 I'm Ty. My name is Ty. I'm Jimmy. Jimmy. Jimmy. J-I-M-I. Oh, whoa! That's awesome! Like Jimmy Hendricks? Yeah, just like Jimmy Hendricks. Are you left-handed too? No, I'm not. Okay. And I didn't die 27. So you got some things ahead of them? I'm actually up. It's a five-minute timer, and I believe any two people can talk about whatever they want. What's something that, like, motivates you, or something that you think is true, something you, like, think is really important? Walking, health, running. Walking health, running? Yeah. I come out here, you know, that's one of my favorite things. You want to talk about that for five minutes? Sure. Sweet. All right, cool. You know what that's for? I'm Ty. I'm Ty. My name's Ty. I'm Jimmy. Jimmy. Jimmy. J-I-M-I. Oh, whoa! That's awesome! Like Jimmy Hendricks? Yeah, just like Jimmy Hendricks. Are you left-handed too? No, I'm not. Okay. And I didn't die 27. So you got some things ahead of them? I'm actually, I'm not sure. I'm 67 years old, so I'm not sure if he was, I think he was just a little older me back then. Okay. And I was in early grades. Yeah? We had three jimmies in there, and they were trying to figure out how to distinguish them. So they tried to change it to James and all that, and turned out some of them had the middle name Mike. So they had to change that. Oh, wow! So that's how I ended up with Jimmy. So you think, like, maybe, so what you had wanted to talk about was, like, walking, staying healthy. Yeah. The lifestyle. Do you think that maybe that lets you out-living? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Jimmy Hendricks? Like longevity and all that stuff? Yeah. Okay. I think I'm going to live to over 100. Do you think everybody should be working out in the same way that you did? Probably have the same convection, maybe. Okay, okay. But not, like, forced to, like, go out of it. No, don't be forced. Okay. You have to want to do it. You have to feel good about it. So what are some of these benefits that you're getting then? Well, I mean, I don't have any problems. I don't have any pains. Okay. So a lot of people say, you know, they have pains by my age. I don't wake up with pains and stuff. Sure. I like to think that doing this all my life has probably had something to do with it. I don't know that. Okay. How confident are you that that is the connection? Like, the fact that you're not waking up with pain is, in fact, by virtue of you working out? Like, how closely do you-like, how confident are you, like, safe from- Like a 99% chance? 90%? 99. I don't-I think there's only one percent chance the other way, actually. I think if I had went the other way, that I'd be dealing with other issues. What would prove it wrong? Like, what's that one percent? Like, do you think maybe if you had worked out too hard and you maybe had some pain or like, what's keeping you from getting to 100? Well, I worked out pretty hard before. I mean, guys like your size, I used to try to lift and try to do leg presses. Yeah. Actually, if you look at the back of my leg- Oh, my gosh. I used to have a big boy and I got up to 850 pounds and I could do 10. Geez! On the leg press? On the leg press. 10 of them. A little guy like me that's 159 pounds, you know? That's quite a bit of weight. Yeah, it is. I haven't done it in the last 7 or 8 years. Okay. But I did do it in my 50s, yeah. Okay, okay. So, you have that one percent. Remember, you just talked about like- Sure. What's in that one percent? Keeping you from being all the way confident. I just think that- just something out in the air, I don't really know. I just think that that's just a margin of error for it, maybe. I like that. Yeah. What do you feel about the philosophy of never being 100% on anything? I feel like it's kind of hard to be 100% on anything. Even if you strive to be 110, 120, I feel like you don't make the full 100% to suit you. It may suit somebody else. Yeah. Yeah, but maybe not you. The way how I like it is you never know what might change your mind in the future and it's always good to just be open. Like, 99% means I'm still looking for something. Yeah, there's still some space out there for improvement. Time? 15? It thinks I'm moving. It thinks I'm moving. Yeah, there's always room for improvement. There's always room for improvement. Is that a good philosophy to have into going into like running and all that stuff? For example, right now I'm trying to get to the point where I can run half marathon. So yesterday I did five miles. I felt really comfortable with that. They're really good. But like, I know it's something I'm going to have to keep trying and keep doing and stay engaged in because even when I run or anything like that, I get bored part of the way of the run if I don't have like a reasonable goal that I can do every single time I try it out. What would you recommend? Well, I was going to say, do you listen to music while you're running? I do listen to music. That helps a whole lot. Yeah, it does. And the next thing is don't push yourself too much. You know, just like say you did five miles. Yeah. Stay with that for a few days and maybe just add maybe just, oh, I don't know. Get that 6.2 out. Yeah, just work a little bit more and get comfortable right there before you move on to the next one. I think that's what causes people to fail is when they back off. Okay. I don't get it.