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Our Most Impactful Learnings From 2025

55m 42s13,043 mots1,796 segmentsEnglish

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Most people live their life like this.

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They build a well and they start to pump

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water. And at the end of their lives,

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after a lifetime of pumping, they see

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they are still thirsty. They spent their

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whole life pumping rather than drinking,

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which was the reason they started

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pumping in the first place.

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What up, Sam? I wanted to do something a

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little different today. End of the year.

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I was doing a little Slack cleanout and

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I was looking at I had this one channel

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for like the best stuff I read this

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week. I call it my content diet channel.

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It's basically what were the vegetables,

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what were my whole foods that I consumed

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cuz I consume a lot of junk, but this

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stuff was actually good. And I was just

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kind of browsing through what really

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stood out or resonated with me and I

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have a couple. I don't know. I And I

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wanted to know yours because you read a

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lot more than me and I think we read

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totally different things. So I I'm

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curious if anything comes to mind for

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you on that topic. Yes. Um, for me it's

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a lot of books and so like for example

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the the topic that I got obsessed with

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this year was presidential

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assassinations. I went deep on the four

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different presidents who were

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assassinated and it that interested me.

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But you know I'm a huge history fan and

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so I could talk to you all about history

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which which I I can like say some of the

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most amazing stuff that I learned. I

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feel like we did a whole bit when the

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Trump assassination thing happened on

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presidential assassinations. There's

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some crazy stories, right? There's like

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the guy who had his speech in his pocket

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that like blunted the blow and so he got

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shot

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>> and he survived.

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>> Roosevelt and he gets shot by his car on

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his way to his speech doesn't die cuz

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the speech is so thick in his pocket.

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>> Gives the speech while bleeding.

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>> Yeah, that was Roosevelt. There's only

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been four presidents that have been

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successfully assassinated and three of

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them happened between like 1865

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and like 1905. And like pretty much up

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until Andrew Garfield was assassinated,

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which I think was like around 1904, any

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human, any American, it was like

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customary, you can just go to the White

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House and schedule an appointment with

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the president. And the idea here was

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that they were supposed to be like a man

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of the people. And I think that's

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ridiculous. And the Secret Service, even

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up till 1963, 64,65 when JFK was shot,

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it was only like 300 people. And so like

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basically was non-existent. And so I'm

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like obsessed with that uh about how

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like something became an institution

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even after four years or sorry four

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deaths happened. And so I've been

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obsessed with that. I've also been

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obsessed with leadership and the idea of

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speeches. Have you ever studied any of

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the great speeches of American or world

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history?

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>> Not in particular. What you got?

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>> So in particular uh Winston Churchill.

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Have you ever seen the movie Dunkirk?

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You've never seen it, right?

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>> No, I haven't.

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>> Okay. The idea is like early in the war

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of England, this was when like the Nazi

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Germany had just invaded France and it

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was like clear that Nazi now was Nazi

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Germany was officially bad. Before it

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was like, "Yeah, they're horrible, but

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like they're going to stay themselves."

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They start evading other countries and

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people start freaking out. They go

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through France and everyone's like, "Oh

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my god, I can't believe uh you know,

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imagine today. Imagine like France

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getting taken over."

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>> France.

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>> Yeah. It is it's just like insane. And

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so England, which is nearby, they were

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like, "Oh my gosh, now they are coming

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to us." And so they start officially

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getting in get into a war and have

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skirmish in Dunkerk where Nazi the Nazis

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surround a part of England and they

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surround like I think it was like 50,000

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or even 100,000 soldiers and basically

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if those people died the war would have

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been over and it was a magical moment

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where hundreds of ships that were just

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fishermen but also the uh British Navy

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they raced over and they grabbed these

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guys off this island and they saved

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hundreds of thousands of lives.

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Whatever. Whatever. [laughter]

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But that's not the important part of my

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story. But up until that point, England

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was like fearful. They were very

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fearful. They're like, "This is

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horrible." Like they were imagining all

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the worst things that that was going to

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happen. Winston Churchill who was in

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power was a very fearful fearful person

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and he was very nervous. But then he

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goes, "Screw it. We're not going to take

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this. We're going to get after it." And

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he gave this speech and at the end of

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the speech, he does this in like I

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forget what their I think it's the House

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of Parliament Parliament. It's like

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their like physical setting where like

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everyone's watching him and he was like,

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"We're going to fight in the beaches.

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We're going to fight in the trenches.

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We're going to fight in the land. and we

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will never ever give up. And he like

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gave this like amazing speech that

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basically changed the entire morale of

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the country. We were talking about tens

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of millions of people and it just like

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I've always been very fascinated when

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there's one person who can exert a

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relatively small amount of energy and

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get everyone else to change their

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energy. So like if you ever been to a

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concert, I used to love watching these

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Oasis concerts. They'll be literally

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they're famous. They they they were

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famous for helping create like this idea

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of like a mega concert. They would have

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250,000 people in the audience and

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they're relatively high energy band, but

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it's just one or two guys singing into a

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microphone and they get 250,000 people

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to like light up and like push that

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energy back to them. And I'm obsessed

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with what is that one thing that person

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has and how do they leverage that amount

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of energy to impact potentially hundreds

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of thousands or in the case of Winston

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Churchill, tens of millions of people.

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And so I'm like uh like try to figure

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out like what words does someone have to

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use? And like if you think about Winston

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Churchill, do you know what he looks

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like?

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>> Uh yeah. I mean I've seen photos of him.

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>> Like he's a a short fat kind of

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drunkard. Like he's not like he's not

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like a good-looking guy. Like he doesn't

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have like the traditional movie star

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good looks or anything like that. And so

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what I've been trying to study is how

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people do that

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>> because you want to just deliver this at

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work or what's the like connect the dots

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for me.

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>> Yeah. Because I do want to become a

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better leader. like once your company

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gets so my company we're only at like 25

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or 30 people but I'm getting to the

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point now where I'm not doing a lot of

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the work and I am having to not motivate

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people because all my a good employee is

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already motivated but in order to make a

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good employee a great employee you do

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need to inspire them right

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>> and so I've just been trying to figure

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out how to become a better leader and so

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I've been studying some of the

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>> we're going to advertise in the banner

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ads we're going to advertise in the

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podcast we're going to advertise

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everywhere we will advertise you know

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what do you what is the like rally cry

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that you're trying to trying to get to

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that What would be like what would be an

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example? Have you done it yet? Have you

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tried?

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>> Yeah. Like so so right now AI is

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everywhere and I just it's making me

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sick that I am like having to talk to AI

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all the time and I'm not having a lot of

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like relationships in real life. I'm not

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having what you call these

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