 It seems like your kids are old. You gave me two old ages, yet you call them your children. Yes. Is there ever a point when your children stop being children? Like, these are my adults. No, no. Can we talk about that a little bit? Have you recorded it? I'm sure. Okay, cool. Sweet. Okay. Because the kids have a short attention spot. Okay, so like I said, five minutes. Anything you want to talk about? I'm Ty, by the way. Hi, Sandy. Sandy, nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. How long have you been teaching? Okay, so I do volunteer teaching. Okay. So my regular job is as a biochemist. This is with a junior achievement. Have you ever heard of that before? Yes. Okay, so every semester they ask people to volunteer and I volunteer and I help them out. I do these talks and then what I do is I cut up the talks and I show the kids, hey, look, this is like an old man who looked mean. But when we talk to him, he's like talks about his favorite dog and stuff like that. So I guess really whatever motivates you, like, do you have something that you like strongly or really, really sure about or like something that's like really passionate for you, something like you send your life around or like a principle you wish everyone would follow. Anything like that? Those tend to be the more fun talks. Well, my children. Okay. I have a 20-year-old at UK. Okay. And a 17-year-old at Henry Clay. You want to talk about like maybe how it seems like your kids are old. You gave me two old ages. Yet you call them your children. Yes. Is there ever a point when your children stop being children? Like these are my adults. No. Can we talk about that real quick? Because my dad always calls me his little girl. Okay, okay, okay. Yeah. What is it that keeps... So when you see them, do you see them for the kids that they used to be or like the adults that they grew up to be? I see them as the kids that they used to be. Kids that they used to be? Yeah. What is that? Why is that? I guess because I'm still providing for them and taking care of them. Oh, even... Yeah, they're still in the house. Okay, okay, okay. You're still the mama bear? Yes. Okay, at that point you can call them whatever you want. That's right. At what point would you be more willing to be like, you know what? This is my son, you're still my baby. But you're a man now and I respect that. Probably when he graduates college. Okay, okay. What are they studying by the way? Computer science engineering. Okay. You need to get a job. Yeah. Can I ask you a question? Mm-hmm. In the event that they were to graduate today, they did a piece of paper and they showed it to you. Would that make you more willing to see them more as the grown adults that they are? Are they adult? Sure. Really? Yeah. Okay, so that is it. Yeah. They just need to graduate and that's it. Probably. Okay. They're going to show some responsibility I guess. So it's time to move on. Yeah. I'm not going to rush around them to like finish their school. It's like, I got to graduate so I can be a man. No. Because they don't know that. I haven't told them that yet. Okay. But they do have pressure to graduate. Okay. Because we kind of put, we set high standards for them. I guess. I can tell. And they're very intelligent. But that's good. Yeah. And you know, sometimes I feel like I've been too hard around them maybe, but it seems to be working out for them. Why do you feel that way? Or I don't have kids myself. I got a cat at best. Well, we were just talking about it on the way here that especially my oldest, I think I was more strict as far as make sure this gets turned in. If this doesn't get turned in, you're losing your computer. And you know, keeping them accountable for their school work and for their chores. I feel like kids tend to respond well to that in the long term. But in the short term, perhaps they don't see it for the effort that it takes on your part to be like, I wish I could love you and follow you. But I have to discipline you. Oh, excuse me. Bless you. Bless me. Bless me. Well, I noticed my youngest, they both have good worth ethics, but my youngest just got his first job. Nice. In March. And he is like, they were so impressed with him. And he's all impressed with himself saying how good he is and how proud they are of his work. So I'm like, where do you think you learned that from? You learned that from your mom and dad. And your rivalry between the two brothers? Not a lot. Are they both in computer science? Well, the youngest is still in high school, but that's what he's going to go into. He wants to do gaming. Really? I love gaming. Okay. Okay. I think that's a great market to actually be in. Making gaming and stuff. Yeah. So he's actually at the Votex school for half a day. What does that mean? The vocational school on Leicester Road. You know, the go half a day. It used to be like shop and stuff like that. People would go to. They would get bus to that. So he does his required courses at school. And the other half a day, he's over there taking. Okay. Has he made a game before? Like has he worked with Flash or anything like that? I don't know. He may have. Okay, okay. I don't know that. It's a cool thing. I think you're doing good jobs. He can do a lot of stuff on computers more than I can. Okay. What would you say is the hardest thing about being a parent just before the last question? The hardest thing. I guess is having that good balance. Of letting them learn with their own mistakes. And not trying to shield them too much. I see. You got to let them kind of get hurt. Yeah. You got to let them learn a few things on their own. That's hard. That is hard. Yeah. That letting them learn to drive in Lexington. Thank you so much for the chat. Oh, thank you. I'm sweaty. Now you're right. Sandy was wonderful. Thank you so much. Kids would love this. Hi kids. See you later. Oh, they liked it. Yeah. We're streaming on Discord right now too. Yeah. Very good job. Oh, I asked you for a core. Were you not okay with that? Oh, okay. Okay. Okay. Okay.