Rances, The Robot Who Struggled to be Understood
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In this episode of Mindset U, the hosts delve into the important topic of mental health and its impact on individuals, families, and communities. They tackle the issue of toxic masculinity and the stigma surrounding mental health in communities of color and emphasize the need to break down these barriers and have honest conversations about mental health. The speakers also discuss the concept of neurodivergence and share their personal experiences with conditions such as dyslexia, autism, and ADHD. The hosts highlight the importance of checking in on loved ones and show how making connections and breaking down stigmas can lead to a better understanding of ourselves and others. Tune in to this insightful conversation on mindset, neurodivergence, and mental health.
Timestamps
0:00 - Intro
0:43 - Mental health and comedy
4:05 - Coping mechanism or the joker?
4:49 - Rances the robot (story)
7:55 - Neurodivergent loneliness
11:12 - Laughter of error
13:56 - The inability to cry
15:33 - Coping with shame
17:58 - Neurodivercity
21:44 - Tell us your thoughts https://forms.gle/aqLERqWV4H1BqDB79
Transcript
00;00;00;01 - 00;00;16;28
Jason
Jason here from Mindset U, and were all about bringing new things to the table when it comes to this podcast, because we all know what the fuck we're doing. There's no rules. Okay, so we can talk about whatever you want, whatever we want, because we're going to spin it and let y'all know what we're going to talk about for 15 minutes.
00;00;17;02 - 00;00;32;27
Jason
Going to give you rapid fire stuff. They're the coaches on the everyday guy. I'm going to challenge them because who the fuck are they to tell me what to do? They don't know me. They do know me. Known me for a really long time. That's not the point. The point is, we're here to give you guys a fun podcast and hopefully you learn some shit along the way.
00;00;32;27 - 00;00;54;22
Jason
So join us. Hit us up on Instagram. Message us on Facebook. Send a carrier pigeon. Stop us in the street. Let us know what you want to talk about. I'm all for it. Unless I'm doing something illegal. Then don't talk to me. Hey, guys, this is Mindset U. I'm Jason, i'm here with my cohosts Moises and Rances, my two loves one is wearing very tight clothes for the second time in a row.
00;00;55;19 - 00;01;13;19
Jason
And we're going to talk about mental health and why he thinks it's a good idea to wear these extremely tight clothes on days of pods And just in general, because I feel like that's not comfortable for somebody who's so athletic and so flexible. Why do you make it a challenge to move?
00;01;15;12 - 00;01;16;23
Jason
Go.
00;01;16;23 - 00;01;18;03
Rances
There stretchy
00;01;18;03 - 00;01;20;10
Jason
are that shirt not stretchy that says.
00;01;21;10 - 00;01;22;09
Rances
I'm about to return.
00;01;24;15 - 00;01;25;02
Moises
he was like...trying to do the lights
00;01;27;06 - 00;01;29;12
Rances
The way I think about it is I can rip it if I need to.
00;01;30;04 - 00;01;30;10
Moises
arh arh.
00;01;31;06 - 00;01;34;17
Jason
in case of emergency you rip! like
00;01;34;17 - 00;01;42;21
Jason
mental health. It's serious. As you guys just found out before, I would imagine that I thought about killing myself a few times.
00;01;43;24 - 00;01;45;22
Moises
You brought it up as a joke?
00;01;45;22 - 00;01;46;23
Jason
No, no. I didn’t.
00;01;46;23 - 00;01;52;03
Moises
And then I was like, wait, you really tried you really thought about killing yourself is like, fuck. Rances Have you thought about yourself?
00;01;52;03 - 00;01;55;12
Jason
Because I mask most of my things as a joke. So I can do.
00;01;56;01 - 00;01;59;02
Rances
So you can say is is truth.
00;01;59;02 - 00;02;03;29
Jason
Well, no. Just because one, it's just the way it's my coping mechanism. If I if I Do,
00;02;04;07 - 00;02;06;02
Moises
maybe that's a good thing. Coping mechanism.
00;02;06;02 - 00;02;29;22
Jason
It's a good coping mechanism for me because working in news for 13 years and it's a lot of death and despair, you develop a little bit of a dark a dark outlook on life and being find me being funny. That's always been my thing kind of. But it helped me to be able to talk about certain things. I always feel uncomfortable.
00;02;30;07 - 00;02;49;24
Jason
But no, mental health is serious. And I think one thing that we can not joking around is the fact that really well, I never knew that about you. And it's like you never know what's in somebody's head kind of thing. You never know they can be the happiest people and those are usually the ones. If you look at comedians who have killed themselves in the past, they're the ones that, like you would never Robin Williams.
00;02;49;28 - 00;03;15;26
Jason
Mm hmm. You know, not knowing him, you go, Oh, my God, that's the happiest man in the world. But you don't realize part of the reason why they are they come off as so happy is because you're battling something on the inside. And it's just a it's just a weird coping mechanism that a lot of people have. And I think that's why when people say, check on your friends, you know, check on your loved ones, it's true.
00;03;16;07 - 00;03;42;25
Jason
It's true because you never know when they might open up. They might actually say something that's, you know, that's a oh, shit. Like, are, are you good kind of thing. Um, we're also, as men, conditioned to always say we are good, you know, mental health, especially like the, as minorities in, you know, Latin communities and black communities and stuff like that, like mental health, you know, as our grandparents about mental health and see how they feel about it, you know.
00;03;43;09 - 00;03;45;07
Moises
I mean, that's still that's to exist.
00;03;45;09 - 00;03;46;05
Jason
It still exists.
00;03;46;06 - 00;03;58;04
Moises
I coach I coach at North Bergen and there's like all these Gen X dudes and so they're like in their forties and they're all Latino, but they're like “fucking soft, right”?
00;03;58;04 - 00;03;58;16
Jason
Everything is soft
00;03;58;17 - 00;04;03;25
Moises
Like everything's soft and being a pussy and all these things and I'm like, Shit, man.
00;04;04;10 - 00;04;05;18
Rances
Those are coping mechanism.
00;04;05;18 - 00;04;07;02
Moises
Those are all their coping mechanism.
00;04;07;02 - 00;04;07;11
Jason
Yeah.
00;04;07;25 - 00;04;13;26
Rances
Yeah. My dad, all my life, that was for all of us “Los hombre no lloran”. men don't cry. Yeah.
00;04;13;28 - 00;04;18;05
Moises
is that why you laugh?
00;04;18;05 - 00;04;25;19
Rances
Moises is referring to the fact that I don't cry. And when they get really uncomfortable talking about coping mechanisms.
00;04;25;19 - 00;04;25;22
Jason
You.
00;04;25;22 - 00;04;27;00
Rances
Laugh. I laugh. Yeah.
00;04;27;00 - 00;04;31;06
Jason
You see, I just tell dark jokes. So I get it. I'm with you on that one.
00;04;31;18 - 00;04;34;16
Moises
I made Rances cry.
00;04;34;16 - 00;04;35;14
Jason
When's the last time you cried?
00;04;35;16 - 00;04;38;27
Rances
No cry from like an emotional.
00;04;38;27 - 00;04;41;26
Jason
Just cry. So when's the last time you happened?
00;04;41;26 - 00;04;46;02
Rances
He was born since the last time I can remember. I was 14.
00;04;47;00 - 00;04;48;29
Jason
You didn’t even cry when your kids were born?
00;04;48;29 - 00;04;49;22
Rances
No,
00;04;49;22 - 00;05;02;17
Jason
you are a robot bro. Really? You are a robot. How are you going to have that kind of facial hair and not cry every now and then? That's wild.
00;05;02;17 - 00;05;34;14
Rances
That word robot thing has been. Yeah. Has been used to describe me multiple times, which for me now, like the things that I'm learning about myself now are bringing a whole new level of understanding. You know, you guys are talking about autism. I'm definitely neurodivergent in that sense. And because of that, a lot of the things that I do are making sense.
00;05;34;14 - 00;05;35;20
Rances
A lot of what is done.
00;05;35;21 - 00;05;36;23
Jason
With this Neurodiverse.
00;05;36;23 - 00;05;50;04
Rances
Neurodivergent is basically anything that has your brain wired differently. So autism falls under Neurodivergent dyslexia, which I have my son dysgraphia ADHD, those things that
00;05;50;04 - 00;05;51;11
Jason
Whats dysgraphia?
00;05;51;11 - 00;05;58;07
Rances
dysgraphia is challenge with writing converting your thoughts or anything into writing. Right?
00;05;58;07 - 00;05;59;00
Jason
Got it. Okay.
00;05;59;07 - 00;06;18;23
Rances
Motor skills doesn't quite connect. Got it the same way. Um, so with a lot of the things that, that the way I see things, the way I do, the way I perform has a lot to do with that aspect of myself. For example, like I didn't speak till I was three years old, like.
00;06;19;03 - 00;06;20;22
Jason
That's not surprising.
00;06;20;28 - 00;06;24;08
Rances
My, my parents are like, oh, he'll figure it out.
00;06;24;22 - 00;06;26;02
Jason
He’s the strong silence type.
00;06;27;25 - 00;06;50;14
Rances
There's a bunch of, like, little things that I do, but when it comes to, like my coaching ability and everything, I think a lot of that stems from my, my constant studying of people to know how to behave in a way that's more acceptable, right? Which is called under the paradigm neurodivergent masking.
00;06;50;17 - 00;06;51;15
Jason
Accruing data.
00;06;52;05 - 00;07;36;10
Rances
Yes. Masking is when you're trying to behave in a socially acceptable way. So when you know I'm working with someone or whatever, I'm able to register so much of their nuance, reaction, expressions and things like that because of my life of observing all those things and noticing all those things. So now I use it as an advantage. But also on the flip side, the word robot has been used to describe me and I didn't realize why it hurt so much until recently, where it's like I'm trying so hard to not come off as a robot.
00;07;36;10 - 00;07;36;21
Jason
Yeah.
00;07;36;28 - 00;07;53;10
Rances
Like, you don't understand how much brainpower I'm using to flex my voice, to move my hands, to, like, all of this stuff, to appear more connected in that way. And then I'm called the robot. It's like, shit. You can see right through all this work. Yeah. And it means nothing.
00;07;53;24 - 00;07;56;24
Moises
But it isn't going to the neurodivergent, right?
00;07;57;09 - 00;07;58;29
Jason
Ever think about rebooting your system?
00;08;02;13 - 00;08;07;25
Moises
Is calibrating when he meditates.
00;08;07;25 - 00;08;15;08
Rances
You guys are done, actually, but everything you guys are saying, like, I'm not taking offensive to it. I'm like, Yeah, yes,
00;08;15;08 - 00;08;16;11
Jason
it is a funny way of saying it
00;08;16;11 - 00;08;19;19
Moises
I was going to say I was going. I just spoke really loud. It's probably.
00;08;20;06 - 00;08;20;23
Moises
Cool.
00;08;21;03 - 00;08;48;02
Moises
But I was going to say that I think and I think you sent me something along the lines of this is Neurodiverse Neurodivergent. It's more natural than unnatural. It's the idea that society or a human has to function within society in a certain way. And when somebody can't understand how society functions in that way, they're considered Neurodivergent. All right.
00;08;48;02 - 00;09;14;02
Moises
So like, writing and reading aren't innate skills for human beings like the language that we made up, symbols that we made up, and like, why the fuck are we supposed to read them? But we read them because it exists in our current modern world. So to me, it's like Neurodivergent is more natural than it is unatural is just unnatural because it's not natural to the state that we live in.
00;09;14;02 - 00;09;15;10
Moises
The society that we live in.
00;09;15;18 - 00;09;35;12
Jason
That makes sense. And also, I think, you know, going back to like me jokingly calling you your robot before, even though I think it's very funny, I think that when you meditate, you just calibrating, I’m never going to not think of it like that anymore. I think also when people think like, Oh, like you haven't cried since you were 14.
00;09;35;12 - 00;09;54;19
Jason
Like they think like, I think some people will automatically think like, oh, that's like a lack of empathy. But that's not true at all because like, you're a very empathetic person, but it's just so I think that's really surprised me more like I know how empathetic and like how much of a sweetie that you can be the sweetest robot I know.
00;09;54;19 - 00;10;01;06
Jason
So to hear that you haven't cried since you were 14 is like, Whoa, really? I thought you were do at least like once a week in the shower.
00;10;01;06 - 00;10;02;08
Moises
But what makes you cry?
00;10;02;18 - 00;10;09;22
Jason
Yeah. What made you cry at 14, I guess. Is it something really fucked up? Because you don't have to talk about it. But if it's like, Oh, I watched Bambi, I'm like, Oh, that's beautiful.
00;10;09;22 - 00;10;29;24
Rances
No, I was it was a conversation with my mother. I remember I don't remember what it was about, but I was I was talking to my mother. I got real emotional. I was trying to express something to her. And I couldn't, like, express like what I was feeling. And then I remember it was like and I hadn't cried before that point for for a while.
00;10;29;24 - 00;10;39;15
Rances
So I remember, like, it bubbling up and I felt so strange and then then I started crying, and then I felt like I can express what I was trying to say. Right?
00;10;39;19 - 00;10;40;25
Moises
So it was like frustration.
00;10;42;01 - 00;11;06;07
Rances
It was. Yes, it was. It was frustration. But also because it was it was an emotional experience about feeling like not understood. So I was expressing I was frustrated because of that inability to be understood, but also the idea of not being able to be understood, not being able to connect.
00;11;06;07 - 00;11;12;02
Jason
It feels lonely, but I can imagine how lonely that feels, especially as a kid. That's tough, you know? No, that makes sense.
00;11;12;11 - 00;11;16;26
Moises
So there's like an error window pop up.
00;11;16;26 - 00;11;21;11
Rances
I think that's where the laughter is. So just.
00;11;22;04 - 00;11;26;06
Jason
Laugh!
00;11;26;06 - 00;11;30;05
Rances
So the laughter. I don't experience that often.
00;11;30;05 - 00;11;30;09
Jason
You don’t laugh often?
00;11;31;01 - 00;11;59;22
Rances
No, the... it's like a reaction of something that that. So the last time I remember it really happening, hard body, I lost complete control was when my wife was pregnant with my son and she and she hadn't told me she was pregnant. So frame of reference, I don't know what's going on with her and she's just like frustrated with me and saying a bunch of stuff that make no sense.
00;12;00;05 - 00;12;13;25
Rances
But she's crying hysterically, telling me all this stuff and like, to use your reference. I can't compute what she's saying. I can't compute what she's saying and is like, oh shit, oh shit.
00;12;13;25 - 00;12;14;14
Jason
System overide
00;12;14;14 - 00;12;26;03
Rances
I feel it coming from here and I'm like, oh shit. And then I'm laughing. Start laughing hysterically and it's like, I'm inside of my body that's laughing.
00;12;26;24 - 00;12;27;11
Rances
Like this no, no, no
00;12;27;11 - 00;12;30;09
Jason
delete, delete, bleep, bleep, bleep, bleep communication error.
00;12;31;03 - 00;12;38;04
Rances
But I'm physically laughing, so you can imagine my wife being emotional from pregnancy. I don't know what the hell was going on.
00;12;38;10 - 00;12;43;05
Jason
basically poor gasoline on a fire. Yeah, essentially, yes.
00;12;44;04 - 00;13;01;01
Rances
Before that had happened with my sister, she was flipping out on me. I was a teenager. She was flipping out on me about if I was out with friends and friend's parents were calling my house and trying to find their kids and they don't know. And I got home really late and my sister just started yelling at me, yelling at me.
00;13;01;01 - 00;13;24;21
Rances
And it happened. And I started laughing like laughing, rolling on the floor laughing. She fucking kicked me out the house and that was really bad. And I'm like, I the next day, I'm like, I can't control it. She's like, Shut the fuck up, you're full of shit. But that my wife and I have talked about it. Like when it comes up because it's come up since then, since that time, but now it's like a really bad time.
00;13;25;08 - 00;13;30;07
Rances
But now she knows me. So now I'm like, is about to happen because about to happen.
00;13;30;08 - 00;13;31;08
Jason
Yeah. Yeah.
00;13;31;09 - 00;13;54;20
Rances
So she's but what we talked about is like it seems to be when I get so like I'm pretty comfortable in, in all types of emotions, especially with other people. Yeah, right. But when I cross that chasm of I don't know what to do in this situation, that's when it happens. So it is. I like an error.
00;13;54;22 - 00;13;58;20
Jason
Do you ever do you ever wish that you do cry? Do you ever think about like.
00;13;58;28 - 00;14;00;05
Rances
Yes, right.
00;14;00;08 - 00;14;10;01
Moises
We had this whole thing at the center where everybody's like answers don't cry like and he he got a little tight about it. Like, it was like for two weeks. Try to figure it out.
00;14;10;22 - 00;14;12;14
Jason
Yeah. No, I couldn't. That's it.
00;14;12;14 - 00;14;19;12
Moises
So I made him tear though with the video. I remember the video I made in December and I call them Spawn. Yeah. Oh.
00;14;19;22 - 00;14;23;18
Jason
I cried watching that video. I called you crying and telling you how much I love you.
00;14;25;15 - 00;14;27;00
Moises
And he teared up
00;14;27;00 - 00;14;49;20
Rances
for that video. Yeah, I got a single tear. Yeah, but so going back to Arlene, when Arlene passed away, so when we got the news, when they came out and told us because we had been in the hospital for multiple days and like where Arlene passing away, it was the entire community like there was over 500 people in the hospital for Arlene.
00;14;49;20 - 00;15;13;03
Rances
Yeah. Okay. So when they came out to the crowd of people and told that she has passed everyone's, you know, start screaming and whatever, whatever, I walked away and went to like a corner and the reason why I did that was I was ashamed that I couldn't cry. In that moment. I'm like, I feel this sadness. I can't express it.
00;15;13;03 - 00;15;31;21
Rances
And I'm afraid that I'm going to be judged for not having this reaction. So I walked away and Johnny, my friend, came, came to me. He's like, Oh, bro, you don't have to go over here to cry. You know, we're all going through this. You can cry with us. And I was like, I'm here because I can't.
00;15;33;08 - 00;15;39;13
Moises
What I do think happens and I think now, like in hindsight, thinking about the team and all the things that that we said, it's like.
00;15;39;22 - 00;15;46;11
Jason
Rances, you don't experience emotion. Nothing ever bothers him and blah blah, blah, blah, blah. I've seen stuff bother him. I Oh yeah.
00;15;46;11 - 00;15;52;17
Moises
It's when you get to know him, you see the things that you see, the human side of things.
00;15;52;17 - 00;15;53;28
Jason
You come out.
00;15;53;28 - 00;16;21;27
Moises
But I think that part of there's no real hold on identity, and I think it's very hard for a lot of people to go into that because of their the level of awareness with their coping mechanisms, because your coping mechanisms kind of prevent you from really look looking at the things you feel shame with because the things that you feel shame with are the things that you identify with at a binary level.
00;16;22;08 - 00;16;47;20
Moises
So then it becomes hard for one to change the coping mechanisms. I'm sorry, I just got distracted. It becomes hard for one to change the coping mechanisms when your identity is built in it. And it's like Jas always, unless he makes a conscious effort to see when the humor is actually covering up the shame.
00;16;48;11 - 00;16;49;21
Moises
He will never get.
00;16;49;21 - 00;17;00;26
Moises
Rid of that because he is the kid that is funny and makes jokes and for him to get rid of that would destroy our podcast.
00;17;00;26 - 00;17;01;23
Jason
The day I get fired.
00;17;02;14 - 00;17;04;05
Moises
You're no longer a producer.
00;17;05;15 - 00;17;09;05
Jason
On the show anymore.
00;17;09;05 - 00;17;09;29
Moises
You took the human.
00;17;09;29 - 00;17;10;05
Moises
Out.
00;17;15;02 - 00;17;22;02
Jason
I just want to apologize for calling you a robot, but without realizing the pain that it's caused. But also at the same time though.
00;17;22;16 - 00;17;23;12
Rances
You want to use it more.
00;17;23;12 - 00;17;25;21
Jason
Oh, so much more. So much.
00;17;25;21 - 00;17;26;29
Rances
I Identify with that heavily.
00;17;27;09 - 00;17;27;25
Jason
More
00;17;28;29 - 00;17;31;01
Moises
You don't get offended by It, do you?
00;17;31;01 - 00;17;31;07
Moises
No not anymore
00;17;31;07 - 00;17;34;06
Jason
He literally just spent 25 minutes talking about how it hurt him.
00;17;34;06 - 00;17;35;17
Moises
No, I think in the past.
00;17;35;17 - 00;17;36;06
Rances
In the past.
00;17;36;13 - 00;17;37;23
Moises
Who called you the robot? Was it me?
00;17;38;02 - 00;17;58;13
Rances
No, it was during. I mean, everyone would constantly say it all the time, but it was during a renewed mindset that one of our clients talked about me in that in that way I like that they couldn't. They connected with everyone else, but they could feel that connection with me because they felt like I was a robot.
00;17;58;15 - 00;18;14;11
Moises
The funny part is that Rances started to learn all they shit about himself. And then we came in and we're like, Maybe you're autistic, right? And this is in all seriousness, because there was a moment that I thought I was like, Asperger is because I was just going off on everybody. Like, I.
00;18;14;11 - 00;18;17;16
Jason
Was just is that the thing with Asperger's that you just sort.
00;18;17;27 - 00;18;24;03
Moises
Yeah, you just there's certain judgments that you have about people that you just feel like saying,
00;18;24;03 - 00;18;24;21
Jason
got it,
00;18;24;21 - 00;18;40;28
Moises
like, but you have no filter. Yeah. It just like really comes out and you know, and I was at the center with the team, like I went off on people. Like it was good that he was the robot because, because there were a lot of emotions to clean up after I went through that place.
00;18;41;28 - 00;18;53;10
Moises
Because I was, I was really mean. But then when we started to look into it, he, I guess that's when it started for you, right? You started to look into whether you were on the spectrum.
00;18;53;12 - 00;19;16;09
Rances
No for me the like the dyslexia came up early on in my coaching career. I had a client who had a son who was dyslexic and he also was dyslexic. So he was telling me about his son. This is older gentleman. His son was already in his like, you know, I think at the time, maybe close to 40 days telling me about his son.
00;19;16;10 - 00;19;42;17
Rances
His son was was a pilot. But everything that he's describing about his son and so on, so forth and like challenges and I was like, yo, this is the first time I'm hearing of someone that sounds like me. You know, these are challenges that I have. And my client, you know, was then telling me about his life growing up and now like how he would see things and how that was a hindrance, but he would overcome it.
00;19;42;17 - 00;20;06;22
Rances
He was a lawyer, I was an engineer, and he was a patent lawyer and an engineer. He's like, super hard for me to be able to get to this point. So as I'm hearing about his life and his son's life, he's telling me I'm like I said to him, it is all this stuff sounds so like, like familiar, like these are my struggles, like you're talking about them, but they're my struggles.
00;20;07;07 - 00;20;31;03
Rances
He was like, you, you might be dyslexic, checked out and I haven't been diagnosed. And actually I was talking to my wife about actually going to be diagnosed, but I started doing a lot of research on dyslexia. I was like, Holy shit. Like that moment felt like we talk about connection. That moment I felt like there's, there's a reason, there's a connection.
00;20;31;03 - 00;21;06;18
Rances
There's like, oh, there's others like me too, right? And then like during that time at the center, this is years forward now with that, that idea of the dyslexia was already there. But then, like through social media and all those facets, you start learning more. And I love that about it because you get to see people's experiences and with that you start to see the because you know, it's one thing to read something on a document written by by psychologist saying, and these are the behaviors and it did it right.
00;21;06;24 - 00;21;09;26
Rances
It's something else to see someone talking about their lived experiences.
00;21;09;26 - 00;21;10;04
Moises
Yeah.
00;21;10;15 - 00;21;27;07
Rances
And that when I started seeing that lived experiences that was like, oh my God. Like there's so many others like me. And that felt like, oh man, I'm not like broken and different and so on, so forth. There's a reason for this.
00;21;27;13 - 00;21;28;28
Moises
Yeah, I've got all the titok videos.
00;21;29;21 - 00;21;32;04
Rances
No, you only got a quarter of Them
00;21;32;04 - 00;21;37;05
Moises
this dude wouldsend me videos about neurodivergent. So like, all right, bro, I get it.
00;21;37;06 - 00;21;37;14
Moises
Yeah.
00;21;38;04 - 00;21;39;08
Jason
You're on the spectrum. You're on.
00;21;39;08 - 00;21;40;08
Moises
The spectrum. I get it.
00;21;40;08 - 00;21;42;16
Moises
I accept you like you're not going to lose me as a friend.
00;21;42;26 - 00;21;57;18
Jason
So my last question before we end this wonderful podcast, dont let my face to think that something terrible is about to come out of it. And of all the Disney movies that you resonate with is Wall-E at the top of it.
00;21;58;29 - 00;22;05;10
Rances
“Eevaaa”
00;22;05;10 - 00;22;05;22
Jason
Yeah.
00;22;06;21 - 00;22;21;22
Jason
That's all you had to say. Yep. Case closed. Thank you very much, guys. Don't forget to, like, subscribe and comment So this one gets the oil change every now and then. We love you. Piece of good night.