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When Caring is Not Enough! Biden, Inauguration and Elvis
Episode 5120th January 2021 • Stillness in the Storms • Steven Webb
00:00:00 00:16:47

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We dive into the big difference between caring and compassion today. I’ve been reflecting on the last four years, especially how unexpected it was to see Donald Trump become president. It felt surreal every time I woke up and thought, “Wow, he’s still in charge.” But now, with Biden’s inauguration, it feels like compassion is making a comeback in politics. We talk about how nobody’s perfect and how those little flaws can actually show the depth of our humanity, like when we stumble over words or get emotional. It's all about recognizing that being perfectly imperfect is what truly connects us and that we should embrace our flaws with kindness.

We all care, we don't all have compassion. And what does it mean to be real and genuine? It means to be flawed which results in perfection. 

Episode I mention is Revision History: Analysis, Parapraxis, Elvis 


Reflecting on the past four years, we dive deep into the unexpected journey of American politics, specifically the surprising rise of Donald Trump and the lessons learned along the way. It’s a wild ride of emotions, from disbelief to a strange obsession with the daily happenings of the presidency. As we approach a new administration with Joe Biden, there’s a sense of hope that compassion might return to politics. We explore the difference between caring and compassion, emphasizing that no one is perfect, including ourselves. Through personal anecdotes and reflections, we illustrate how compassion in leadership can lead to understanding and resilience, highlighting the importance of recognizing our shared flaws as human beings. The conversation flows into the concept of being 'perfectly imperfect,' using examples from music and personal experiences to show that true connection comes from our vulnerabilities rather than our flawless performances.

Takeaways:

  • Four years ago, I never thought Donald Trump would actually become president, but here we are.
  • I've learned that everyone makes mistakes and nobody is perfect, including myself.
  • Caring is about wanting things to be right, but compassion goes deeper than that.
  • Compassion is what we need in leadership today, not just caring or perfection.
  • Elvis's imperfect performances remind us that true emotion matters more than flawless execution.
  • We all have flaws, and that's what makes us perfectly imperfect human beings.

Transcripts

Speaker A:

A little over four years ago, I would talk to my friends about the US election.

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And one conclusion I could only come to was there was no way Donald Trump was going to win the election.

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But then, over the next four years, I woke up every morning, or not every morning, but I woke up many mornings thinking, holy crap, Donald Trump is president.

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Over the four years, I got so obsessed with Donald Trump's Twitter and the.

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I was partly entertained, but every day I was like, wow, I cannot believe a president would say that.

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And here we are today on the day of the inauguration, and Biden is about to be sworn in.

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And I was watching the TV last night.

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There seems to have been compassion returns to politics in America.

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And one thing I've learned over the last four years is nobody is perfect.

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Everybody makes mistakes.

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Everybody slurs their words.

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Everybody says the wrong word.

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I'm no exception.

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In council meetings, I often say the wrong word to what I really mean.

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And luckily, my colleagues recognize that I believe and they often correct me, and I'm thankful for them in doing so.

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There's two things that I want to bring up in this podcast, and that's about the difference between caring and compassion.

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And the other thing is nobody is perfect.

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I'm Stephen Webb, and this is Stillness in the Storms.

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And it's a podcast that'll help you to build resilience and that emotional wisdom to deal with things when they go wrong.

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I'm paralyzed.

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I've been paralyzed since I was 18, and I think I qualify for someone that ended up in a life that I wouldn't choose and has been quite difficult.

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I find my inner peace.

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I find my happiness.

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And I live a pretty damn good life and very blessed life.

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And it's a blessed life because it's deeply flawed, which means it's perfect.

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I could never understand the.

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When people say perfectly imperfect, I was like, yeah, that doesn't make sense.

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But as I get older, I realize that everything doesn't have to make sense.

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And I was listening to a podcast by Malcolm Gladwell, and he was talking in the podcast is called Revision History.

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He was talking about paraplexis.

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And it's when you say the.

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The wrong word, when you cannot get your words out and you fumble on them or and you fall upon them.

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He talks about Elvis and Elvis, especially in one particular song, are you lonesome tonight?

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And if you look it up on YouTube, look up every performance you find of are you lonesome tonight?

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In.

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In the singing part, it's flawless.

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It's perfect.

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But in the bridge where it's the talking.

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And it is not easy to remember the words in a talking part, but this was one of his biggest songs.

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What's really telling about during the bridge is how he falls over the words.

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And he doesn't fall over the words because he doesn't know the words.

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He falls over the words because emotions get in the way.

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And you can tell that because when Malcolm Gladwell looked into it and he spoke to a few colleagues and other musicians, he realized that prior to Priscilla leaving him, he was able to do it a lot easier.

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And then when Priscilla left him, he was really difficult to do it.

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The way the song set out is, are you alone tonight makes him the hero, and then the bridge makes him the flawed person.

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And when we.

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When we are talking about us being a flawed person, we get a lump in our throat.

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We find things difficult.

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We don't want to show up.

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We.

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We want to run.

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And if you're on stage or you're talking to a group of people and suddenly you're talking about something that you're not quite sure of, or an emotion is running strong, you.

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You will fumble your words.

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You'll get them wrong anyway.

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Let me play a little bit of the song now for you, and then you'll understand a little easier.

Speaker B:

Is your heart filled with pain?

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Shall I come back again?

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Tell me, dear, are you lonesome too?

Speaker B:

I wonder if you're launching the night.

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You know, someone said the world's a stage and each of us play a part they had me playing in plus tags.

Speaker B:

You read your line so cleverly.

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You never missed.

Speaker A:

Thank you.

Speaker B:

They came act too.

Speaker B:

You forgot the word.

Speaker B:

You seem to change, you fool.

Speaker B:

You acted strange and why I've never why I ever did it.

Speaker B:

Honey, who am I talking to?

Speaker B:

You lied when you said you love me.

Speaker A:

You.

Speaker B:

I had no cause to doubt you.

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But I really go on hearing your lies and you go on living without you.

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Now the stage is bare and I'm standing there without any hair.

Speaker A:

I know.

Speaker B:

And you won't come back to me Is your heart.

Speaker A:

So there it is, the.

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The amazing performer, Elvis Presley.

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And I wonder how many people realize that, why it was so difficult for him to get those words out.

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But that's what makes those performances so perfect.

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And when it comes down to performing that song, many people would perform it perfectly, but no one could perform it, which, ironically, isn't perfect because Elvis performed it perfectly, which was wrong every single time.

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He performed it perfectly because the words meant something and they were deep and meaningful.

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And that's the difference between caring.

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You care whether you get the word right.

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When you're singing a song.

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You care whether you hit the notes right.

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Compassion is not about hitting the notes right.

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Compassion is about the feeling behind the notes, the reason you're there, the why behind the words and the songs and the feelings.

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And over the last four years in America and in this country, with the rise of nationalism more and in America with the patriots and all of these people deeply care.

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They deeply care about their country, and they want their country to be right, and they want their country to fit a certain image in their minds.

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And I cannot sit here and say they're wrong, because they're not wrong.

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There's nothing wrong with caring.

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You know, we want everybody to care, but when we move on from that caring, we realize caring isn't about one perfect solution.

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Because there isn't one perfect solution.

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There isn't a perfect life.

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There isn't a perfect human.

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There isn't a perfectly sung song.

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The perfectly sung song is the flawed one, the speech that the person fumbles over their words and has a tear in their eye and has compassion.

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That's the perfect one.

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That's what it means to be perfectly imperfect.

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And this last four years have really shown the difference between caring and compassion.

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And last night, Biden, someone that suffers from a stutter, which I do as well.

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My stutter started when I was about 17 years old when a few friends would take the mick out of me when I couldn't get my words out properly and they would tell me to hurry up, and I developed a stutter.

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At that point, I don't have it so much anymore because I tend to.

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It's only when I get really nervous.

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But Biden has a stutter, and you can see sometimes in his mind, he's trying to get the word out, and he doesn't always get the word.

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And he misses words, and so does Trump.

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Trump doesn't so much miss words.

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He pronounces the words wrong because he's one step ahead.

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And I'm not knocking Trump for that.

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I do the same thing, and I'm not knocking Biden for missing words because I do the same thing, and everybody does.

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I don't know anybody that doesn't.

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And if you never miss a word, you've practiced too much.

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And it's not necessarily coming from the heart.

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You're trying to emulate something else.

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I think we need to look at each other and we need to see things as and recognize that each other is perfect, just the way we are with our flaws.

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The missing words, the incomplete sentences, the bum notes, the hair out of place, the slightly twisted top, you know, the belly, whatever.

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You want to look at people and just accept them for the deeply, beautifully flawed, perfect person they are.

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And that goes for the patriots that care deeply about what they see as a perfect country or can be perfect.

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Opposite side.

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See as a deeply caring, compassionate country that sees the imperfections and says, we're okay with that, but we can ease each other's pain.

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And look at Biden last night.

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It wasn't a different America, but it was that the face was different of America.

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400,000 people have died in Covid.

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We've got nearly 100,000 in this country.

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Way more people than had to die if we ended up doing things in a different way.

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I'm going to talk about that on this podcast, but all I'm going to say is it's really seeing for the first time compassion in a leader.

Speaker A:

And when you see compassion leader, you see someone that will make mistakes, that will falter, but they'll pause, and the decisions they make will be based on wisdom and compassion.

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Don't always look at a person's words, a person's mannering mannerisms and the song they're singing.

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Look at what's deeply behind them, the caring behind them.

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I'm not talking about a conspiracy theory bollocks like that behind them, like, oh, he said that as a slip.

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And he had many reasons for saying that.

Speaker A:

No, that's your opinion of it.

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Look up the song by Elvis and you'll see perfectly what I'm talking about.

Speaker A:

And he, he fumbles it and he, he, he goes, blah, blah, blah.

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And he laughs and he thinks and he cries.

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ere was a performance in June:

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That's a terrible impression.

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I'm sorry for any Elvis fans out there.

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I'm a huge Elvis fan.

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My daughter is as well.

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But he just goes on and goes, ever the whole world's a stage and we're all playing and he laughs and he cries.

Speaker A:

That's the perfect performance.

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If you want to do a perfect performance as a human, do it through compassion.

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Do it through fumbling your words.

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Do it through.

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You know, I don't know.

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Just.

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Yeah, I'm fumbling on my words right now.

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Just be you and care.

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Care deeply.

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And that's the kind of leadership that we need right now.

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And that's the kind of leadership that I seen in America last night, and I'd so damn welcome that back.

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If compassion isn't in our leaders, it's not going to be in the people.

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And if a person does a speech or a song perfectly, Michael Malcolm Glabel ended that podcast with the most exquisite, beautiful line that I could never emulate.

Speaker A:

And he said, talking about.

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And I'll put a link to the podcast below because you have to listen to it.

Speaker A:

And there's so much more to the podcast than what I'm even brushing over.

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It's probably the best podcast I've ever listened to, and it's had the deep impact on my life, and I think it'll have a deeper impact on my life and it'll resonate for a long time to come.

Speaker A:

But he said right at the end about another singer, and she was singing about her mum and she wrote the song and she found it really difficult to get the words out.

Speaker A:

And in the end she managed to get herself through it.

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He said at the end, and I just love this line.

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A lesser person would have performed it perfectly.

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You are a better person for being who you are.

Speaker A:

Showing up with a flawed, perfect heart, with that flawed speech where you mumble your words, that flawed song where you don't hit the high note because perhaps something's going on inside of your heart.

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You know, that flawed meal that's slightly overdone because you had your mind on something else, that flawed hug that you just need to hug that little bit more because you're frightened to letting go be flawed, because that's the only genuine people I know, the ones that know they're deeply flawed and show up.

Speaker A:

Anyway, I just want to say I love you guys and thank you for being part of this podcast.

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And I'm trying to get a new episode out every week.

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If you could leave a review and you could share it and subscribe, that would be absolutely awesome.

Speaker A:

And take care.

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And I'm looking forward to the inauguration this afternoon.

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Bringing the compassion back where the cake where the.

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That's.

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I'm going to leave that in because that's so beautiful.

Speaker A:

Bringing the compassion back when the caring was not enough.

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