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Episode 41: Reddit stories to make you feel smart by comparison Episode 41

Episode 41: Reddit stories to make you feel smart by comparison

· 34:30

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Intro:

Yapping!

Edgar:

Hello, my name is Edgar and I am one half of the Yapping Schnauzers. We entertain you with yap worthy stories we find around the web. Erica is sick, still, and can't speak, so a link in this guide would make her feel better. And it'll probably be that way for like maybe another week or so, but yeah, that's how she gets better and in the interim, she found some cool stories she thinks that we would all like.

Edgar:

Today's theme is No Common Sense. Our first story is titled, Roommate Broke My Can Opener. So I brought a new one that I knew I could figure out how to use. So, I rent rooms out in my house. I generally do it with friends or friends of friends.

Edgar:

And a couple years ago, I had this roommate who was the ex husband of a friend of mine and I felt sorry for him. So I gave him a discount on rent. He still fell behind, but that's a totally different malicious compliance story. Well, he was the worst roommate I've ever had for many reasons, but for this account, he was pretty much living off canned food when he wasn't stealing my food, and he used my can opener every day. Well, he broke it and he came to me and told me that as a landlord I needed to get a new can opener.

Edgar:

And before I get to the malicious compliance, let me add, he was very proud of his Harvard PhD. He didn't use it in his minimum wage job, but he never avoided the opportunity to remind me that my PhD was from a state school and his was from Harvard. Note, I was working in the career that I used my PhD knowledge and the program I went to has several Nobel laureates and I worked with some of them. My roommate was pretty much a failure in life and had slipped into leeching off others to survive. He has no marketable skills.

Edgar:

Anyways, the malicious compliance. I bought a new can opener, but I got one that is really tricky to use. It basically works like an electric can opener, but it's manual. I knew there was no way this incompetent roommate would be able to figure out how to use it, and he couldn't. I'd find mango cans in the garbage, and he's not even recycling, and he came to me and asked me how to use the can opener.

Edgar:

My response? A guy with a Harvard degree should certainly be able to figure out this on their own, if a guy like me can. Having a roommate is like very difficult for anyone who has a roommate, which I think is like most people these days because like the housing market and like rent, especially in a lot of major cities is just astronomical. A good roommate is like a blessing and a bad roommate is like kind of the role in most cases. Especially if like you don't really know them.

Edgar:

And like I guess the worst part about this roommate is like, like I'm very against college, I kinda like the idea of them. I think like maybe once upon a time, like decades ago, they like meant something, but because like hundreds of thousands or like millions of people like graduate every year, it's just like, it's just very diluted. Basically everyone has a degree at this point, and everyone isn't a millionaire with a mansion, so there's probably something breaking in that system. Plus like, can learn a lot better on your own these days. There's a lot of things online that help you to learn, whether you use Google, YouTube, or AI.

Edgar:

I mean, and this would be my worst nightmare kind of like roommate, like someone that constantly talks about like their Harvard degree. Do I know any Harvard people? I think like a few people from my old job did, but I don't think I ever came up that often. Especially like once you're in the real world. A good degree from like a good school can probably get you through the door, but like as you get older, what you've done with that degree or what you've done in general is what's gonna carry you to like wherever you wanna go in your career.

Edgar:

That and plus knowing some people, but I didn't really like the lather of like having to know someone to like climb the ranks either. In this case, I feel like if he had the balls he would just kick the roommate out at this point. Like he's not even paying rent and like, yeah sure. If you like, if you can survive not paying rent for like a month or two, and like there's someone like you're close to or like your friends with, I think that's like, if you're comfortable with it, you should be able to offer. But I mean, especially like for someone that's like a drug like this, it's just like kick them out as soon as you can.

Edgar:

Though I think like a lot of like, depending on which city this takes place in, there's like a lot of tenant protection laws, so OP might just be like stuck with him. Because of that, things like this where he just gets a slightly more complicated can opener. It's probably like a or in many ways just fight back against the roommate. Like hopefully he gets the picture. So the top comment is, Really freak him out with a P-thirty eight.

Edgar:

I had one of these when I was in the army and could open a can in a snap. But if you didn't know the NAC, you were screwed. So what's a P-thirty eight? Okay, so a P-thirty eight, so in the top comment I had a link to a P-thirty eight can opener in Wikipedia. And if you're in the army, you can tell me more about it.

Edgar:

I would like to hear your experience with it, because I've never seen this thing before. I thought it was a penny, because the image just shows the penny, but no. The P38K opener is just like a little credit card looking slab of metal, with like half a knife sticking out of it, guess. Like half a very short knife sticking out of it. And I mean, can see how that works, but I think I would end up just like, just stabbing the can until it opened.

Edgar:

I might try and get it and just to have it as an option. But yeah, OP, you final thoughts. OP, maybe you should get the P38. I wonder if a Harvard graduate would be able to get it. So, the next story is titled, I applied to be a receptionist at a vet clinic and somehow got interviewed like I was joining the Avengers.

Edgar:

Dang. Yeah. And these interviews are getting crazy for no reason. Like, I get it for like, if you're some sort of like tech company or where you're gonna get paid like $6.07 figures, but like even these like entry level jobs are like asking for way too much for no reason. So the story begins, I walked in expecting the usual questions.

Edgar:

Can you answer phones? Handle scheduling? Instead, the interior goes straight into, what would you do if an aggressive dog lunged at you? How many aggressive dogs happened? Oh, yeah, is a bit clinic, so I guess this makes sense actually.

Edgar:

It's terrible TBH. So, there I am, calmly explaining how I'd approach an angry Rottweiler, thinking, 'Wow, receptionist here must double as pet psychologist. And she finishes the page of questions, looks up at me, and suddenly freezes. Wait, you applied for receptionist, not vet assistant? And I said, Yeah.

Edgar:

And then she says, oh, wrong list. Let's start over. And just like that, I was put through round two, a completely different set of receptionist questions back to back. By the end of it, I felt like I'd been tested for receptionist, assistant, and part time adventure all in one sitting. The longest job interview of my life and I still don't know if I got the job.

Edgar:

But hey, at least I know now how to wrestle a hypothetical dog while answering phones. This isn't like exactly like the worst kind of interview to get. Like I'm sure it's annoying to like do basically two interviews back to back. It seems like it's like a fun interview, like just asking hypotheticals about taking care of pets, so like I guess being a receptionist to pet owners. I wonder what kind of question made OP think that this was like an Avenger kind of like question.

Edgar:

Yeah, my longest job interview was probably my interview for Google. So for the tech interviews, if you guys ever heard about it, they're very notorious for being very long and arduous. And that was before like AI happened, like when I did my interview, like when AI was like more widely used. So, I mean, it was like a very, not a very different dynamic, like, it's, I feel like it's a lot harder, I'll tell you why after I explain how the tech interview works. But basically, they call you initially, like some recruiter, and they just are like asking you basic questions, just to ensure that you weren't lying on your resume, and that you know how to ask.

Edgar:

And then afterwards, you get a phone call interview where, well not a phone call, but more like a video interview with an engineer, you and the engineer, and then the engineer asks you like a simple coding question. In tech, it's called LeetCode style questions, and they're basically like little coding computer science puzzles that you have to discuss like possible solutions, and then like make clarifying questions, and afterwards you had to code out the the solution, and then explain the solution and all that stuff. Like, do all that within a thirty minute like, interview time slot, and that's like the first first, second round. And afterwards, if you did well enough, they bring you into the on sites, or through like Google Meets. And then from that point, they had four to five back to back interviews in that same style.

Edgar:

And the questions were pretty difficult. And I didn't sleep that day actually. Yeah, so for that interview it was for Google, I did not sleep that day, because I was very anxious, because I really wanted to get in. But yeah, the interview was like four or five back to back, and it lasted like five ish to six hours maybe. It felt like it was forever.

Edgar:

It was basically like a whole workday, where I was just like talking to Google engineers, and they were pretty cool, all the ones I met. I never met them again after that day, but like they were pretty cool to talk to, and the kind of questions they asked were basically like, things that you'd find like in a ketoscience intro course, to be honest. It was like, graph problems. It's been like four ish, five years, so I don't quite remember it exactly anymore. So yeah, back then, it was like a pretty long interview, like, like the interview itself was long, and then also, like, in the time between waiting, for each recruiter interaction or email was like pretty long too.

Edgar:

Like, I think I got, I submitted my my resume to like the Google careers portal at like April, May, and I started working at December, because that's how long it took to like go back and forth with the recruiter and all of the people that were involved in the interview process. So yeah, it was like half a year basically for me. And I was just like basically studying and just trying to get better at my skills at the time. Cause I was very entry level, like, engineer wise, like in terms of like, definitely in terms of skill and just like knowledge. But, yeah, it was a good time afterwards.

Edgar:

I would recommend. But yeah, nowadays, however, because everything was like online, interviews and all that stuff, it's very easy for people to just use AI in another like tab or window or like device. It's just to help them like through the the interview process. And like obviously interviewers can see like when you're not acting honestly, but like it definitely makes it easier if you're good if you have a good poker face. I haven't been in the interview loop recently, so I don't know how drastically that affects the interview process.

Edgar:

But I know like a lot of companies now like trying to have people like interview in person, just to weed out people who just use AI to like get them through the process. Which it makes sense. Ideally, the person knows their like their basics and their fundamentals, like it's the back of their hand. But because I use AI every day, just I would say like the first few years of your career, if you're in like engineering or if you're interested, I wouldn't use AI. Or I wouldn't use AI when you're coding, just because you need to be able to code yourself, and you should be able to see and like get all that skill and all that struggle that helps you get better at being an engineer.

Edgar:

And then you get to see a lot of problems, see how they're solved, or see like Like, personally, I struggle a lot when I'm like creating things. And it's like, I feel like every single possible bad thing that can happen, or bug I can like, run across to, I always hit it regardless of if I'm using AI or not in my, when I'm coding. I'm always learning it in that, in that range, but yeah. If you're starting out, I would not recommend. I would recommend using AI to like help you teach and stuff, but like for coding tasks for you, I would just like keep it to your own skills.

Edgar:

And then like after a year or two, once like you know how like code is supposed to look, and you have like, you can start forming opinions on like how things should be organized, and when you can just like basically understand like the gist of all of that, then you can use AI to just like, speed up the process. But yeah, that's just to say that like, when I I I think he like, for him or for OP, this interview was probably, like, not tough, but just like long, which is like a different kind of like, like difficulty, like the endurance event. But at least for me, to like a tank interview, I I would kind of prefer these kind of interviews just because just because, like, you're not, like, under pressure to, like, perform, like, some sort of, like, coding puzzle and coding on the spot. Like, I I know how to code, but, I feel like if I had to do it on the spot, I would be a little bit nervous. And like these questions are like pretty fun, an adventure style question, or a question that makes you feel like they're into unforgiving adventures.

Edgar:

Sounds pretty intense. Oh, and the top comment is, what would you do if an angry customer lunged at you? And then OP responded, turned their rattler on them. Well, I've never had an angry customer lunged at me. And I don't think I would ever have a job where someone would attack me like that.

Edgar:

I think how would I answer this? If I want a job, I'll say I step out of the way. And if I don't want a job, I would say I would lunch at them at the same time, so we meet in the air. This isn't really like a Am I the asshole host, but like hopefully, Ophie gets the job. Like, I mean, basically doing these two interviews back to back.

Edgar:

I feel like he kind of deserves some, like some, at least some other like interview, if they're still on the fence of him. But I still feel like this is like the way that the interviewer handled this interview with OP is a little bit of a red flag for the vet clinic. Like it just shows like a lack of organization or something broken in the system. So maybe there's other parts of working at this vet clinic that would be equally as hectic. But I mean, we're in a tough job marketeconomy, so you just have to take what you can get.

Edgar:

The next story is titled, Am I the Asshole for Telling My Best Friend I Understood Why His Fiance is so Disappointed that He Proposed to Her at the Gym. I guess if they're like a fitness couple or whatever, this would make sense, but I do not know a lot of people who'd want to be willingly proposed to at a gym. So yeah, I, 27f, was excited when my best friend, 27 male, told me he had proposed to his girlfriend, 29 female. He said he had the proposal on video. I was so confused when the video started out in a woman's gym when I saw his girlfriend on an exercise machine in the video.

Edgar:

I had a bad feeling. Yeah, me too. And I'm not even seeing it. But yet she looked so shocked and she said yes. She only looked happy for like two minutes and the rest of the time she gave an insincere smile.

Edgar:

My best friend expressed frustration that his fiance had confessed she wasn't happy with the proposal after he asked her why she looked so sad. He was venting to me and asked me how I'd feel if a guy proposed to me while I was in the gym. I guess he really expected me to agree with him, but I said I would hate it. I said I don't want to be proposed to when I'm sweaty and stinky at the gym. And I basically explained to him that I understood why she was disappointed.

Edgar:

My best friend called me shallow and a bad friend. Am I the asshole? I would not say you're an asshole for giving your opinion. It's pretty odd like there has to be some sort of like like inside joke between OP's friend and his fiancee, but I mean, given that the video shows that she clearly wasn't that happy about the proposal, I see Indus guy's future, like, having to re propose, like, somewhere better. Like, at least some sort of, nice restaurants or or like a nice park.

Edgar:

Like what you do to propose, I guess doesn't really matter too much, because it's just like a single moment and like in the rest of the time that you're together with somebody. And there's plenty of more times, plenty more like situations and moments that you can make the other person feel more special. Despite all that, I would not want to propose to someone at a gym. I don't see much many people being happy about the idea of being proposed to at a gym. And the worst part is he got this on film for whatever reason, just to like, I guess to memorialize how disappointing this proposal was.

Edgar:

Yeah, when I proposed to Erica, it was pretty I I put it out pretty well. I had like a few months to set it up and we actually got we I actually did the proposal at New York City in the QC Spa. And yeah, I just messaged him like months in advance if we can do this, and we just, we're back and forth. The main contact at QC Spa, and they were very professional, and it was a nice place. I had like a mini vision about how it would look like, and I had a photographer and all that stuff, and I wanted everyone to, of our families to be at the place, or both our families or as many of our families to be at the spa as possible.

Edgar:

And QC Spa at the time allowed us, because like it's a spa, so there there's no children allowed, and everyone has to be like in in their like their robes or like their bathing suits. But for like a wee five minute window, they allowed us to do the proposal like in in full dress in the on premise. And yeah, and they're very professional about everything, and they're equally as excited when we went as well. I would recommend it. Oh, and funny thing too, I felt like the entire day was like very stressful.

Edgar:

So, I drank a little bit too much, and I didn't eat that day either. So, the drinks hit me a lot harder. But yeah, like maybe like after three or four like cocktails in, I was like definitely like beyond buzzed. And I was dropping off Erica to like a massage, like appointment within the spa. So I and she would be there for like an hour or so.

Edgar:

And that would give me time to just like Well, ideally that would give me time to get the photographer and one ready, and also for me to like sober up a little, and as soon as I dropped her off, I went to the elevator in QC Spa, and then I went like to the ground level. And when the elevator door opened, I just see like a tall guy, formally dressed, and he said, Are you Edgar? And I was like and then I had to step up quickly because I was the manager and had to explain to him, I guess, basically the entire plan. Because I was the manager for that night, for that shift, and so I had to explain to him as clearly as possible without slurring my words. But still, it went smoothly.

Edgar:

See, I'm not trying to yeah, but I'm not trying to mock the guy for proposing at a gym. I think as long as the place is special to you and whoever you're proposing to, I mean, that's all that really matters when it comes to the proposal. And I mean, even though she didn't like being proposed to at the gym, she still said yes. So you still have like that closeness and that bond to elicit that yes. So now, the top comment is, don't ask questions you aren't ready to hear the answer to.

Edgar:

I mean I agree with you and Jim is an odd place to propose unless it is a very specific reason for it. Like that's where you met and you loved that story or that's how you bonded or whatever. He's just upset that he disappointed his fiancee and he needs to come to terms with that. I do agree with this. I think maybe OP's friend had a reason to do this, but I mean, ultimately like he knows that he like messed up.

Edgar:

He knows that his fiancee is like not on board with like how it was done. And as I said earlier, I see a re proposal in his future. Somewhere nice, somewhere with a photographer maybe, or I guess you gotta make up for the mistake by making it a little bit bigger when you do re propose to her. Hopefully to have like a nice long wedding. Nice long happy wedding.

Edgar:

Nice long happy marriage. So final verdict OP, the one who said that this plan was dog shit, that this plan was terrible. You are not the asshole for just basically just being honest to your friend. The pro- like OP's friend who proposed, I wouldn't say he's an asshole for this. He's an asshole for how he treated OP, for giving her opinion, but I don't think he was the asshole for proposing in this way.

Edgar:

Because I'm sure he thought that this was like a good proposal. So, the next story is titled, 'Am I the asshole for telling my girlfriend she's going to have to get over dirt if she wants kids. I, 25 female, and my girlfriend, Amy, 27 female, is a wonderful person. She's very smart and she works in a clean room with computer chips and all that stuff, but she's also something of a germaphobe to the point that she keeps her toothbrush in the hallway outside the bathroom in a ziplock bag. Her apartment is always spotless.

Edgar:

She showers thrice a day, Even her car somehow never has any dirt on the floor. And she hand washes all of her clothes as soon as she's done wearing them. And it's both impressive and intimidating. I'm not the messiest person on the planet by any means. I don't have massive piles of unwashed dishes or a leaning tower of used pizza boxes or anything.

Edgar:

But I'm not as clean as she is and I'm not against making some adjustments, but we've been talking more about the future now that we've been getting serious and I've come across a problem. Amy wants kids, desperately wants kids. And I like kids too, but she's never been around babies or little kids before in her life and she seems to think she'll be able to keep the house just as clean as it is now and keep the baby spotless too. I'm the oldest of four and the oldest cousin of nine and I grew up around kids. I've been babysitting since I was 10.

Edgar:

There's no such thing as clean toddlers, not for longer than ten minutes at the very most. And she thinks if we just work at it, we have a spotless house and a spotless kid. And I told her gently of course that that's just not possible. And I asked how she plans on handling diapers, vomit, frogs smuggled into the house, jam going everywhere, soup bowls tipped over for fun, spilled grape juice, nail polish on the wall and the like. And she insisted that the kids who do that are just poorly trained and don't have good boundaries.

Edgar:

She kind of has a point there but I told her that their kids without fine motor skills or impulse regulation and accidents will always happen. And if she wants to have kids, she's going to have to accept that they're going to get messy and her house will get messy. Amy accused me of not being supportive and trying to find excuses to not have kids with her and trying to guilt her into being sloppier. This is dissolving into an actual fight instead of a discussion and I'm starting to second guess myself. Maybe my family was just excessively messy because we were rural and poor and maybe my standards are too low and we really haven't tried hard enough.

Edgar:

It's very frustrating and I want some outside perspective. Parental perspective especially. So yeah, I'm not a parent but I do take care of a lot of cousins and nephews and nieces. And yeah, I would agree with this. I mean, it depends on the child, honestly.

Edgar:

It's a mixture of like how their personalities are and how they were raised. But yeah, for the most part, kids are pretty messy, like they like we have like our nephews over pretty often, and we've had like Erica's little sister over when she used to like live here. The entire like apartment, entire like room would always get messy after like a whole night of having them over. And I'm not even sure what happens. We're just like playing games or we're just like on our iPads or whatever.

Edgar:

But yeah, somehow the entire apartment is flipped over and then we have to slowly pick up all the pieces again. But yeah, it's just like something to accept. Like even if they're like well trained, like Obi says, they don't have fine motor skills or impulse regulations, so they're just like more prone to like having more accidents or making a mess of the place. OP and OP's fiance girlfriend should probably have like more honest discussion about this. Like whatever OP just said in the spread, he should tell his girlfriend because this isn't coming from a place, oh, I don't wanna have kids or I want us to be more messier.

Edgar:

Maybe a little bit of that, to be honest, but it's just OP just wants to give his girlfriend like a heads up. This is just like the reality. And not to freak out when the other child like just ends up flipping the room whenever they're at. But yeah, the top comment is just when you think you've cleaned up all the poop and mess you find a casual pile of vomit behind a pillow. And I think that basically sums it up.

Edgar:

I just, especially like babies. I've heard like a lot of horror stories and then I've heard like some like stories, like other stories like you're, you're the first like year or two with a baby, they're either like perfect angels or you're not sleeping for like the entire period of time. Especially for babies, just, they vomit and poop because that's, they're getting used to like eating and all that stuff that people had to get used to. But you hopefully have an honest conversation about this because like this isn't like kind of like a relationship ending kind of argument. It's like something they can just set boundaries or just set like proper expectations about like what having a baby means.

Edgar:

Because that's you raising a person to like a full adult and like making sure they're like all prepared for life and stuff. The messiness is only a part of like what being a parent is. Like I'm not a parent, but I imagine like it's pretty difficult, but also equally rewarding when done well. Final verdict. OP and her girlfriend are not the assholes in the story.

Edgar:

It's just like kind of not seen eye to eye, but it's like nothing like a five, ten minute conversation can't fix. The next story is titled, Am I the asshole for taking my daughter out for a nice dinner and leaving everyone else to fend for themselves. So my daughter, 16 female, and I, 43 female, love eating at authentic Asian restaurants. We had to pick my son, 12 male, up at a Korean barbecue about forty minutes from my house. It was a party with another family and I suggested to my husband, 44 male of twenty five years, that he and the two other kids can have whatever they want for dinner and my daughter and I would get Korean barbecue at this restaurant.

Edgar:

And he said, no, we should all go as a family. And I reminded him that he and the other kids aren't big fans of Korean barbecue and it would be cheaper to eat separately. Yeah, never makes sense. And he insisted on everyone going. When we get to the restaurant and he sees the menu, he complains he doesn't know what to order and complain about the price.

Edgar:

The other kids followed suit. I suggested they go eat in another restaurant in the plaza and daughter and I would get the Korean food. It smells so amazing by the way. And we waited twenty minutes for our table and he continued to make comments about the price. Even though you better not order anything fancy.

Edgar:

Even told me you better not order anything fancy. And that was the last straw. I got up and I went to the van. Everyone followed. I said I was taking everyone home and my daughter and I would go on our own to a local Korean barbecue.

Edgar:

We did exactly that. Everyone else had McDonald's and played Roblox and I get home and he is fuming saying that I owe everyone an apology. I refused. I said I had zero remorse and it seemed like everyone was happy but him and went to bed. I slept perfectly fine and he's still mad.

Edgar:

So, am I an asshole for taking my daughter out for dinner and leaving everyone else to do their own thing? Probably like an asshole to her husband, but I mean, she did warn the husband that he and like the children that like that followed like and some of the other children, are not fans of like Asian food or Korean barbecue. And if that's the case, like it's totally okay to just like eat something else because Korean barbecue is very expensive. I think around here was like $40.45 dollars per person depending on like what you get. Like around here we have a place called Hot Pot.

Edgar:

They have like different prices for if you want like the hot pot which is just like the soup where you can put a bunch of, you can put like a, like whatever soup base kind of noodle, and like any kind of meat or like vegetable in there, and then you boil it, and then you make your own soup that way. They also have like, favar, to like get like more ingredients, and condiments, and peppers and spices. Yeah, so they have that for the hot pot, then they have the Korean barbecue part of it, which is like, you have a grill in the middle of your table, and you just order a bunch of raw meat and whatever you want to like eat, and it's all really seasoned for you, so all you gotta do is just put all that food into the grill in the middle, and you make your own food in that way. And it sounds like a lot of extra work, most of the time it feels a little bit more extra, but like the food is just like amazing. And it's like, it's buffet, so it's like all you can eat.

Edgar:

Depending on, yeah, one or the other or both, the prices are like, ranges from like 30 to $40. And yeah, that's pretty, per person, and yeah, that gets very expensive really fast. So to have like a whole family where like more than half of the family doesn't like Korean barbecue just doesn't make sense, because it's just so expensive. No one's gonna be enjoying the food. And I think ideally the husband would have listened at the start because then he would have had pizza instead of McDonald's in frustration.

Edgar:

The top comment is, Not the asshole. You told him what your plan was and he and you both knew he and the other kids didn't like Korean barbecue. There is nothing wrong with doing things separately occasionally. And yeah, I agree because even though it's ideal for everyone to like eat as a family or like eat all together, sometimes people just don't like the food that's being served. It's like only so many places that have like just chicken tenders or fries or some sort of side you can like nip on, but like it all just comes down to compromise, which both OP and her husband failed to do.

Edgar:

So final verdict, I think both OP and her husband were assholes in this situation. The husband because he was stubborn and then OP because even though like she was in the race, she kind of like rubbed it into, the husband's face instead of trying to like remedy it. It seemed like she just put more fire into it. So that is all the stories that we have today. Thank you for tuning in to this week's episode.

Edgar:

Check out our website, www.yappings.com and join our mailing list for updates. If you love our podcasts and want to support us, subscribe and share to your friends and family. We would appreciate this so much. Also, have a Facebook group called Am I the asshole relationship and family drama linked in description. Join so you can share Am I the asshole posts you like or share your own stories for us all to judge.

Edgar:

We may even read a few posts in one of our episodes if you're lucky. Hopefully Erica will get better soon. Like and subscribe to help her feel better. And thank you. Bye.

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