00:00What came about in terms of what your family group became as an only child?
00:04No, absolutely. I think it makes you much more creative and imaginative because you're playing games by yourself.
00:12You're talking to yourself. I mean, I'm sure your daughter did the same thing.
00:15She did. She used to line up Barbies and have conversations about what I reprimanded her about.
00:19She'd be in there like, if she wants me to do the dishes, she used her dish and she didn't wash her dish, but she would have these whole things.
00:25I would create whole worlds. I remember I would go visit my grandmother and I'd have a blanket outside of her front lawn.
00:32And I just I would create an imaginary world because that fantasy was how you kind of did that.
00:39But I think you're right. It also makes you much more outgoing.
00:44I think even though I present as an extrovert, I tell people I'm really an ambivert, which means I may present as I'm outgoing,
00:50but I do get energy and source by, you know, being by myself because I'm, you know, used to being by myself.
00:56Yes. But I'm an introvert.
00:58Yeah. So I think it shapes it shapes you in a lot of ways in that way.
01:03Yeah. So I think what's really fun about that about that exploration is anybody who's listening who has been an only child gets to understand a skill set,
01:12a way of existing in the world that was a benefit. And I just think it's super dope to hear you say that.
01:20Yeah.
01:21Yeah.
01:22Yeah.
01:23Yeah.
01:24Yeah.
01:25Yeah.
01:26Yeah.
01:27Yeah.
01:28Yeah.
01:29Yeah.
01:30Yeah.
01:31Yeah.
01:32Yeah.
01:33Yeah.
01:34Yeah.
01:36Yeah.
01:37Yeah.
01:38Yeah.
01:39Yeah.
01:40Yeah.
01:41Yeah.
01:42Yeah.
01:43Yeah.
01:44Yeah.
01:45Yeah.
01:46Yeah.
01:47Yeah.
01:48Yeah.
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