodes
publish.
Cause
I'm
waiting,
and
I
mean
it.
I'm
waiting
for
the
feedback.
I'm
waiting
for
the,
oh
my
gosh,
you
look
like
you
ate
another
person,
or
oh
my
gosh,
the
topic.
I'm
listening
people
are
mean.
And
so
I'm
waiting
for
that.
And
so
I
mean
it
when
I
say
my
butt's
puckered.
Like
I'm
just
waiting.
And
so
the
fact,
first
of
all,
thank
you
for
not.
Um,
the
fact
that
we've
had
some
really
nice
feedback,
and
and
most
of
it's
from
people
we
know,
which
is
also
really
nice
too.
But
um,
I
do
want
to
hear
it.
Like,
if
this
isn't
landing,
if
the
conversations
that
we're
having
don't
make
sense,
or
you'd
want
to
hear
us
talk
about
them,
tell
us.
Like,
I'd
love
to
hear
that
constructively,
not
in
a
mean
way.
SPEAKER_00
1:29
Oh,
so
yes,
and
Janine's
love
language
is
words
of
affirmation.
So
please
tell
us
how
great
we
are.
SPEAKER_03
1:36
And
remind
us,
Maria,
what
is
yours?
It's
quality
time.
SPEAKER_00
1:41
Didn't
you
time
it
as
a
service?
SPEAKER_03
1:43
Okay,
right.
SPEAKER_02
1:44
So
I
don't
know
how
they
can
help
with
that,
but
well,
spend
that
quality
time
with
us.
There
you
go.
Yeah.
Listening
to
our
episode.
Show
me
your
listening.
Show
me
the
money.
Yes.
SPEAKER_03
1:59
Okay,
so
Maria,
what
are
we
gonna
talk
about
today?
SPEAKER_00
2:03
I
think
we're
gonna
talk
about
the
topic
of
quitting.
And
I
mentioned
this
to
you
a
while
back
in
our
discussions
because
it's
it's
coming
up
for
me
in
different
ways.
Um,
I
grew
up
in
the
era
where,
you
know,
you're
not
a
quitter.
You
just
have
to
plow
through,
finish
what
you
start,
don't
quit.
And
that
could
look
like
a
lot
of
different
things.
Fast
forward
to
me
much
older
and
as
a
mother,
and
I
wrestle
with
this
specifically
as
a
mother
because
I
want
my
son
to
be
able
to
discern
for
himself
when
something
isn't
right
and
be
okay
with
that.
So,
you
know,
as
an
example,
when
we
are
looking
at,
you
know,
colleges
or
college
programs
or
different
schools
that
he
might
explore,
yeah.
I'm
trying
to
reinforce
to
him
that
if
you
make
a
decision
today
about
what
you
want
to
do
or
be,
that
does
not
have
to
be
where
you
land.
You
can
change
your
plan.
Right.
And,
you
know,
if
you
think
about
that
in
the
context
of
quitting,
I
think
there
are
a
lot
of
people
whose
parents
would
have
said,
absolutely
not.
You
don't
be
a
quitter.
Or
however
you
want
to
phrase
it,
or
whatever
your
perception
is
of
it.
Um,
and
that
comes
up
for
me
in
a
lot
of
different
ways,
specifically
as
it
relates
to
being
a
mother,
but
also
for
myself.
Um,
you
know,
when
does
it
make
sense
to
give
up?
Or
to
just
say,
you
know,
this
isn't
working
for
me
anymore,
this
isn't
good
for
me,
this
isn't
what
I
thought
it
would
be,
this
isn't
good
for
my
mental
or
physical
health,
whatever,
you
know,
it
insert
whatever
you
need
to
in
the
blank.
Um,
but
I
thought
it
was
interesting
to
talk
about
with
you
because
I'm
I
want
to
know
your
perspective
on
it.
You
know,
when
is
it
okay
to
quit?
Is
it
ever
not
okay
to
quit?
SPEAKER_03
4:17
Well,
I
almost
said
it
depends,
but
I've
decided
I'm
not
going
to
say
you're
not
allowed
to
say
that.
Yeah,
I'm
gonna
avoid
that
in
this
episode.
And
so
I
think
all
of
what
you
said,
yes.
Meaning
I
grew
up
in
a
house
where
you
don't
quit.
If
you've
committed
to
something,
you
fulfill
your
obligations.
I
mean,
let's
also
talk
about
the
fact
that
I
grew
up
in
the
70s
and
80s,
and
gold
watch
society
was
still
a
thing
where
you
know
your
parents
worked
for
the
same
company
for
almost
all
of
their
lives
until
they
retired
and
got
their
gold
watch.
And
that
had
started
transitioning
toward,
I'm
gonna
say,
you
know,
the
early
to
mid-90s.
And
so
my
first
parts
of
my
working
life
were
is
still
in
that
kind
of
society.
Growing
up,
if
we
joined
a
team,
a
sports
team,
as
we
were
participants
on
the
team,
you
know,
the
soccer
team,
whatever,
we
were
expected
to
fulfill
our
obligation.
Not
only
because
we
had
committed,
but
also
because
we
had
teammates
who
were
depending
on
us.
Right.
So
there
was
that
whole
thing.
Now,
truthfully,
I
did
not
join
a
whole
lot
of
team
sports
for
a
number
of
reasons
that
we
can
get
into
another
time.
But
my
father's
biggest
thing
is
he
did
not
want
my
sister
and
I
to
get
bruised.
And
so
sports
were
not
a
thing
in
our
house.
Um,
my
sister
played
soccer.
I
was
like,
I
could,
you
know,
do
without
it.
But
yeah,
he
just
had
this
real
weird
thing
about
us
being
bruised.
So
we
just
didn't,
um,
it
wasn't
a
thing.
But
with
the
kids,
so
my
sister's
kids,
they
my
sister
and
her
husband
are
very
clear.
If
you
join
that
team,
you
are
part
of
that
team.
You
are
an
active
team
member,
you
are
there
for
your
teammates
because
they
are
counting
on
you
and
you
made
that
commitment.
You
don't
have
to
do
it
again
next
year,
but
you
committed
to
this
season,
you
will
play
this
season.
And
so
which
resonated
with
me.
And
I
think
we're
seeing
something
different,
you
know,
more
recently
with
you
know,
you
join
and
whatever,
you
can
you
can
pivot.
I
personally
sit
on
both
sides
of
the
fence
because
if
it's
a
detriment
and
that
child
is
being
negatively
affected
by
it,
but
they've
given
it
the
old
college
try,
as
they
say.
They've,
you
know,
worked
hard,
they've
tried
to
do
the
things,
and
they
it's
still
just
not
a
good
fit
for
them,
then
I'm
okay
with
that.
I
really
am
okay
with
them.
Not
that
I'm
trying
to
be,
you
know,
I
don't
know
what
the
word
is
on
it,
um,
wishy-washy
about
it.
But,
you
know,
as
long
as
they've
given
a
trade,
like
the
first
day
they
walk
in,
like,
nope,
not
for
me.
You
know,
there's
also
truthfully,
there's
also
skills
involved.
And
if
they
just
don't
show
that
they
have
the
skills
for
it,
you
know,
like
so
the
kid
who
can't
hit
the
ball
ever
or
whatever,
and
they're
like,
Yeah,
I'm
not
good
at
this,
you're
right,
you're
not.
So
from
that
standpoint,
but
I
can
see
as
a
parent
how
you
know,
towing
that
line
so
that
you're
raising
somebody
who,
you
know,
is
resilient
and
puts
in
the
effort
and
does
all
the
things
before
allowing
them
to,
you
know,
make
a
different
choice.
I
can
see
where
there's
a
struggle.
You
know?
Yeah.
I
I
mean
it's
a
struggle
for
me,
for
myself,
like
starting
something
and
then
going,
I
don't
like
this.
And
then
just
saying,
well,
I'm
not
gonna
do
it
anymore.
SPEAKER_00
7:50
But
yeah,
yeah.
It's
tough
though.
This
is
totally
unrelated,
but
for
we
when
we
when
you
just
said
that
for
some
reason,
it
made
me
think
of
I
think
you
and
I
probably
have
both
been
in
childhood
sitting
at
a
dinner
table
being
forced
to
eat
100%
the
Brussels
sprouts
that
we
absolutely
hated.
And
in
my
case,
there
were
a
couple
of
times
I
remember
at
my
dad's
well,
on
my
dad's
side,
he
there
were
times
where
I
had
to
sit
there
at
the
table
probably
for
like
two
hours
because
I
did
not
want
to
eat
whatever
was
on
my
plate.
SPEAKER_03
8:26
Silent
tears
coming
down
my
face.
Yep.
Oh,
Maria,
my
mother
that
you
love
so
much,
I
would
see
that
meal
again
for
breakfast.
Because
at
some
point
it
would
be
my
bedtime,
and
her
and
my
dad
would
go,
okay,
go
to
bed,
like
from
the
kitchen
table.
And
I
would
go
to
bed.
And
then
when
I
would
get
up
in
the
morning,
that
same
plate
was
there
for
me
in
the
morning.
Yeah.
I
mean,
they
were
not
kidding.
SPEAKER_00
8:53
So,
okay.
I
know
this
is
off
topic,
but
I
just
want
to.
SPEAKER_03
8:56
When
do
we
not
go
off
topic?
SPEAKER_00
8:59
What
do
you
think
that
what
did
that
come
from
for
them?
SPEAKER_03
9:04
I
believe
that.
At
the
time,
I
thought
it
just
came
from
pure
evil.
However,
as
an
adult,
I
think
it
came
from
a
place
of
scarcity.
We
don't
have
a
lot.
We
put
this
on
the
table
for
you.
This
is
what
we
have
to
eat.
This
is
what
you're
going
to
eat.
So
I
think,
you
know,
not
to
say
that
we
live
like
paupers,
we
didn't.
Like
I
believe
in
my
child
brain,
I
think
that
we
had
everything.
And
so
there
was
never
a
time
that
I
felt
like
we
were
poor
people.
And
so
my
mother
cooked
it.
And
my
father
was
that
guy
who
was
like,
Your
mother
made
this
for
you.
The
only
exception
to
that
was
my
mother
and
sister
liked
liver
and
onions,
and
my
dad
did
not
like
it,
nor
did
I.
And
so
if
my
mom
made
liver
and
onions,
her
and
Lisa
would
eat
that,
and
then
he
and
I
could
have
something
else.
That
was
the
only
exception.
It
was
because
he
didn't
like
it.
So
yeah.
It
didn't
matter
if
you
didn't
like
it.
It
didn't
matter
at
all,
but
thank
God
he
didn't
like
it
because
then
I
got
to
have
something
different
as
well.
SPEAKER_00
10:05
So
but
again,
so
that
speaks
to
it,
that's
not
about
scarcity.
That's
about
feeling
like
I
just
want
to
explore
that
for
a
second
because
to
me,
that
is
the
the
adult's
pin
opinion
matters
than
the
child,
matters
more
than
the
child.
SPEAKER_03
10:22
Yeah,
there's
no
doubt.
But
as
far
as
the
norm,
it
really
was
about
like
I
do
think
respect
played
into
it,
but
I
think
there
was
a
mindset
like
that
his
parents
and
my
mother's
parents
before
that,
you
know,
you
work
very
hard
for
the
money
that
you
get
to
buy
the
food
that
gets
put
on
the
table.
And
so
if
I'm
putting
this
on
the
table,
you're
gonna
eat
it.
And
what
I
would
say
about
that
liver
thing
is
mom
didn't
make
it
for
everybody.
She
only
made
a
very
small
amount.
It
was
just
her
and
my
sister.
And
so
it's
not
like
she
made
this
whole
thing
and
then
he'd
go,
I'm
not
gonna
eat
it.
Like
it
was
just
we
had
two
separate.
And
sometimes
he
and
I
would
go
out.
But
yeah,
it
was
planned
for.
And
most
times
we
just
had
sandwiches.
Like
if
they
were
having
that,
we'd
have
sandwiches
or
cereal
or
whatever.
It
wasn't
like
this
grand,
like
she
cooked
two
different
meals.
But
um,
yeah,
it's
it's
interesting.
I
love
that
this
conversation
as
far
as
quitting
made
you
think
about
that
sitting
at
the
table
and
and
not
quitting
on
our
food
that
is
put
in
front
of
us.
SPEAKER_00
11:22
I
don't
know
how
we
got
there.
I
do
not
know
how
we
got
there,
but
uh
yeah,
it
just
popped
into
my
brain.
Um
so
so
what
are
your
thoughts?
I
know
you
were
kind
of
talking
in
the
context
of
sports
teams
as
an
example.
Like
if
you
get
a
sports
team
to
me,
that's
a
I
don't
want
to
say
an
easy
one,
but
a
little
easier.
I
think
it
depends
on
who
the
parent
is.
Yeah,
that
sort
of
thing.
Um
but
what
are
your
thoughts
on
other
forms
of
quitting?
And
and
how
do
you
feel
about
it
for
yourself?
SPEAKER_03
11:53
I
mean,
well,
I
mean,
you
know
me,
so
you
know
that
I
have
left
a
job,
which
uh
so
instead
of
saying
quitting,
I
said
I
left,
but
I
quit
a
job.
And
how
I
feel,
you
know,
it's
it's
interesting
because
I
don't
want
to
say
um
that
word
that
I
said
I
wouldn't
say.
And
so
I
think
it's
situational
for
sure.
And
um,
you
know,
when
I
go
into
a
situation,
I
don't
go
into
that
situation
thinking,
well,
it's
only
temporary.
You
know,
for
the
most
part,
I'm
thinking
long
term.
I'm
thinking,
especially
when
I
say
a
situation
like
a
workplace,
I'm
thinking
long
term.
I'm
thinking
of
contributing
and
retiring.
And
I
really
do
think
of
all
of
those
things.
I
don't
take
a
job
or
I
have
haven't
historically
taken
a
job
thinking,
well,
it's
only
gonna
be
six
months
and
then
I'll
move
on.
Um,
and
so
that's
just
my
mentality.
I
don't
think
everybody
else
feels
the
same
way.
I
think
when
people
go
into
something,
they
may
go
in
going,
this
is
just
to
pay
this
bill
or
this
situation
or
whatever.
And
so
it's
it
doesn't
have
the
same
kind
of
weight,
right?
Right.
I
mean,
that's
that's
it.
And
so,
but
for
me
personally,
I
don't
take
it
lightly.
It's
something
that
I
struggle
with.
Um,
it
has
to
be
a
really,
really,
I'm
gonna
say
critical
situation
for
me
to
decide
not
to
do
that
job
anymore
because
it
affects
so
many
different
things.
Like,
where
am
I
gonna
get
my
paycheck?
I
don't
know
that
I'm
gonna
get
another
job
right
away.
So
you
end
up
staying
in
that
situation
maybe
longer
than
you
should
have
anyway.
And
so,
like
I
said,
I
just
don't
take
it
lightly.
I
believe
that
people
should
have
the
opportunity
to
pivot.
And
when
I
coach
people
now,
especially
of
like
career
type
coaching,
I
tell
them
all
the
time
just
because
you
take
this
job,
this
isn't
forever.
You
can
decide
just
like
they're
deciding,
they're
evaluating
your
performance
all
along.
You're
evaluating
them
too.
Okay.
And
so
think
about
that
when
you
go
in.
While
you're
there,
give
them
everything
that
you
can.
Don't
half
ass
it,
but
also
know
that
this
isn't
forever.
This
is
a
today
decision.
Okay.
And
tomorrow's
a
tomorrow
decision.
If
you
recognize
the
culture
fits,
all
the
things
that
you
can't
find
out
from
outside
um
isn't
what
you
thought
it
was,
it's
okay
to
make
a
different
decision.
And
so
for
myself,
I
did
not
coach
myself
in
the
same
way.
But
for
the
clients
I
work
with
now,
I
always
do.
I
just
think
it's
important.
You're
not
stuck.
We
are
not
um
we
are
movable
people.
So
we
get
to
move
from
place
to
place.
We
don't
grow
roots,
is
my
point.
We're
not
trees.
You're
struggling
with
that,
so
I
can't
wait
to
hear
what
comes
out
of
your
face.
SPEAKER_00
14:39
No,
I
think
I
just
you
just
hit
something
for
me.
Uh,
and
I
just
realized
too,
similar
to
you,
I
do
not
give
myself
the
same
grace
that
I
do
others.
So
I
I
very
much
um
feel
like
I
have
stayed
in
situations,
again,
fill
in
the
blanks,
far,
far
longer
than
I
should
have,
and
far
longer
to
the
point
that
they
became
unhealthy
for
me
in
a
variety
of
ways
because
I
was
so
headstrong
about
not
being
a
quitter,
not
quitting,
doing
what
I
said
I
would
do.
unknown
15:19
Yeah.
SPEAKER_00
15:20
So
that
that's
another
part
of
this
for
me,
which
is
like
I
value
so
much
when
someone
does
what
they
say
they're
going
to
do.
And
if
they
don't
do
what
they
say
they're
going
to
do,
they've
lied.
And
so
I
just
that
it
is
a
snowball
for
you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So
for
me,
um,
yes,
I
just
when
you
were
talking,
it
just
became
so
clear
to
me
that,
you
know,
you're
coaching
others
in
a
way
that
I
would,
in
a
way
that
I
am
with
my
son,
which
is
it's
okay.
But
man,
I
do
not
listen
to
that
same
advice
for
myself.
SPEAKER_03
16:02
Well,
now
pivot
that.
Now
you're
an
employer.
You
don't
want
to
hire
somebody
that
is
thinking,
well,
this
doesn't
work
out,
I'm
out.
Because
it's
very
expensive
to
recruit
and
hire
and
train
and
go
through
that
process
of
bringing
somebody
on
board.
And
so,
you
know,
the
same
thing
I
would
say,
you
know,
for
an
employee,
a
company,
it's
an
investment
and
it's
not
a
temporary
investment.
Like
you
don't
go
into
it
thinking
that,
all
right,
well,
in
six
months
we're
going
to
downsize.
You
know,
the
hope
is
that
you
continue
to
grow
and
build
and
whatever.
The
reality
of
businesses,
that's
not
always
the
case.
And
it
is
a
quick
expenditure.
You
know,
it's
the
end
of
the
year
and
we
need
to
save
some
money.
And
so
let's
get
rid
of
some
staff.
And
so,
you
know,
I
might
be
a
little
bit
jaded
since,
you
know,
the
industry
that
I
was
in,
it
felt
like
that
was,
you
know,
their
financial
plan.
And
that
is
tough.
And
I've
worked
for
several
companies
in
the
mortgage
industry
or
in
the
mortgage
space
where
layoffs
are
just
part
of,
and
you
know,
obviously
it's
cyclical
based
on
rates
and
and
what
have
you.
And
there's
many
business
reasons
why
it
happens.
I
get
all
the
things,
like
I'm
logical,
I
can
do
that.
But
as
a
human
that
is
on
both
sides
of
the
fence,
either
a
person
being
laid
off
or
a
person
doing
the
layoffs,
and
it's
not
easy.
It
takes
a
toll
on
your
psyche.
And
so
to
your
point,
like
when
we
are,
you
know,
talking
to
others,
we
give
them
a
lot
more
grace
than
we
give
ourselves.
You
know,
we
kind
of
figure
we
have
to
muscle
through,
you
have
to
muscle
through.
And
um,
it's
not
a
good
place
to
be.
And
so
if
I
could
do
it
differently,
um,
and
I
feel
like
I
kind
of
can
through
the
people
that
I
coach,
then
you
know,
I
want
them
to
know,
again,
be
committed,
give
everything
that
you
can,
be
a
good
employee,
do
all
the
things
that
you
should
be
doing,
you
know,
be
accountable,
be
this,
be
that,
be
that.
But
at
the
end
of
the
day,
if
you
evaluate
it
that
it's
not
a
good
fit
for
you,
not
that
you
just
don't
like
it,
you
know,
that
it's
just
not
a
good
fit
for
you
because
of
whatever,
then
it's
okay
to
make
a
different
choice.
SPEAKER_00
18:08
How
do
you
know
when
it's
not
okay?
SPEAKER_03
18:10
That's
gonna
be
a
decision
for
every
person.
Like
it
it's
um
it's
situational.
And
for
me
You
know
what,
Janine.
SPEAKER_02
18:21
You
are
just
you're
just
I'm
a
diplomat.
I'm
a
diplomat,
Maria.
SPEAKER_03
18:27
Through
and
through.
Um,
so
what
I
would
say
for
me
though,
how
I
know
it's
not
a
good
fit,
if
I
am
giving
it
my
my
all,
I'm
genuinely
in
there
every
single
day,
giving
it
my
all.
And
either
one,
I'm
just
not
making
a
difference,
or
it's
just
not
making
a
difference.
And
then
I'm
going
home
every
single
day,
miserable.
And
when
I
get
up
the
next
morning,
I'm
miserable
and
have
to
go
in.
It's
just
draining
every
part
of
my
being.
Um,
because
overall
I'm
a
fairly
positive
person.
And
so
when
I
start
seeing
my
mental
health,
my
um
ability
to
put
a
smile
on
my
face,
change
and
waver.
And
it
takes
a
while
for
me
to
get
there.
Probably
like
you,
I
stay
in
it
longer
than
I
should,
because
I
I
just
I
really
want
to
make
a
change.
I
really
want
to
make
this
work.
I
really
want
to
um,
but
you
can't
do
it
yourself.
And
so
when
you
realize
that
you
are
just
beating
your
head
up
against
the
wall
every
single
day,
that's
when
for
me
it
it
ends.
I
know
that
for
other
people
their
line
is
somewhere
different,
but
for
me,
it's
that
beating
my
head
against
the
wall
every
single
day
and
just
feeling
frustrated
and
feeling
like,
you
know,
it's
loose
lose,
or
recognizing
that
the
people
that
you
work
for
aren't
aligned
with
your
values.
That's
another
that
is
hard
for
me.
SPEAKER_00
19:47
That's
a
big
one.
That's
a
big
one.
Um,
I
do
though,
as
you
were
talking,
I
I
love
that
phrase
and
I
I
say
it
often,
the
phrase
of
don't
fall
in
love
with
potential.
And
I
don't
know
where
it
originated,
but
I
think
it
was
in
context
to
you
know,
relationships
like
don't
fall
in
love
with
someone
who
you
think
has
a
lot
of
potentials,
right?
You're
not
gonna
be
able
to
fix
them.
Um
and
the
same
is
true
for
for
jobs,
if
you
think
about
it.
And
oftentimes
when
we
start
a
new
job,
we
go
in
excited
and
in
love
with
the
potential
that
brings.
And
most
often
it
does
not
fulfill
that
potential.
Right.
Right.
And
then
so
when
you
start
realizing
or
recognizing
that,
okay,
this
isn't
what
I
thought
it
was
gonna
be,
or
this
maybe
isn't
what
I
had
envisioned
for
my
future.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03
20:38
Um
the
problem
is
you
don't
know
it
until
you're
on
the
inside,
right?
I
mean,
you
can't
tell
a
company's
culture
from
the
outside.
You
can
get
like
some
hints
of
it,
but
you
can't
tell
until
you're
in
it.
And
also
depends
on
the
position
that
you're
in,
what
you
get
to
see
and
what
you
don't
see.
And
so
you
have
to
sometimes
experience
those
things
in
order
to
know.
And
I
will
say
there's
been
a
couple
of
times,
so
I
have
quit
more
than
one
job.
I've
quit
two
jobs
in
my
entire
life.
That's
all.
Yeah.
Well,
that's
not
true.
I
did
quit
one
in
college.
I
called
in
dead.
So
that's
a
different
story,
but
yeah,
I
called
in
dead.
I
I
literally
had
somebody
call
in
and
tell
them
that
I
was
no
longer
alive.
Yeah.
Again,
I
was
a
kid.
I
was
it's
so
dumb.
So
freaking
dumb.
It
was
Dunkin'
Donuts
in
Greenville,
North
Carolina.
I
went
to
ECU
and
it
was
the
Dunkin'
Donuts
there.
SPEAKER_00
21:36
So
I
need
to
understand.
So
you
called
in
dead.
What
did
Dunkin'
Donuts
do
with
that
information?
Were
they
just
like,
oh,
okay,
sorry
to
hear
it.
Click.
Or
did
they
send
flowers?
They
did
not.
SPEAKER_03
21:49
I
was
there
one
day.
One
day.
SPEAKER_00
21:51
Oh.
SPEAKER_03
21:51
Yeah.
SPEAKER_00
21:52
Okay.
SPEAKER_03
21:52
Yeah.
And
uh
truth
be
told,
I
don't
even
know
that
they
believed
the
person
that
called
that
said
I
was
dead.
Because
they
did
ask
for
my
uniform
back.
unknown
22:04
What?
SPEAKER_03
22:06
Yeah,
they
issue
you
khakis
and
a
a
Duncan
shirt.
And
the
funny
I'm
I'm
I
don't
know
that
this
happens
at
every
Duncan,
but
there
was
literally
a
shed
behind
the
Duncan.
And
so
on
your
first
day,
you
go
with
the
boss
or
the
owner
into
the
shed
and
they
try
on
different.
So
they
just
had
like
a
rack
of
very
bad.
SPEAKER_02
22:26
Just
very,
very
bad
way
to
start
a
job.
SPEAKER_03
22:30
Yeah,
it
was.
Going
into
the
shed
with
the
boss.
It
just
doesn't
sound
good.
No,
behind
the
Duncan.
Yeah.
So
anyway,
so
three
jobs.
That
was
one
of
them.
It
was
not
out
in
the
woods.
It
was
literally
just
in
the
parking
lot
behind
the
Duncan.
Mm-hmm.
SPEAKER_00
22:46
So
did
you
give
the
uniform
out
of
the
book?
I
did.
SPEAKER_03
22:48
I
had
somebody
drop
it
off.
I
had
somebody
drop
it
off.
I
mean,
I
still
the
funny
thing
is,
it's
not
like
I
still
have
obligations,
right?
So
instead
of
going,
ah,
screw
that.
I'm
not
even
I
I
did.
I
had
somebody
turn
the
uniform
in.
Actually,
they
gave
me
two
shirts
and
then
one
pair
of
pants.
SPEAKER_00
23:04
So
You
could
have
told
them
to
tell
Duncan
that
you
were
buried
in
it.
She
loved
her
job
so
much.
She
was
gonna
stay
there
forever.
So
um
I
know
we're
getting
way
off
track
here,
but
why
did
you
Duncan
after
one
year?
SPEAKER_03
23:22
No,
I
don't
really
remember
um
because
it
was
not
that
hard
of
a
job.
And
I
don't
know
if
they
still
do
things
this
way,
but
like,
you
know,
the
little
sandwiches
you
do
in
the
microwave,
like
everything
was
very
easy.
The
smell
of
donuts
by
the
end
of
the
day
was
so
distasteful.
I
will
say
that.
Um,
but
I
I
just
I
don't
know.
I
have
no
idea
why
I
did
not
want
to
do
that
job
anymore,
but
I
did
not
want
to
do
that
job
anymore.
SPEAKER_00
23:49
Do
you
regret
quitting?
Do
you
regret
regret
doing
that?
SPEAKER_03
23:53
I
don't
know.
I'm
I'm
saying
I
don't
know
just
simply
because
I
don't
remember
the
situation.
Um
I
I
know
I
didn't
like
the
boss
guy,
but
he
didn't
do
anything
wrong.
There
was
no
like
situation
during
the
day
with
a
customer
that
I
was
like,
oh
my
god,
I
can't
do
this,
or
none
that
I
remember,
so
I'm
assuming
that
there
wasn't.
Um
do
I
regret
doing
it?
No,
as
a
kid.
You
know,
we
do
such
dumb
things
as
a
kid.
So
yeah,
not
really.
No
regards,
no
regards.
No
regards.
Just
just
like
that
tattoo
on
my
uh
tattooti.
It
says
no
regards,
you've
seen
it.
SPEAKER_00
24:37
That's
where
this
is
coming
from.
But
what
you
just
said
was
different
than
that.
No
regards?
Just
like
a
tattoo
on
my
own.
SPEAKER_03
24:45
Just
like
that
tattoo
on
my
patootie
that
says
no
regards.
SPEAKER_02
24:49
You
have
a
tattoo
on
your
patootie
that
says
no
regards.
Well,
I
don't.
SPEAKER_03
24:55
I
was
joking
when
I
said
that
I
did.
Uh
I
haven't
had
any
coffee
today.
It
feels
like
maybe
you
haven't
either.
Like,
come
on.
SPEAKER_00
25:14
Um
yeah,
so
on
the
uptake,
as
they
say,
I
suppose.
SPEAKER_02
25:17
But
I
do
think
I
said
tattoo
instead
of
tattoo.
It
was
the
way
I
said
tattoo
as
well.
SPEAKER_00
25:23
Oh,
well,
yeah.
Tattoo.
And
then
you
said
on
my
patootie,
and
I
was
like,
wait
a
minute,
is
there
something
about
you
I
don't
know?
I
went
through
the
whole
thing.
SPEAKER_03
25:30
There
could
be
many
things
that
you
don't
know.
Because
I
do
have
a
tattoo
on
my
patootie.
I
do.
You
do?
I
do.
Not
a
tramp
stamp.
Oh
my
gosh,
it's
so
embarrassing.
It's
a
heart
with
a
lightning
bolt.
I
got
it.
I
think
I
was,
I'd
like
to
say
I
was
young,
but
I
think
I
was
25.
I
think
I
was
25.
And
it's
not
big.
It's
probably
like,
you
know,
yay
big.
And
um,
yeah.
You
ever
look
at
it?
Do
you
ever
turn
around
in
the
mirror
and
I
do
I
do
because
I
want
to
see
how
much
it's
stacking.
Thankfully,
it's
still
it's
still
in
a
good
spot.
Back
when,
like,
so
when
in
the
80s,
we
used
to
wear
the
French
cut
bathing
suits.
Yeah.
Right.
So
I
didn't
get
it
until
later
in
life.
Like
I
wasn't
25
in
the
80s.
But
when
I
got
it,
I
remember
specifically
thinking
it's
so
that
when
I'm
wearing
the
high-cut
bathing
suit,
you
can
see
it.
It's
like
where
it's
located.
And
so
anyway,
it's
been
a
long
time
since
um
this
body
has
been
in
a
high-cut
bathing
suit,
but
you
just
never
know.
You
never
know
when
the
heart
might
come
back
out.
But
yeah,
it's
a
red
heart
with
a
white
lightning
bolt.
Wow.
Yeah,
it's
pretty
spectacular.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All
right.
So
anyway,
we
digress.
So
three
jobs.
Thank
you
for
not
asking
me
the
same
question,
by
the
way.
I
appreciate
that.
Oh,
I'll
come
back
to
you.
Oh,
you
mean
about
a
tattoo
on
your
patootie?
Let
me
text,
let
me
text
your
boyfriend,
see
what
we
got
going
on.
I
do
not
do
it.
I
do
not.
I
would
be
absolutely
shocked
if
you
ever
told
me
that
you
had
a
tattoo
on
your
bottom.
SPEAKER_00
27:20
Yeah,
I
do
not.
SPEAKER_03
27:21
Yeah,
it
would
it
would
shock
me
more
than
so
many
things
in
this
world.
Yeah.
That
would
be
something.
So
I've
quit
three
jobs.
You?
How
many
have
you
quit,
if
any?
SPEAKER_00
27:35
Oh,
when
you
said
that,
when
you
said
it
like
that,
I
thought
you
were
saying
that
you
quit
me.
Um
I
quit.
No.
How
many
have
I
quit?
Yeah.
Wow.
I
don't
know.
Is
it
a
lot?
I
mean,
it's
just
almost
as
many
jobs
as
I've
had.
Well,
because
okay.
SPEAKER_03
28:00
That's
interesting.
Because
you
leave
to
go
to
something
else,
or
do
you
okay,
so
let
me
ask
a
different
question.
How
many
jobs
have
you
quit
that
you
didn't
have
something
to
go
to?
You
were
just
like,
I
can't
do
this
anymore.
That's
a
different
question,
right?
SPEAKER_00
28:15
Yeah,
it
is
a
different
question.
I'm
not
sure
how
to
answer
it.
So
I
quit.
I
quit
the
a
job
that
I
technically
didn't
have
another
employer
I
was
going
to,
but
I
was
starting
my
own
business.
Does
that
count?
SPEAKER_03
28:33
Did
you
decide
to
start
your
own
business
because
you
wanted
to
leave
that
other
business?
Like,
were
you
at
the
I
can't
I
honestly
can't
do
this
anymore?
I'm
better
off
starting
my
own
business.
Or
were
you
like,
it's
time
for
me
to
start
a
new
my
own
business,
so
I
think
I'm
gonna
leave
this
one.
SPEAKER_00
28:56
No,
it
was
it
was
out
of
I
I
felt
like
I
needed
to
chart
my
own
course.
SPEAKER_02
29:04
I
felt
like
I
had
had
enough,
what
it
was
so
diplomatic
the
way
you
said
that.
You
needed
to
chart
your
own
course.
SPEAKER_00
29:11
Enough
of
other
people
telling
me
what
my
career
was
gonna
look
like.
And
I'm
not
saying
that
from
any
particular
employer
I've
had,
but
I
think
the
idea
of
relying
on
others
to
give
me
opportunities
or
not,
or
to
tell
me
whatever,
fill
in
the
blank.
I
just
felt
like
I
could
do
it,
do
it
better
if
I
was
leading
the
charge.
SPEAKER_03
29:35
Yeah.
Yeah.
And
so
I
deliberately
asked
the
question
that
way
because
I
do
think
it's
different
if
you're
working
for
somebody
and
then
or
some
a
company
and
then
get
recruited
or
you
see
an
opportunity
somewhere
else.
Because
nine
times
out
of
10,
if
you
see
an
opportunity
somewhere
else,
you're
not
happy
where
you
currently
are.
And
so
you're
starting
that
search.
Um,
if
you
get
recruited,
you've
been
recognized
as
somebody
who
is
doing
well
and
that
whatever.
Um
the
jobs
that
I've
quit,
it's
been
without
a
next.
It's
been
I
am
so
done
here.
And
you've
done
that
three
times.
Well,
the
Duncan
was
one.
And
then
um
there
was
a
a
company
that
I
worked
for
that.
I
I
can't
even
like
it.
And
my
father
happened
to
be
ill
at
the
same
time.
And
so
we
just
talked
about
it.
And
I
was
like,
you
know
what,
this
is
a
good
out
for
me,
and
I'm
gonna
take
this
out.
I'll
go
hang
out
with
my
dad
for
a
while
and
then
look
again
after
that.
Um,
he
got
better.
I
started,
you
know,
and
I
actually
got
recruited,
which
was
interesting
for
the
next
company
that
I
quit.
So
yeah.
Um,
prior
to
those
two
that
I
quit,
just
I
can't
do
this
anymore.
Um
I
hadn't
I
just
I
don't
know.
Interesting.
SPEAKER_00
31:05
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The
ones
that
you
did
quit.
So
you
had
gotten
to
a
point
where
it
was
so
bad
that
you
had
to
leave
without
another,
without
a
backup
plan.
Right.
And
we've
both
felt
that
way.
Um
do
you
regret
waiting
until
that
point?
Like
meaning,
okay.
SPEAKER_03
31:29
The
writing
was
on
the
wall.
SPEAKER_00
31:33
Okay.
And
why
is
that?
Because
you
needed
a
job,
or
because
of
that
mentality
of
you
don't
quit
things,
or
why
did
you
stay
longer
than
you
should
have?
SPEAKER_03
31:44
Belief
in
myself
that
I
would
be
able
to
make
it
better.
If
I
just
keep
doing
this,
or
if
only
this,
then
this
will
be
so
much
better.
I
think
it's
what
you
described
as
far
as
that
potential
is
concerned.
Yes.
You
know,
right?
So
if
only
and
if
I
just
did
this,
or
if
I
worked
harder
or
for
longer
hours,
or
you
know,
whatever.
And
so
at
some
point
you
go,
I
am
delusional.
I
am
delusional.
I
would
love
to
admit
that,
you
know,
I'm
quicker
on
the
uptake,
that
I
figured
it
out
really
early,
but
I
didn't.
You
know,
or
I
shouldn't
even
say
I
did,
I've
I
knew,
like,
you
know,
the
thing
that
you
know.
However,
I
still
wanted
to
make
it
better.
I
still
wanted
to
make
it
better.
SPEAKER_00
32:33
That
I
think
goes
back
again
to
when
we
started
this
conversation.
I
said
to
you
that
I
have
a
different
perspective
as
a
mother
than
I
have
for
other
things
for
myself.
And
I
want
my
son
to
be
able
to
figure
it
out
earlier,
to
not
put
himself
in
a
situation
where
he
is
becoming
a
former
version,
like
a
shell
of
himself.
Or
he's
so
incredibly
unhappy
that
he
is
just
barely
dragging
himself
to
work
every
day,
or
that
he
gets,
you
know,
depressed
or
anxious,
or
whatever
the
things
are.
Like,
I
want
him
to
be
able
to
recognize
for
himself
when
okay,
the
writing
is
on
the
wall
and
that
be
early
in
the
game,
you
know,
without
quitting
too
soon
as
well.
SPEAKER_03
33:22
Right.
SPEAKER_02
33:23
That's
exactly
what
I
was
thinking.
That
quitting
too
soon.
How
do
you
how
do
you
figure
it
out?
Like,
what's
the
test?
SPEAKER_00
33:31
People
quit
soon
these
days.
As
an
H
person,
I
will
tell
I
will
tell
you
that
it
is
um
unlike
anything
that
you
and
I
had
have
experienced
from
a
people
just
the
loyalty
is
not
what
it
used
to
be.
The
expectations
of
employers
are
different
than
they
than
they
used
to
be.
Um
it's
it's
it's
different.
I'll
just
leave
it
at
that.
It's
different.
SPEAKER_01
34:00
Yeah.
SPEAKER_00
34:00
Um
yeah.
SPEAKER_03
34:02
So
well,
and
so
as
a
parent,
then
how
do
you
not
even,
I
don't
want
to
say
teach
them,
how
do
you
explain
that
balance
of,
you
know,
you
need
to
figure
out
where,
you
know,
it's
kind
of
like
this
lever
or
a
what
was
the
um
teeter-totter?
It's
a
teeter-totter,
right?
So
you
want
to
try
to
keep
it
here.
And
if
this
starts
happening
or
this
starts
happening,
but
um,
you
know,
when
we
talked
about
anxiety,
one
of
the
things,
and
and
I'm
bringing
it
back
into
because
I
start
thinking
about
you
don't
want
to
automatically
tell
your
child,
oh,
you
have
anxiety,
right?
Because
nervousness
is
okay.
Anxiousness
is
okay.
The
same
thing
of
you're
not
gonna
like
every
single
day
of
this
job.
There's
going
to
be
situations
that
are
shit.
And
that's
okay.
It's
the
next
day,
is
it
gonna
get
better?
The
next
day,
is
it
gonna
get
better?
Or
is
this
a
pattern
of
it's
always
shit?
Right.
So
I
don't
know
how
you
where's
the
fulcrum
on
that
for
the
teeter
totter
to
keep
it
like
this
or
like
this.
But
once
you
are
like
this
for
a
long
period
of
time,
that's
when
it's
time,
right?
That's
when,
but
how
do
you
describe
that?
How
do
you
help
them
see?
SPEAKER_00
35:18
I
think
we
just
did
it
pretty
well.
I
think
you
just
did
it
pretty
well.
So
thank
you
for
that.
SPEAKER_02
35:22
Get
on
a
teeter
totter
with
them.
SPEAKER_00
35:24
Yeah,
yeah.
SPEAKER_02
35:25
Do
they
still
call
them
that?
What
are
they
called?
Teeter
Seesaw.
Seesaw.
That
was
it.
I
couldn't
figure
out
the
seesaw
word.
SPEAKER_00
35:31
Yeah,
I
like
teeter
totter
better
though.
Um,
I
don't
know.
I
think,
I
think
I
was
starting
to
consider
are
there
certain
things
that
you
need
to
teach
them
that
are
non-negotiables,
like
values.
So,
you
know,
when
you
become
aware
that
a
company
is
so
far
away
from
your
values
and
what's
important
to
you,
then
don't
stay
because
those
values,
they're
not
going
to
change.
That
is
not
going
to
be
able
to
be
healed.
Um,
so
maybe
that's
a
place
to
start,
you
know,
because
I
have
thought
about
this
a
lot
for
myself.
And
for
me,
that
was
at
the
very
core
of
things
is
a
misalignment
in
values.
And,
you
know,
I
just
always,
well,
but
what
if?
And
what
if
I
could
convince?
And
what
if
I
could
change
that
convincing
piece?
Yes,
yes.
And
it
you
that's
never
gonna
happen.
Right.
So,
you
know,
I
think
for
me,
I'm
just
considering
like,
is
that
kind
of
the
starting
point
of
being
able
to
teach?
SPEAKER_03
36:41
I
like
that
idea
of
the
values
being
because
when
I
when
I
go
back
and
I
analyze
at
least
the
two
that
as
an
adult,
I
made
decisions
about.
Um,
I
would
say
in
both
cases,
definitely
value
statements.
In
the
first
one,
um,
they
were
lying
to
a
client
and
then
asking
me
to
support
that
lie.
And
it
was
just
like,
I
know.
And,
you
know,
there's
so
many
little
keys.
The
person
who
hired
me,
it
was
only
in
the
roll
three
months,
by
the
way.
The
person
who
hired
me
promoted
me
so
that
she
could
move
out
to
a
different
uh
part
of
the
business.
Like
she
knew
it
was
a
shit
show.
And
so
she,
and
I
was
like,
I'm
not
ready
for
this.
And
she
was
like,
Oh,
honey,
you
are,
you're
so
good.
You
are
so
good,
you're
ready
for
this.
And
I
was
like,
I
I'm
just
really
not.
And
she's
like,
Well,
I'm
going
and
left
and
promoted
me.
So
in
three
months,
I
actually
gotten
two
promotions
and
they
were
sp
they
were
senior
jobs.
I'm
not
talking
about
just
um,
you
know,
yeah,
yeah,
flipping
burgers
or
something.
Um,
and
then
I
got
to
do
fries
too.
Like
they
were,
I
had
people
responsibility,
et
cetera.
And
once
I
realized
the
lie
that
was
being
told
to
this
client
that
I
my
team
was
supposed
to
be
supporting,
it
was
like,
holy
crap.
So
she
told
the
fib,
and
then
it
became
mine
to
deliver
on.
And
it
was
just,
and
I
remember
telling
some
of
my
colleagues
what
I
had
learned.
And
they
were
like,
Well,
this
is
what
we've
got
to
do.
And
I'm
like,
no,
no,
no,
no,
no.
We
we
can't,
we
need
to
let
the
client
like
you
can't
let
the
client
know
that.
And
so
just,
yeah,
values.
And
so
in
in
your,
you
know,
trying
to
figure
out
that
fulcrum,
how
how
do
we
clearly
say
to
not
just
our
children,
but
our
peers
and
other
people
that
we
care
about
that,
you
know,
are
looking
for
their
own,
I
don't
whatever,
that
the
your
values
be
really
clear
about
what
your
values
are
and
those
become
your
non-negotiables.
And
the
minute
something
starts
to
infringe
on
that,
and
I
mean
the
minute,
it's
time.
It's
time.
And
it's
okay.
SPEAKER_00
38:58
Yeah,
I
think
this
has
been
a
good
conversation
for
me
because,
you
know,
I
think
number
one,
I
never,
I
don't
know
if
you
did,
but
I
never
had
anyone
sit
with
me
when
I
was
growing
up
or
even
a
young
adult
and
helped
me
figure
out
what
my
values
were.
It
was
not
a
conversation.
I
don't
even
think
you
knew
that
that
was
a
thing.
Of
course,
you
always
hold
your
values,
you
just
don't
know
what
it
is,
what
they
are.
Right,
right.
So
um,
it
wasn't
until
really
I
was
in
my
late
30s
where
I
went
through
a
literal
values
exercise.
I
was
with
a
career
coach
and
we
went
through
this
exercise
together.
And
I
was
like,
oh,
that's
really
interesting.
I
can
now
kind
of
see
in
black
and
white
these
things
that
make
me
make
me
me,
make
me
operate
in
this
world,
things
that
are
important
to
me.
But
I've
not
done
that
in
any
way
with
my
son,
really,
you
know,
to
verbalize,
help
him
verbalize
what
those
values
are.
SPEAKER_03
39:59
Wouldn't
that
be
valuable
if
some
if
colleges,
if
high
schools,
if
schools
actually
did
that,
yeah,
would
be
so
it
would
it
would
be,
I
think,
a
game
changer
in
the
workforce.
SPEAKER_00
40:11
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
I
agree.
SPEAKER_03
40:13
Yeah.
SPEAKER_00
40:14
So
I
have
some
work
to
do.
Yeah.
SPEAKER_03
40:16
I
do
too.
I
do
too.
I
mean,
there's
there's
children
in
my
life.
There's
um,
again,
clients
in
my
life
that
doing
that
values
exercise
can
not
only
help
illuminate
certain
things,
but
also
as
we're
making
decisions
go
as
they
are
making
decisions
going
forward.
I
think
it's
a
it's
a
guiding
post.
It's
something
that
you
can
go,
this
is
my
line
in
the
sand.
Yeah.
In
the
concrete.
SPEAKER_00
40:43
There
you
go.
SPEAKER_03
40:44
There
you
go.
I
like
this
conversation,
Maria.
I
think
it's
really
helpful.
Um,
I
don't
know
as
normal.
I
don't
know
that
we
um
actually
I
do
think
that
we
solved
something.
I
think
this
is
the
probably
the
first
time
that
I'm
gonna
say
we
solved
something.
We
both
believe
that
knowing
your
values
and
having
that
be
your
helpful
decision
maker
on
when
you
quit
something.
Yes.
Right?
That's
that's
the
thing.
Knowing
your
values
will
allow
you
to
know
whether
it's
a
good
fit
for
you
or
it's
time
to
pivot.
SPEAKER_00
41:18
Yes.
And
we
didn't
really
talk
about
this,
but
it
also
applies
to
relationships,
and
maybe
we
come
back
to
that
in
a
future
conversation.
SPEAKER_02
41:26
I
see
what
you
did
there.
I
see
what
you
did.
Yes,
I
like
it.
And
let's
commit
to
it.
Do
we
continue?
Dun
dun
dun.
Yes.
So
thank
you.
SPEAKER_00
41:40
Good
job,
Maria.
I
like
that.
Thank
you.
And
thank
you
to
everyone
who
may
be
watching
or
listening.
Of
course,
we
love
having
you
with
us.
Um,
want
to
hear
what
your
thoughts
are
on
quitting.
How
do
you
feel
about
it?
Um,
have
you
stayed
in
places
of
work
or
relationships
or
situations
far
longer
than
you
should
have
because
you
were
afraid
of
quitting?
Um,
you
know,
this
is
a
conversation
that
we
want
to
continue
having
with
you,
so
please
let
us
know
that
in
the
comments.
Like,
follow
us,
subscribe,
follow,
email
us
at
brainsconefold.com.
Brainsconefold
at
gmail.com.
SPEAKER_03
42:12
That's
the
one.
SPEAKER_02
42:14
And
we'll
see
you
next
time.
Thank
you.
Thanks,
Maria.
Bye.
Bye.