Two Millennials and Mom

082: Smoke & Mirrors: Hope, Lies and the Stories We Tell Ourselves

1 h 11 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 082: Smoke & Mirrors: Hope, Lies and the Stories We Tell Ourselves

Descripción

Where is the line between hope and delusion? And more importantly, how do you know when you’ve crossed it?   In this surprisingly complicated conversation, the Two Millennials and Mom crew wrestles with the uncomfortable overlap between optimism, denial, intuition, and self-deception. From relationships and bad jobs to abusive situations, AI hallucinations, red flags, and generational differences in “faith,” we unpack the stories we tell ourselves when reality feels too hard to face.   Is hope a survival tool…or a smoke screen? When do we keep fighting for something, and when are we just lying to ourselves? And how much evidence do we really need before we accept an uncomfortable truth?   We don't pretend to solve it, but we do pressure test the idea from various angles and land on something important: hope matters…but only when it’s grounded in reality.     10,000-Foot View of this Episode: * Hope and Delusion Feel Almost the Same: How do you know when hope becomes a lie? We explore why optimism and denial can feel nearly identical while you’re living through hard situations and why hindsight always feels clearer than reality in the moment. * The Stories We Tell Ourselves: Whether it’s relationships, bad jobs, or dreams that refuse to work out, we unpack how our brains protect us from uncomfortable truths. Are we consciously lying to ourselves, or are we subconsciously rewriting reality to survive? * The Lion, the Ladder, and the Shield: Cole introduces a standout analogy: if a lion is charging at you, do you grab a shield or climb the ladder to safety? The conversation turns into a deeper discussion about instinct, confidence, comfort zones, and why people don’t always choose the “obvious” path. * Can You Trust Your Gut? We wrestle with intuition, skepticism, and optimism. Is trusting your gut wisdom? Fear? Trauma? Wishful thinking? We debate whether trusting yourself is helpful…or whether it sometimes becomes just another form of self-deception. * Why Community Matters More Than We Admit: We’re often terrible at spotting our own blind spots. We discuss how trusted friends, family, and hard conversations can help pressure test beliefs, challenge narratives, and keep us from falling too far into false hope…or cynicism. * Hope Is a Tool, Not a Lifestyle: By the end, we land somewhere in the messy middle. Hope matters…but hope without action, honesty, or evidence can quickly turn into delusion. Real hope isn’t pretending everything is fine; it’s being willing to face reality and still move forward.   Memorable Quotes: * "I don't think a lot of people know what their gut feeling actually feels like." – Cole * “Our brain looks for the easiest, simplest answer. And if our heart is involved and sometimes that can skew things.” – Mecca * “We need to be honest with ourselves and say, 'maybe I do look stupid, but I would rather look stupid for five minutes than for five years.'” – Callie * "There are some hills not worth dying on. And if you're the one making the hills, it's probably not worth dying on." – Cole * “If AI is having hallucinations, we're all having hallucinations. Maybe that's been built in because we do all have hallucinations.” – Mecca * “I don't want to shit on hope because I think that it's really powerful. But I just think we need to be cognizant of the difference between hope and delusion.” – Callie * "If you can't be honest with yourself, find someone who can." – Cole * “If you continue to tell yourself the lie of 'I'm too smart to make a mistake' or 'I don't have to take ownership of that mistake,' that's just a delusion.” – Mecca * “You can tell the truth with kindness and with grace. You don't have to just sit here and be an asshole and that's the only time that it's considered truth.” – Callie   Resources Mentioned: * Pablo Escobar’s Hippo Problem: [https://tmampod.short.gy/gCcJ8p] Four imported hippos somehow turned into a nearly 200-animal ecological crisis in Colombia. Weird, fascinating, and ethically messy in all the ways. * Ukraine’s Animal Rescue Efforts: [https://tmampod.short.gy/GLrzYG] Proof that even in the middle of war, people still stop to save animals. The drone rescue story is wild, but the larger rescue effort is even more incredible. * Ballerina Farm & Tradwife Culture: [https://tmampod.short.gy/l4yIAn] Curious about the tradwife conversation? Dig into the cultural debate around traditional gender roles, entrepreneurship, family dynamics, and why social media has turned it into such a lightning rod topic.     Think about something you're currently calling hope. Now ask yourself: is there evidence you've been quietly walking around? Is there something you haven't told your people? This week, pick one hard question and actually say the answer out loud. It's kind of freeing….!   Find us wherever you listen to podcasts, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who needed to hear it.

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Portada del episodio 084: Free Speech & Dirty Water: A Small Town's Big Problems

084: Free Speech & Dirty Water: A Small Town's Big Problems

What happens when a small-town mom posts on Facebook asking her neighbors if their water looks weird too…and ends up arrested on a felony charge? Callie, Cole, and Mecca dig into the story of Trinidad, Texas, a town of fewer than 1,000 people that somehow became a national flashpoint for debates about free speech, government overreach, and what accountability actually looks like at the local level.   What starts as a discussion about dirty water quickly becomes a conversation about power, transparency, and the responsibility we all share when asking hard questions. It's messy, it's maddening, and according to Callie, it's not a one-off…It's a mirror.   10,000-Foot View of this Episode: * A Facebook post, a felony charge, and a lot of questions. Jennifer Combs asked her Trinidad neighbors on Facebook if they were experiencing the same water issues she'd heard about. No accusations, no demands, just a call for information. The local police chief had her arrested under a Texas law prohibiting false alarms. The grand jury declined to indict, and we are still trying to figure out how her question became a crime. * Was it even false? The city had already issued a boil water notice and the mayor acknowledged aging pipes. We break down the statute the police chief invoked and find it a pretty bad fit. No emergency declaration, no call to action, no fabricated claims. All Jennifer Combs did was ask if anyone else was seeing the same thing. * The dominos start falling. A water complaint spiraled into lawsuits, a protest arrest, retaliatory employee firings, and a city council vote to remove the judge who threw out one of the charges. Cole notes (with some dark humor) that Trinidad's legal bills may soon cost more than just fixing the pipes would have! * First Amendment 101: Local police are government. If the government arrests you for what you said about the government, that's a First Amendment problem. Cole and Callie agree it's not a close call. The bigger question we wrestle with: who gets to decide what's true, and why can that authority never belong to the people being questioned? * This isn't a Trinidad problem. Cole calls it a needle in a stack of needles. Callie mentions versions of this story are playing out in cities and towns everywhere…most without the national headlines or the lawyers. The real issue isn't one rogue police chief. It's a pattern of unchecked power and eroded trust that's become so common it barely registers anymore. * So what do you do about it? Vote like it matters, stop treating party affiliation like a team sport, and bring some basic decency back as a minimum requirement for public office. We draw a sharp distinction between ignorance and stupidity. Callie points out that the difference gets a lot more dangerous when the person in question has power over other people's lives.   Memorable Quotes: * "Where exactly is the line between protecting the public and protecting free speech?" – Cole * “Is there a rule about not being able to post your concern?” – Mecca * “Stupidity becomes really dangerous when those people are in power.” – Callie * "With the information that I have been presented, this is pretty clear cut tyrannical behavior that I'm seeing displayed by the city of Trinidad and its officials." – Cole * “We have got to stop saying, 'Well, I'm a Republican, so I can only vote for Republican. It doesn't matter if they have no morals or horrible humans. They're on my team, so I'm gonna vote for them.'” – Mecca * "[This situation is] a needle in a stack of needles." – Cole * “The real housewives don't have this much drama in a season that these people do in two months.” – Callie * "We're talking about the last six presidencies effectively, all of whom are well known for spewing bullshit." – Cole * “We've just got to bring some decency back.” – Mecca * “We made a song and memes out of [the hide ya kids, hide ya wife guy]. And we're gonna arrest her?” – Callie   Resources Mentioned: * Callie mentions that X (formerly Twitter) carries more misinformation [https://tmampod.short.gy/WxztjB] than other platforms, and the research backs her up. A 2023 EU-commissioned study by TrustLab found that X had the highest ratio of misinformation discoverability across six major platforms…AND that false content on X got more engagement than accurate content. * Texas Penal Code 42.06 [https://tmampod.short.gy/RC3hUf] is the "false alarm or report" statute used to charge Jennifer Combs [https://tmampod.short.gy/wT5DqR]. Worth a quick read if you want to see how far a stretch that charge actually was. * Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 [https://tmampod.short.gy/P5K0Wu] protects over 1,100 species of migratory birds, including their eggs, feathers, and occupied nests. Yes, even the ones in your new truck.     Trinidad, Texas probably wasn't on your radar a few months ago. Now it's a case study in what local government accountability (or the complete absence of it!) actually looks like. And the uncomfortable truth is that versions of this story are playing out in cities and towns all over the country, most of them without the national attention or the lawyers.   So here's the question worth sitting with: if something like this happened in your town, would you know? Would you speak up? Would you even feel safe doing it?   If today's conversation got you thinking, share it with someone who needs to hear it. And if you haven't already, subscribe to Two Millennials and Mom wherever you get your podcasts. We drop a new episode every Friday.

Ayer59 min
Portada del episodio 083: Harvard's Straight A Nation: What Are Grades Really For?

083: Harvard's Straight A Nation: What Are Grades Really For?

Harvard just voted to cap A grades at 20% of each class and we have thoughts. Starting in 2027, professors at one of the world's most elite universities will face hard limits on how many students can earn the highest grade, a response to a report showing 60% of Harvard grades are currently A's (up from 24% in 2005). Is this a bold stand for academic integrity, or a policy that punishes students for their classmates' success? We're digging into what grades are actually for, who bears the blame for grade inflation, whether Harvard's student body even deserves the scrutiny, and what AI might be about to do to all of it.   10,000-Foot View of this Episode: * Treating the Symptom: Putting a hard cap on A's doesn't address whatever created grade inflation in the first place. We push back hard on the idea that artificial scarcity is a solution. We also raise the uncomfortable question of what happens to the student who genuinely earned an A but loses it to a quota. * Who's to Blame: Professors? Students? Donors? The court of public opinion? We each have a theory, and none of us may be entirely right. The conversation gets thornier the further up the chain we follow the blame. * The Harvard Asterisk: There's a real argument that Harvard's student body is so aggressively selective that 60% A's might not be outrageous at all. We test that logic against UNT's 72% acceptance rate, valedictorians who can't all be equal, and what it actually takes to get through the front door in the first place. * What Are Grades Even For: Feedback? Motivation? A sorting mechanism for employers? Proof of mastery? We all land in pretty different places on this one and the answer turns out to matter a lot for whether Harvard's new policy makes any sense. * AI Changes Everything: Mecca drops the question no one was ready for: is AI already making it impossible to tell exceptional work from mediocre work? Cole thinks the floor and the ceiling are eventually going to meet and what comes after that might not look like school at all. * The Millennial Cautionary Tale: Callie's Weird Thought goes into how Gen Z is quietly outpacing Millennials in homeownership at the same age. The way they're doing it suggests they may have been watching Millennials very closely.   Memorable Quotes: * "If you're saying, okay, this is the material that you need to understand, and you understand all of that material. Moving the goalposts is not the point. Do you understand it or not?" – Cole * “Are we measuring intelligence? Or are we measuring compliance? And how are we measuring that?” – Mecca * “The court of public opinion via the internet is a treacherous place.” – Callie * "It would be possible for a whole class of students to all meet the standard to get an A." – Cole * “I don't think your education is all about the grades. Your education is about the exposure and the experience.” – Mecca * “It's a professor problem.” – Callie * "'I have this chip in my brain that tells me everything I need to know. I don't have to learn algebra. I installed it yesterday. I already know algebra.'” – Cole * “Social media could eat you alive as a professor.” – Mecca * “Are these professors teaching to the point of mastery? Or are they teaching to the point of avoiding drama?” – Callie   Resources Mentioned: * Harvard's own student newspaper [https://tmampod.short.gy/L4Iii8] covered this whole grading story themselves. See what they have to say about grade inflation. * Callie mentioned a 13-year-old attending NYU. The podcast Smart Girl Dumb Questions [https://tmampod.short.gy/dZNLzj] did a whole episode on him and it's worth a listen.     What do grades mean to you? Were they an accurate picture of what you knew, or just a game you learned to play? If you're a parent, what are you telling your kids grades are for? We'd love to hear where you land on this one.   Share this episode with someone who's ever argued about a grade they thought they deserved (or didn't get), and leave us a review wherever you're listening.

29 de may de 20261 h 5 min
Portada del episodio 082: Smoke & Mirrors: Hope, Lies and the Stories We Tell Ourselves

082: Smoke & Mirrors: Hope, Lies and the Stories We Tell Ourselves

Where is the line between hope and delusion? And more importantly, how do you know when you’ve crossed it?   In this surprisingly complicated conversation, the Two Millennials and Mom crew wrestles with the uncomfortable overlap between optimism, denial, intuition, and self-deception. From relationships and bad jobs to abusive situations, AI hallucinations, red flags, and generational differences in “faith,” we unpack the stories we tell ourselves when reality feels too hard to face.   Is hope a survival tool…or a smoke screen? When do we keep fighting for something, and when are we just lying to ourselves? And how much evidence do we really need before we accept an uncomfortable truth?   We don't pretend to solve it, but we do pressure test the idea from various angles and land on something important: hope matters…but only when it’s grounded in reality.     10,000-Foot View of this Episode: * Hope and Delusion Feel Almost the Same: How do you know when hope becomes a lie? We explore why optimism and denial can feel nearly identical while you’re living through hard situations and why hindsight always feels clearer than reality in the moment. * The Stories We Tell Ourselves: Whether it’s relationships, bad jobs, or dreams that refuse to work out, we unpack how our brains protect us from uncomfortable truths. Are we consciously lying to ourselves, or are we subconsciously rewriting reality to survive? * The Lion, the Ladder, and the Shield: Cole introduces a standout analogy: if a lion is charging at you, do you grab a shield or climb the ladder to safety? The conversation turns into a deeper discussion about instinct, confidence, comfort zones, and why people don’t always choose the “obvious” path. * Can You Trust Your Gut? We wrestle with intuition, skepticism, and optimism. Is trusting your gut wisdom? Fear? Trauma? Wishful thinking? We debate whether trusting yourself is helpful…or whether it sometimes becomes just another form of self-deception. * Why Community Matters More Than We Admit: We’re often terrible at spotting our own blind spots. We discuss how trusted friends, family, and hard conversations can help pressure test beliefs, challenge narratives, and keep us from falling too far into false hope…or cynicism. * Hope Is a Tool, Not a Lifestyle: By the end, we land somewhere in the messy middle. Hope matters…but hope without action, honesty, or evidence can quickly turn into delusion. Real hope isn’t pretending everything is fine; it’s being willing to face reality and still move forward.   Memorable Quotes: * "I don't think a lot of people know what their gut feeling actually feels like." – Cole * “Our brain looks for the easiest, simplest answer. And if our heart is involved and sometimes that can skew things.” – Mecca * “We need to be honest with ourselves and say, 'maybe I do look stupid, but I would rather look stupid for five minutes than for five years.'” – Callie * "There are some hills not worth dying on. And if you're the one making the hills, it's probably not worth dying on." – Cole * “If AI is having hallucinations, we're all having hallucinations. Maybe that's been built in because we do all have hallucinations.” – Mecca * “I don't want to shit on hope because I think that it's really powerful. But I just think we need to be cognizant of the difference between hope and delusion.” – Callie * "If you can't be honest with yourself, find someone who can." – Cole * “If you continue to tell yourself the lie of 'I'm too smart to make a mistake' or 'I don't have to take ownership of that mistake,' that's just a delusion.” – Mecca * “You can tell the truth with kindness and with grace. You don't have to just sit here and be an asshole and that's the only time that it's considered truth.” – Callie   Resources Mentioned: * Pablo Escobar’s Hippo Problem: [https://tmampod.short.gy/gCcJ8p] Four imported hippos somehow turned into a nearly 200-animal ecological crisis in Colombia. Weird, fascinating, and ethically messy in all the ways. * Ukraine’s Animal Rescue Efforts: [https://tmampod.short.gy/GLrzYG] Proof that even in the middle of war, people still stop to save animals. The drone rescue story is wild, but the larger rescue effort is even more incredible. * Ballerina Farm & Tradwife Culture: [https://tmampod.short.gy/l4yIAn] Curious about the tradwife conversation? Dig into the cultural debate around traditional gender roles, entrepreneurship, family dynamics, and why social media has turned it into such a lightning rod topic.     Think about something you're currently calling hope. Now ask yourself: is there evidence you've been quietly walking around? Is there something you haven't told your people? This week, pick one hard question and actually say the answer out loud. It's kind of freeing….!   Find us wherever you listen to podcasts, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who needed to hear it.

22 de may de 20261 h 11 min
Portada del episodio 081: Voting Rights & Redrawn Lines: The Battle Over Fair Representation

081: Voting Rights & Redrawn Lines: The Battle Over Fair Representation

What if one of the most important decisions in an election happens before anyone ever casts a ballot? This week, the crew dives into the Voting Rights Act of 1965, why America needed it in the first place, and how a law designed to protect voting rights unexpectedly connects to one of the most controversial (and misunderstood) political strategies today: gerrymandering.   From literacy tests and poll taxes to suspiciously squiggly voting districts, the trio unpacks how systems meant to protect democracy can still be manipulated and why so many Americans feel like the system is stacked against them. Along the way, they wrestle with hard questions about fairness, representation, political tribalism, campaign money, and whether democracy itself depends on trust.   10,000-Foot View of this Episode: * Theory vs. Reality: The 15th Amendment gave everyone the right to vote. The Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964. So why did the Voting Rights Act need to exist in 1965? Because humans find loopholes…and when they do, someone has to patch the hole. The gap between rights on paper and rights in practice is the whole ballgame. * Packing, Cracking, and Pie Crust: Gerrymandering isn't just a nerdy civics term. It's the strategic drawing of voting districts to concentrate or dilute opposing voters and Callie's pie analogy nails it. You can cut a pie so everyone gets some crust, or you can cut it so one person gets all of it. That's the game. * Both Sides Are Doing It: Gerrymandering isn't a Republican problem or a Democrat problem. It's a power problem. Texas redraws its maps. California retaliates and redraws theirs. The American public ends up face-down in the mud while two sides fight in a never-ending tug of war. * The Fire Hose Is the Strategy: Cole floats a theory worth sitting with: what if the flood of divisive issues isn't accidental? What if keeping citizens arguing about a hundred things is exactly how those in power prevent them from uniting around one? Divide and conquer is as old as Sun Tzu and it still works. * The Incumbency Paradox: Congress sits at a 10% approval rating and an 86% disapproval rating. And yet incumbents win reelection at a roughly 90% clip. How? Voter complacency, straight-ticket voting, and gerrymandered maps that make competition nearly impossible. The math doesn't add up…unless the system is designed that way. * You're the Product: Big tech isn't a bystander in any of this. If you're using a platform for free, the platform is using you. Your attention, your data, your behavior…all of it feeds the same machine that feeds the political cycle. * Accountability Starts at the Ballot Box: The antidote to all of this isn't revolution. It's showing up. Callie's message is clear: stop making blanket statements about never voting for a party again, and start making targeted decisions about individual representatives who have failed you. Writing to your rep, holding the line regardless of party affiliation, and not sitting this one out. That's the loophole citizens actually have.   Memorable Quotes: * "I think there is a misconception about many acts and laws and amendments in our Constitution about them being airtight." – Cole * “There's so many solutions here and we're not doing anything to move towards those solutions.” – Mecca * “Is it really a right if all of those obstacles make it dangerous or nearly impossible to exercise those rights?” – Callie * "Modern crony capitalism is whoever can shit on the other guy the most wins." – Cole * “It brings a level of frustration and distrust to what we want to call democracy.” – Mecca * “We know, based on history alone, that the most effective way to collapse a population is to exploit its existing divisions.” – Callie * "We can't stop people from voting, so we're going to make their votes count less." – Cole * “If we passed a law 61 years ago to take care of a problem that we saw, and 61 years later, we haven't resolved that problem. Something is wrong.” – Mecca * “It's not black or white or Democrat or Republican. It's one versus the other.” – Callie   Resources Mentioned: * Pete Buttigieg recently endorsed the Montana Plan. [https://tmampod.short.gy/XA7E4e] It's a real challenge to Citizens United but on a state level and it's happening right now. Pretty interesting rabbit hole if politics/money stuff fascinates you. * When ABC suspended Kimmel [https://tmampod.short.gy/Gnhcg7] under government pressure, 7.1 million people cancelled their streaming subscriptions in one month. Disney reversed course in a week. Your wallet is louder than you think. * Target dropped its DEI commitments [https://tmampod.short.gy/LjE6Qu] in January 2025 and paid for it with a 40-day national boycott and $12.5 billion in lost market value. * In 2019, Chilean high schoolers started jumping turnstiles over a 4% fare hike. It snowballed into 1.2 million people in the streets. It was the largest protest in Chilean history [https://tmampod.short.gy/UB1UEd]. It started with teenagers and a hashtag. * 119th Congress: 10% approval and 86% disapproval. [https://tmampod.short.gy/YcoIOe] Yet, somehow, incumbents keep winning. Make that make sense.     This week, pick one representative (local, state, or federal) and actually look them up. How long have they been in office? What have they done for your district? Have they earned your vote? You don't have to storm a capitol or start a podcast to participate in democracy. You just have to pay attention. And maybe write a letter. Cole will even make it a Mad Libs if that helps.   Let us know your thoughts, share this episode with someone who loves a good political debate, and don’t forget to follow, rate, and review Two Millennials and Mom wherever you listen.

15 de may de 20261 h 3 min
Portada del episodio 080: Fear & Integrity: The Stories Our Brains Tell Us

080: Fear & Integrity: The Stories Our Brains Tell Us

This week, the trio dives into the psychology of fear, negativity bias, and why humans are so quick to expect the worst even when there’s little evidence to support it. What starts as a conversation about a fictional “green flag husband” quickly spirals into a much larger discussion about trust, self-protection, political exhaustion, standing up for your beliefs, and the growing temptation to bury your head in the sand instead of confronting hard things.   The conversation explores how our brains are wired for survival, why fear often reacts faster than logic, and how modern life overwhelms our ability to process risk. Along the way, the three wrestle with uncomfortable questions about integrity, civic responsibility, respectful disagreement, leadership, and whether speaking up actually changes anything.   10,000-Foot View of this Episode: * Negativity Bias Is Not a Character Flaw...It's a Feature One bad review buries a thousand good ones. The brain is wired to weight potential threats more heavily than positive signals. That's not weakness; it's ancient survival code running on modern hardware and it costs us more than we realize. * The Brain Lies to Protect You Your brain isn't interested in truth. It's interested in patterns and the path of least resistance. Once it finds a narrative that fits, it will sell you that story and you'll believe it, because why would you lie to yourself? * Outrage Has an Expiration Date The hosts explore a sharp political tension: mob-level fury over Hunter Biden's salary, relative quiet over far broader concerns from the current administration. They're not letting either side off the hook. They're asking a harder question — what happens to a society when outrage becomes so constant it stops working? * Standing Up vs. Making Change...Are They Even the Same Thing? Cole, Callie, and Mecca get into it: is voicing your conviction meaningful if nothing moves? Callie says change requires action. Cole says integrity doesn't require outcomes. Mecca says being a leader of yourself is still leadership. Nobody fully wins. That's kind of the point. * Avoidance Is a Coping Mechanism (But So Is Pretending It Isn't) Head-in-the-sand isn't always cowardice. Sometimes it's exhaustion. Sometimes it's routine. Sometimes it's your brain convincing you that not reacting is the same as not knowing. Spoiler: it isn't.   Memorable Quotes: * "It kind of feels like we're overreacting, underreacting, or just opting out altogether." – Cole * “I think you owe it to yourself to not stick your head in the sand, but it's really easy to stick your head in the sand.” – Mecca * “If I can't trust myself, how the heck am I going to trust somebody else?” – Callie * "It only takes one card in a house of cards to collapse the whole thing." – Cole * “You can still voice what you believe in even though you can't change it versus requiring a change.” – Mecca * “If you stop thinking for yourself and allow AI to do all of this for you, at what point do you have to sit back and go, 'I don't even remember how to do that anymore.'” – Callie * "We're constantly assessing risk that we're biologically designed to. That's the reason our species is still alive." – Cole * “Is standing up for what you believe in being a leader of yourself?” – Mecca * “Is having this belief worth all of the trouble that it is going to cause?” – Callie   Resources Mentioned: * Here’s the Tangle [https://tmampod.short.gy/zpVEdZ] newsletter Mecca references when talking about political consistency and the Hunter Biden comparison. If you want news that actually shows you both sides without the spin, Tangle is worth a look. * The Quitter's Club [https://amzn.to/4u2bwNc] is the novel Mecca is reading, which sparked the whole conversation about that green-flag husband. (Also apparently a great read about women realizing their old goals no longer fit.) (affiliate link) * The Same Height Party [https://tmampod.short.gy/KoKG6E] put on by Oakland-based Lucian Novosel who spent months 3D-printing custom platform shoes to bring 15 guests of wildly different heights (ranging from 4'11" to 6'5") all to the same eye level for a night. The result was part social experiment, part perspective shift. * letsbuyspirit.com [https://tmampod.short.gy/JTA6sb] is the crowd-sourcing campaign Callie covers in Good News. It's moving fast, so check the current numbers; they'll be different from what you heard in this episode.     This week, notice the gap between fear firing and your logic catching up. That's where so much of our behavior lives. Is fear protecting you, or is it quietly running the show? And if you've got someone in your life you can actually put your convictions to the test with, hold onto that. It's rarer than it should be.   If you enjoyed this episode, share it with someone you trust enough to have a hard conversation with. And if you disagree with us? Even better. We believe respectful disagreement matters now more than ever.

8 de may de 20261 h 4 min