Ep 327: Same Podcast, One Year Apart (The Fifth Year)

SARAH: Hey, what's up? Hello. Welcome to Sounds Fake But Okay, a podcast where an aro-ace girl (I'm Sarah, that's me) 

KAYLA: And a bi-demisexual girl (That's me Kayla) 

SARAH: Talk about all things to do with love, relationships, sexuality, and pretty much anything else we just don't understand

KAYLA: On today's episode, ‘same podcast one year apart, the fifth’

BOTH: Sounds Fake But Okay

KAYLA: It's the most last episode of the year

SARAH: What if I just started with that? What if I cut off everything else we just said and it just… it's doo, doo, doo, doo, doo and then it just, it’s the most last…

KAYLA: I think you should, but then also keep this

SARAH: Perfect 

KAYLA: Great. 

SARAH: Welcome back to the pod

KAYLA: Hello. Hello 

SARAH: Hi everyone. You may notice my voice is still a little messed up. Well, let me tell you…

KAYLA: Not fun 

SARAH: Let me tell you something, my voice got messed up during the podcast last week. We recorded it on Friday. It is now the following Wednesday

KAYLA: It’s still messed up. 

SARAH: It's still messed up. At least it wasn't like… it's not like Sunday, on Sunday I… 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Sounded insane

KAYLA: Podcasting is a dangerous business 

SARAH: It’s a really dangerous business 

KAYLA: They don't tell you about all the injuries that you can get from podcasting

SARAH: But it does lead to great TikToks. I'm very proud of that TikTok I made.

KAYLA: You did do a good… and I was really proud of my comment on the TikTok. So, thank you

SARAH: Yeah, it was good.

KAYLA: Thanks

SARAH: I made a TikTok when I had no voice, that was me doing wicked Karaoke except I had no voice. 

KAYLA: Yeah, really bad 

SARAH: So, it was just bad 

KAYLA: And I said, JoJo Siwa looks different here because Sarah sounded like when JoJo Siwa is trying to sing but it's like really raspy and bad.

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: So, great stuff all around

SARAH: I guess if you want to know what my voice would have sounded like if we had podcasted on Sunday, boy howdy, do I have to TikTok for you? 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Uh, Kayla do we have any housekeeping? Yeah, we do, this is the last one 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: Not ever, just this year

KAYLA: Just this one 

SARAH: Just this time. 

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: We will be back on whatever day we said we would be back. Sarah, stop moving your mouth around your microphone, challenge. I noticed I did that a lot last week and I would hear it move around in my ears when I was editing and I was like, I don't like this at all.

KAYLA: Oh my God

SARAH: We're coming back on the 19th. Yeah, the 19th of January is when we'll be back

KAYLA: Slay 

SARAH: So, look forward to that, hoping you all have a lovely holiday season. Shall we begin?

KAYLA: Yes

SARAH: Kayla?

KAYLA: Yep

SARAH: What are we talking about this week? 

KAYLA: This week is our fifth installment of ‘Same Podcast, One Year Apart’ a la, the Billie Eilish Vanity Fair interviews, we are going to be answering the same questions that we have answered for the past five years, so we can… I don't know, reflect on our growth and what not. I became… and if you're listening to this like in the time it comes out, I think you'll probably like know why I'm saying this, I became very aware this week of our digital footprint and that if I were to ever commit a crime…

SARAH: Oh, I was like, why? 

KAYLA: If I were to ever commit a crime, which I haven't, they could really… 

SARAH: Kayla has never gone one over the speed limit. 

KAYLA: No, never. 

SARAH: Never 

KAYLA: I’ve never done that. 

SARAH: It's because Kayla never drives. 

KAYLA: Yeah, that's true, I hate driving. But I was just… I really became painfully aware that wow if people ever really wanted to do a deep dive on our lives, they really could 

SARAH: Oh yeah 

KAYLA: They really could find out a lot of personal details. 

SARAH: Oh, yeah. I've just accepted…. I've recently was trying to internet-stalk someone that I worked with 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: And I told him about this because I was trying to figure out what year he was born in

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: Because I thought he was older than me, like that was the vibe I got 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But then he sent me a picture of an art he did and on it, it said ‘99 

KAYLA: Oh 

SARAH: And I was like… 

KAYLA: Oh

SARAH: Was that the year you were born? And so, I was trying to find online what year he was born but like this dude does not exist on the internet. And so, I texted him and I was like, what fucking year were you born in? And he was like, what? Would you like to know? And I was like, yeah, I fucking want 

KAYLA: Yes, I would 

SARAH: And he is still… he refused to tell me. I eventually did some like very deep diving and I found a Facebook post he made in a group about Italy 

KAYLA: Oh, I love it 

SARAH: Because I couldn't find him anywhere else, and I was like, oh, okay, you were born in 1999, that's terrifying

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: Why did I say this? Oh, but I was like, I understand that I'm very easy to stalk online and he was like, yeah, you are

KAYLA: Oh, yeah

SARAH: And I was like, yeah, I know. 

KAYLA: Yeah, it's all right there

SARAH: It's easy. 

KAYLA: If you look up our names, especially mine because like no one else has my name 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Like it's ever… all of it. So much shit comes up when you just google me 

SARAH: Uh-huh 

KAYLA: And even for you, you like rank highly among the Sarah Costellos now

SARAH: Hell, yeah 

KAYLA: Congratulations

SARAH: Hell, yeah 

KAYLA: Anyway, let's dirty our digital footprint a bit more 

SARAH: Even more. Well, I mean Kayla just don't ever shoot a healthcare CEO

KAYLA: Damnit

SARAH: I know

KAYLA: There goes my Saturday

SARAH: Damn. Um, okay, are you ready? 

KAYLA: Yes. 

SARAH: I knew you were, I just asked that because I wanted to take a sip of my pop

KAYLA: It took me like a second to say yes, though, it's not like you… Okay

SARAH: I'm gonna have to edit out all those pauses anyway 

KAYLA: I guess. Okay, I just don't quite see the point, but carry on 

SARAH: Question number one, what's your name?

KAYLA: Kayla Marie Kaszyca

SARAH: See, this is not helping with your digital footprint. 

KAYLA: I think I've said this, last year

SARAH: Yeah, I know but…

KAYLA: I'm gonna pull up last year

SARAH: Please do because I will have… because remember how last year I would… kept being like well, worse than last year, better than last year 

KAYLA: Yes, yes 

SARAH: But then I wouldn't know what I said last year? I'm gonna do that again

KAYLA: Okay, well, let me just get past all of our yapping from last year

SARAH: Okay, Kayla's name is Kayla Marie Kaszyca. 

KAYLA: I said this... Okay. Here's what happened last year

SARAH: Uh-huh 

KAYLA: You said, what is your name? I said, my name is Kayla Marie Kaszyca. You said, wow, you're just doxxing yourself. So, the same conversation. And I bet if we went back to the year before that, it would be the same

SARAH: My name is Sarah, you know my middle name, Costello.

KAYLA: Last year you said, my name is Sarah Costello, if you want to find my middle name, it's not that hard to find but you gotta do the work yourself. 

SARAH: I know I said that last year, that's why I won't… It's my little bit now that I will not say my middle name on this podcast

KAYLA: Well

SARAH: It's easy to find

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: It's easy to even guess

KAYLA: Yeah, it is

SARAH: But I won't say it on this podcast out of spite 

KAYLA: Okay, it fine

SARAH: Who am I beefing with? 

KAYLA: Yourself? 

SARAH: I don't know. Great, what's today's date? It is Wednesday, December 11th, 2024

KAYLA: At 11:27 p.m. Eastern time. 

SARAH: No. It's 8:27 p.m. Pacific time. Thank you. 

KAYLA: Okay

SARAH: And it's 10:27 p.m. Central time and it's 9:27 p.m. Mountain time, but we're not in either of those time zones

KAYLA: No, that's true

SARAH: How old are you?

KAYLA: 27. 

SARAH: 27

KAYLA: And the only reason I answered that so fast is because I was looking at last year's transcript where I said I was 26 

SARAH: Great

KAYLA: Because recently someone asked me how old I was and it took me an extremely long time to answer

SARAH: I admire how bad you are at knowing how old you are. 

KAYLA: It's because of Covid, before then I was good, but Covid really…

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: Also, like I feel like that all the late 20s, like 25 to 30s, you're the same age

SARAH: Well, I know how old I am because it was my birthday and I was like… And it was my Pride and Prejudice birthday

KAYLA: Right, which is important. 

SARAH: Yeah. So, well, I remember… Ew, I’m gonna be 28 next year

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: You know what’s more terrifying? My sister is gonna be 29 next year. 

KAYLA: I think my sister is already 30. 

SARAH: I think she is too

KAYLA: Are you 30? She's listening. Are you 30? I think she is 

SARAH: Rachel are you 30? The other day my sister asked me what the age difference between you and your sister was and I guessed, I wasn’t sure

KAYLA: I think it's like two and a half

SARAH: Yeah, because…

KAYLA: Two-ish 

SARAH: The person was like, isn't it similar to you and your sister? And I was like, I think there's an extra, I think there's an extra one in there. 

KAYLA: Well, because your sister was a year above us, right? At school.

SARAH: Was Rachel two years above? 

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: Okay, I was right then

KAYLA: At school, she was two years above me, yeah

SARAH: Okay.

KAYLA: So, yeah, it's like two-ish years difference 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Now I'm doxxing my sister

SARAH: Great

KAYLA: Rats

SARAH: How do you identify?

KAYLA: Bi-romantic demisexual woman

SARAH: Whoman 

KAYLA: Whoman 

SARAH: Whoman. I identify aro-ace, baby. And I am baby 

KAYLA: And you are baby?

SARAH: Mm-hmm. 

KAYLA: I see 

[00:10:00]

SARAH: I identify as baby 

KAYLA: You're not gonna… No movement of the gender this year? We got to the check-in, we got to see…

SARAH: I have a manifesto, we'll get to it later

KAYLA: Oh, oh 

SARAH: Is it later? Is there time? Will I do it later? Do I have to do it now? I'm looking at the list

KAYLA: Okay. I think it might be time now. 

SARAH: I think I have to do it now. Damn. I was really hoping to like ramp up to the manifesto

KAYLA: That's really tough, but it is time, I think

SARAH:  Damn it. Okay… 

KAYLA: It is the yearly gender check-in

SARAH: Are you ready for a manifesto? 

KAYLA: Yeah, I am, because I have no idea what you're about to say

SARAH: Okay, okay. Okay. Okay. Wait, I want to start this, with a question for you. 

KAYLA: Okay. 

SARAH: What do you think my gender is?

KAYLA: Like if I had to assign you a gender, what would I assign you? 

SARAH: Yeah, like gender assigned by Kayla. Assigned…

KAYLA: Oh

SARAH: Assigned gender by Kayla. 

KAYLA: Assigned gender by Kayla. Okay, so… Okay. Wow, I was not prepared for this question

SARAH: He he he he he 

KAYLA: Are you like about to come out? Am I like guessing? 

SARAH: No, no, not necessarily. No

KAYLA: Okay, I could see you being agender, I could see you pulling a AAA

SARAH: Haha, I would be like the car people, you know? 

KAYLA: Or the battery, very good. 

SARAH: Or the battery. Well, right now I'm already a battery

KAYLA: That’s true 

SARAH: I'm just a bigger battery and I would be a smaller battery 

KAYLA: Smaller battery, yeah.

SARAH: All right, interesting. Okay, here's my thing. Here's my thing, I'm still kind of like yeah, whatever 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: But part of me is like, should I just put on the internet that my pronouns are she/they not because I necessarily want people to ‘they’ me, like I'm fine with it, if… I'm fine with it if you do 

KAYLA: Uh-huh. 

SARAH: I nailed that

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: I'm fine with it if you do but like I'm also fine with being SHEed for the rest of my life, you know? 

KAYLA: Okay

SARAH: Um, like I don't feel the need to ask people to make a change. But the reason why I would be like, mm, maybe I should just put that on the internet, is because it is a signal to a community that like, hey, I'm sort of existing in the same space as you, like, mm, you know? Do you get? Do you understand what I mean by that? 

KAYLA: I do understand what you mean

SARAH: Because like my gender doesn't necessarily feel significantly different than it did a year ago

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But I also don't want people to look at me and be like, mm, that's a… you know? Do you understand? 

KAYLA: So, you don't want people to look at you and say that's a woman?

SARAH: No, I'm fine with that

KAYLA: Okay

SARAH: See, this is the problem I cannot describe it very well

KAYLA: I'm just trying to… I guess for me, I'm just wondering about the utility of… It's not so much that you want someone to ‘they’ you 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: It's just you wouldn't mind if they did 

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: So, to me, I'm wondering about like the utility of like… Because like for me if someone THEYed me, I wouldn't be like offended

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: But that doesn't make me feel the need to like add that to my list of pronouns

SARAH: I think for me it's that I still have that level of like apathy

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Like that like that level of female gender apathy 

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: And so, I feel like adding that pronoun would convey to other people that there's something a little Funky about my experience of gender. 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: End of sentence

KAYLA: I get that. I think in a queer community that is easily conveyed. 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: I don't know that you could take that outside of the queer community and have people understand like what you're asking for 

SARAH: Right. And I think… There's also part of me that looks at that and is like is that bad? Like is that… would that be cosplaying as something I'm not? 

KAYLA: Sure 

SARAH: Just so I can feel like accepted in a particular space 

KAYLA: Right 

SARAH: Like to take on this identity as like a bat signal

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Rather than like a projection of my inner they

KAYLA: I did have that thought too, it is like are you taking it on because that's how you want to be… Because that is how you identify? 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Or because that's how you want to be seen? And are those connected? Somewhat, yes, but… 

SARAH: Am I shoulding myself into this corner?

KAYLA: Mm, I see

SARAH: You know? 

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: Um, but then I also think like if I'm asking that question isn't that kind of proof that like I do have a place in that space? Like because… like if a person does not have these like interrogative thoughts about their own gender and like what it means and like to what extent it matters like they're not gonna feel compelled to roll up to that space to begin with

KAYLA: Right 

SARAH: Um, I have more manifesto, it keeps going

KAYLA: Wow, I'm shocked

SARAH: Hold on. I gotta scan it. 

KAYLA: Okay. 

SARAH: It has been a while

KAYLA: Was this written in prep for this episode or these are your general musings?

SARAH: The first thing was written like in the middle of the night in September. 

KAYLA: Okay 

SARAH: With this episode in mind, knowing that I was going to be asked about it. 

KAYLA: You were going to be asked your yearly checkup?

SARAH: Yeah. And then I had a follow-up in October that's even longer

KAYLA: Great, okay

SARAH: Okay, we're gonna fly through this.

KAYLA: Okay 

SARAH: Like I don't know that calling myself non-binary like would feel right or accurate, because like again as I've said in past years like I do feel some connection to like the woman of it all but the woman of it all that I feel that connection to continues to be a social structure and a social construct not necessarily an inherent understanding of womanhood and like what it is to be a woman. And like, I'm not far enough away necessarily that I want to use the term non-binary but I also don't feel that womanhood should be binary restrictive at all. And like isn't that the definition of non-binary?

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: But that's referring to gender as a whole, not necessarily my own presentation of it. But also, is it?

KAYLA: This reminds me… and I feel like maybe I've said this before, this reminds me a lot of the concept of being a non-binary lesbian. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm 

KAYLA: Of like, because it is not a binary you can be non-binary but like towards the feminine end of that spectrum if you know what… like… 

SARAH: Yeah, yeah

KAYLA: Does that make sense? 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: I don't know, that's just what came to my mind. 

SARAH: I know… I'm thinking of someone who identifies as a… like is a non-binary lesbian who's like pretty butch presenting and has two different names that they go by 

KAYLA: Slay 

SARAH: And I remember at some point in the… some… in the last year, they were like, hey, I think I prefer this name over what I assume is their birth name

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: And they're like, I'm still fine with you calling me either but like I've kind of switched what my kind of preferred one is 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: And it's a much more ungendered name

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But it's like that person is still… they're a butch non-binary lesbian, like that can all exist at the same time 

KAYLA: Yeah. I recently saw someone online call themselves a bisexual lesbian and people were getting really mad at them and I was like, I don't know, I kind of get it. I kind of get what you're saying. Like I can't… I don't know

SARAH: Okay, so, here's my conclusion from September, in conclusion, I am not sure much has materially changed in the past year about how I feel and how identify, but I'm also not sure how much I still want to be associated with the strict gender binary 

KAYLA: Mm

SARAH: Which may in turn lead to a change, if that makes sense. Like I genuinely wish I could just put she/her I guess/I don't care as my pronouns everywhere. But like that doesn't work on like… I was gonna say the US Census but the US Census doesn't have pronouns on it 

KAYLA: Yeah, no, it doesn’t 

SARAH: But like a Google form, you know? Like in real-life adulting settings. But you can't do that in real-life adulting settings without looking wishy-washy or unprofessional, which I am, but we don't want to telegraph that as a first impression, future employers who may be listening to this podcast, this is a joke, you are laughing

KAYLA: Yeah. It's really funny. 

SARAH: Employ me 

KAYLA: I think it's again the thing of like what spaces you're in

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Are you in a queer space? Because then you could say that and people would be like, me too. But if you're at work and it's a bunch of straight people who have learned that you're supposed to start with your pronouns now… 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: And you throw that out, people are gonna be like, huh?

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: Like you're gonna confuse the olds, unfortunately

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: I would love to hear non-binary genderqueer thoughts on this

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: I don't know if you would, so you don't have to invite that if you don't want to, but I would… 

SARAH: Yeah, that’s fine, sure 

KAYLA: But I’d be interested in hearing if people have had similar thoughts in the past

SARAH: Um, okay, here's my follow-up that I'm not gonna do all of because it seems like there's too much. Um, but this was like not long before the election and I was thinking, RIP, and I was thinking about how… I was thinking about the 2024 election in comparison to how I was thinking about the 2016 election and how I like felt less connected to the like potential like first female president which obviously is not happening

KAYLA: Yeah 

[00:20:00]

SARAH: But like, I feel like in 2016 I was like, yeah, like first female… like I have my shirt that was like, future is female, like, yeah, and like… 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: I do think part of that was maybe naivety and part of that was maybe like optimism that turned out to be misplaced and now I'm just super-jaded and I'm like, fuck it, nothing matters. But this cycle I was not like oh, yay, like first female president, I was like that wasn't something I was thinking about at all

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: And I think partially… I think in general people were talking less about it because they realized that last time it didn't do us any good

KAYLA: Yeah, it wasn’t exciting in the end 

SARAH: But because… like I'm just less invested in the gender binary now. 

KAYLA: Sure 

SARAH: And so, like I… and so like I haven't… like I still have my ‘future is female’ shirt but I haven't worn it in like years

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But… and that… I'm like, should I get rid of it? Because like I'm not the demographic for it anymore

KAYLA: No, yeah 

SARAH: Like I don't know, like I want to take that shirt, and like just take a sharpie and write like, and non-binary and trans and…

KAYLA: And everything

SARAH: And everything. And I was listening to a podcast or an interview of Alyssa Mastromonaco with Nancy Pelosi and Alyssa co-hosts the Hysteria Podcast which is like a political podcast that's based on women and their point of view. And I don't listen to Hysteria but I do… I like the hosts of Hysteria, like I like both of them. And so, when I listen to this interview, I was surprised because it… Alyssa and Nancy Pelosi were talking a lot about like the glass ceiling and Congress and blah blah blah blah blah and I was just like, ugh, like this could also just be a result of me getting like more and more left-leaning as I get older which contrary to what boomers will tell you is exactly what is happening. But like the whole conversation like felt kind of like simplistic and like Neolib, I was like, yeah, like okay the glass like will work but like it's more… it's bigger than just the binary. And then I was taken aback when they were saying that Congress is only 28% female because I did expect that number to be a little higher

KAYLA: See, this is… yes. I do think… 

SARAH: We live in a bubble

KAYLA: I think the problem is that we live in a bubble because I had a similar experience where the class I am taking is like an organizational psychology class, so it's like psychology of the workplace and one of our topics was leadership and then a subtopic was gender in leadership and when I saw that… and they… there's actually at the school an entire course on gender in leadership that I had looked into for a bit and then my thought was like I am not gonna be super interested in this class because it's going to be very binary 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: And it's also gonna be like shit I probably already know. However, and my professor actually brought this up. He was like, I understand that the conversation we're having right now is extremely binary but… and he brought up like the 28% of women in Congress like it's like 20% of Fortune 500 CEOs or less are women

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Like the rates of just like leadership positions for women are just like astonishingly low and I think…yeah, you, in your mind do think it's more?

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: And so, I think that's the problem is like people like us we're like it's so far beyond that we need to like push further

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: But in reality, we are still so far behind

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: That it's like the world is not ready for those conversations yet if we’re still at 28% of women in Congress 

SARAH: Exactly. And there's a big part of me that's like I… Like obviously it's important to like have women in these positions of power but like focusing on the firsts and the woman of it all and disregarding the actual impact these women are having like that's not necessarily the conversation I want to be having, like I have zero words to celebrate the win of Marjorie Taylor Greene being in Congress when she is out there being Marjorie Taylor Greene

KAYLA: No 

SARAH: And so, I think sometimes when we focus on like, oh, first woman, first blah, blah, blah, first… but like if we talk about it more as a collective, if we talk about that like 28% number then it's like, I feel like that… 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: I'm like, okay. I'm on board. Stop talking about MTG, you know? Um, I also think the other thing that made me think about this in regards to this election, it turns out I am gonna read the whole manifesto 

KAYLA: Okay, great 

SARAH: Is that in the wake of Roe v. Wade being overturned and abortion no longer being legal as a federal overarching thing in the United States

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: So much of the conversation in the election this year was about bodily autonomy and abortion and in its own way motherhood, and as a sex averse asexual person who has no interest in having kids and has been incredibly lucky to not have had any first-hand experience thus far in my life with SA, knock on wood. Is that wood? My head is wood. Um, like I don't feel personally connected to that issue in the same way that many other women do because I don't consider like, oh, like I could have an unplanned pregnancy at any time because I'm like, no, I couldn't

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: And because so much of the focus this election cycle was rightfully the issue of abortion and that has bearing on how we're talking about womanhood in 2024 and in the context of that conversation like I don't feel represented by that definition of womanhood

KAYLA: Mm-hmm 

SARAH: And like obviously like I don't pretend that I could never be impacted by abortion laws like I understand that shit happens. 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But like I also understand that in a lot of ways like my connection to the issue of abortion is one step removed. 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Like sort of like it might be if I were like a man married to a woman who needed abortion care but it was not that woman themselves and so like my privilege also plays into that because I knew that if something happened and I ever needed an abortion for any reason like I could probably find a way to get one

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: And so, like despite being AFAB and being the exact age demographic most impacted by this abortion issue like I don't feel like I'm on the front line of it, I care a lot about it and I care about it… but I care about it because of other people, not so much because of myself

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: So, I think that impacted my relationship to womanhood in relation to the election and how I was thinking about it that way. 

KAYLA: I think that makes sense. 

SARAH: Blah blah blah blah blah blah. In conclusion, I was like, okay, I need to step back and think… like because to going back to this thing with Alyssa and Nancy Pelosi, I was like you're talking… it seems like you're talking about it as like a one or two-dimensional issue. Like we're so far past that why we are still talking about it in this way? But then I have to take a step back and realize that I operate in a very different world than like your median female voter in the United States

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But then I have to ask myself why that is and there's a large part of me that's saying like once you get put on these aspec… once you put on your little aspec glasses, Bing, Bing, Bing

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Once you detach yourself from… even partially from the chokehold of the gender binary and the should, should, should, like how can anyone not feel a certain distance from their gender assigned at birth? But then I wondered, is that really universal or is that a sign that I am not so cis? End 

KAYLA: That's a great question, I mean, I think… and I think we've heard this from aspec people before is that, especially women, well, I think it could go for any gender really, but so much of being a woman and the definition of being a woman is around the relationships, like the sexual and romantic relationships you have like that is how you define the difference between a man and a woman is like how you interact in those relationships. And so, I think it makes total sense that you would feel a disconnect from what people are saying womanhood is

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: When you are not having those interactions 

SARAH: Right 

KAYLA: With people 

SARAH: And in the 2016 election, I knew I was aro-ace but I was at the beginning of that journey and I was not like publicly out yet 

KAYLA: Right. I know… yeah, you didn't fully have like the culture of the community. 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: I think like you were saying being fully embedded in the like understanding gender queerness in the aspec glasses, I do think it makes us pretty out of touch to be honest

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: With your average person 

SARAH: And you don't realize it until… 

KAYLA: And you have no idea. 

SARAH: You're like slapped in the face by it, yeah

KAYLA: Right. Which is like… it's an interesting thing too, for… like for me going back to working in person and like working with… I previously had been working with like all people, my age, my demographic and going back into like a more normal work setting where it's like a lot of diverse people of a lot of age ranges, it really does slap you in the face of like, I am actually extremely out of touch and in a bubble

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Like with the way I'm thinking 

SARAH: You're very in touch but in a way that is out of touch with other people 

KAYLA: Yes. I am in touch with my community, I'm out of touch with like your average American. 

SARAH: Yeah, so that's that, we should really just rename this podcast ‘Sarah's Gender Update’

KAYLA: ‘Sarah’s Gender Update’ 

SARAH: How many social media followers does the podcast have? 

KAYLA: I don't know. 

SARAH: I don't know and I don't care, we don’t use them 

KAYLA: I know, I'm… so, someone called me out on the Discord today… this week, too. They were like, when are they ever gonna post the poll on social media? I was like, I don’t know.

SARAH: I don’t know 

KAYLA: Never. Our Instagram has 9,568 followers, we've been so close to 10,000 for like three years.  Years actually. 

SARAH: You know if we get up to 10,000 on TikTok, we can make money off of TikTok.

KAYLA: You are not… we got pretty… like, I think we're actually like not that far off on TikTok too

SARAH: We're in the 9000s on TikTok

KAYLA: There was a time where we were like really posting and it was like happening and then we just stopped

[00:30:00]

SARAH: Amazing 

KAYLA: Eight thousand nine hundred and ninety, so

SARAH: Mm, astounding. The next question is how many Patreons do we have on… how many patrons we have on Patreon? I'm trying to check but I don't know how to work this fucking website.

KAYLA: Let me see if it'll show me on the app

SARAH: Audience. Oh, but it's confusing again because it added the free tier. So, it makes it really hard, hold on, I got to turn on the filters, active payment, paid members, apply filters, 113

KAYLA: Slay

SARAH: Cool. 

KAYLA: I don't know

SARAH: I don’t know either 

KAYLA: Our TikTok went down from last year

SARAH: Yeah, I was gonna say I thought I wasn't it at 9,000 

KAYLA: It was, at the time 

SARAH: Nice. I love becoming less popular, it's so great, like unironically 

KAYLA: No, I love it. It's actually great for my mental health, it's actually so good for my mental health 

SARAH: Completely unironically. And yet, do I have my Instagram fucking check-marked? No 

KAYLA: Yeah. It's because you don't try frequently enough, you need to just keep trying. 

SARAH: I don't have… I can't remember

KAYLA: Okay, should I… do I need to like remind you monthly? Like it’s time.

SARAH: Maybe.  

KAYLA: Because that's how I did, is I just like periodically would be like I guess I'll try again, you just have to keep trying

SARAH: I tried again probably… it was probably maybe two or three months ago, I…

KAYLA: Okay, you've got to try again, you just got to keep trying, one day it'll happen. 

SARAH: Do you have a job? If so, what is it? Yes, I'm at the same job I was at last time 

KAYLA: I am not 

SARAH: You never are

KAYLA: That's not true. I was at the same company for like two or three years and then I got laid off, laid the fuck off

SARAH: No, but I just feel like whenever we do this it's always… 

KAYLA: That's not true because my last job I was there for two to three years, which would have spanned at least… 

SARAH: Two to three years

KAYLA: I work at Harvard Law School

SARAH: Harvard Law School

KAYLA: Harvard Law School 

SARAH: I work at a production company and I produce. No, I personally don't produce

KAYLA: You're there when the producing happens 

SARAH:  Well, I'm in the room where it happens, I give notes on things, producers do that

KAYLA: That sounds like a producing to me

SARAH: But I don't get credit. 

KAYLA: I worked at my last company for three years and three months, so, get… with that 

SARAH: Well, I've been at my current job for almost three years now, and that's terrifying. Where do you live? In my house 

KAYLA: Me too, I also live in your house

SARAH: I still live in Los Angeles. I have lived in the same place the entire time I lived in Los Angeles and honestly…

KAYLA: That’s so crazy. 

SARAH: I'm so glad. Oh my God 

KAYLA: I'm so jealous of you, I’ve lived in so… the amount of times I've moved since you have lived in that one apartment is actually bananas

SARAH: But just think, you don't pay as much as I do

KAYLA: Mm, yeah, probably not, I should hope not, as I'm splitting rent. 

SARAH: Uh-huh. 

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: Uh-huh. 

KAYLA: I live in Cambridge, massive huge chits

SARAH: You don't live in the same place you lived last time, but you live in the same place 

KAYLA: Not the same apartment, but in the same three-block radius

SARAH: The same area

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: What's your relationship status? Single baby. Kayla's relationship status is delusional. What's your relationship status? 

KAYLA: In a relationship

SARAH: Why are you being weird about it? 

KAYLA: I'm not, just being delusional, that’s all

SARAH: Kayla is… okay. We don't think Kayla is gonna break up. I would like to be clear… 

KAYLA: No, it’s not what we’re being delusional about 

SARAH: That we're not being… we don't think her relationship is going to end, that's not what the delusion is about 

KAYLA: That’s not what we're being delusional about, don't worry about that. 

SARAH: I was like, people may…

KAYLA: People are gonna be like….

SARAH: Misread this entire line 

KAYLA: No, that’s not it. 

SARAH: What has been the best part about this year pod-wise? I don't know, that we still have one, congrats to us

KAYLA: What big happened this year? 

SARAH: Nothing

KAYLA: I think you might be right. What did we do this year? 

SARAH: It's a miracle it's still going. 

KAYLA: Did we have a single guest on this year? 

SARAH: Yeah. 

KAYLA: Who?

SARAH: I don't know.

KAYLA: Hold on I need to do a bit of scrolling. 

SARAH: We have, we definitely have. 

KAYLA: Are you positive? 

SARAH: Uh-huh. 

KAYLA: I'm not. We haven't.

SARAH: Are you sure?

KAYLA: Yes. No, we had… no we had Rhaina Cohen on

SARAH: Ha ha ha ha haaaaa

KAYLA: That was a highlight, that was an excellent pod

SARAH: We had Ash McCullough on… McCullough.

KAYLA: Oh my gosh. Yes. There it is. Okay, that was actually… That was also good. That was so long ago, that was months ago. 

SARAH: Yeah, it was 

KAYLA: Okay. I did… now that I remember them, me not remembering them does not mean they were not good guests, those were both very good convos

SARAH: They were 

KAYLA: Also, I think that doing the listener lore first episode was a… Honestly a highlight for me. I thought that was… I had the silliest time. I had so many giggles

SARAH: I love that for you. I just saw that you named the last episode ‘Reddit Rabbit Hole Part 14 Kids Edition,’ that makes it seem like it's kids bop.

KAYLA: Maybe it is

SARAH: Like it's for kids

KAYLA: Yeah, it's for kids

SARAH: Okay Trix are for kids. Um, what has been the worst part about this year pod-wise? I don’t know 

KAYLA: I don’t think anything like bad has happened 

SARAH: Just being tired about it

KAYLA: Yeah, it has just been harder to juggle, I think 

SARAH: I think it started taking me longer to edit. 

KAYLA: Yeah, editing is not fun 

SARAH: I think I have gotten more and more obsessive about removing any pause longer than about half a second 

KAYLA: Yeah, that's tough, you should break that, you should stop that 

SARAH: Well

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: Well, it was like when I… when we were… when you and me did the podcast together in the same room on the same mic it took me half as long to edit the podcast. 

KAYLA: Yeah, because we were just yap, yap, yapping 

SARAH: Yeah. And it was one mic and I didn't have to line things up and I didn't have to like whatever

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: I was like, wow, this is great

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But these days a lot of times it takes me like multiple days, to be clear, I have limited windows in those days

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But 

KAYLA: Not like all day. 

SARAH: Yeah. What has been the best… the worst part about this year personally?

KAYLA: Lots of like family illnesses this year. 

SARAH: Yeah, my grandma has had 11 UTIs

KAYLA: So not chill

SARAH: That's like not fun. 

KAYLA: Yeah. No. Oh, I got laid off, that was ass at the time, like I’m fine now, but do you know how many gray hairs I found during those like three months? So many actually 

SARAH: At least one and a half. Uh, what has been the best part about this year personally?

KAYLA: I have a nephew

SARAH: Right. 

KAYLA: It's a baby, I like him. 

SARAH: I got into the K-pop group Seventeen

KAYLA: Because she needed one more 

SARAH: I needed 13, it’s what I need

KAYLA: It’s so bad, it's so bad

SARAH: Literally, that's the only thing I can think of

KAYLA: I think one of the worst parts was moving apartments because I really hate moving but one of the best parts was my new apartment because I really like my new apartment

SARAH: I have a sword on my arm now. 

KAYLA: That's true. Wait, I think I got at least one tattoo this year. This one? This one this year 

SARAH: When did you get your frames?

KAYLA: That would have been this year too, to be honest 

SARAH: I think that was this year. 

KAYLA: I think it was. 

SARAH: No 

KAYLA: No? No? 

SARAH: I have a photo of you at the Getty where it's on your arm 

KAYLA: At the Getty? 

SARAH: That was October of 2023. 

KAYLA: Who's the Getty? 

SARAH: At the Getty

KAYLA: Oh, when we did our pictures? Yes. 

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: It was in those pictures. 

SARAH: Yeah. 

KAYLA: Okay, yes, so I think just the one, I think just the one 

SARAH: Yeah, but you just got it randomly one day

KAYLA: I wanted it

SARAH: I might… there's a small chance I get another tattoo before the year is over

KAYLA: Ooh 

SARAH: But there's also a decent chance that it doesn't happen until next July 

KAYLA: Oh, wow, okay 

SARAH: It's either going to happen… because it needs to happen in Michigan, is why 

KAYLA: I see 

SARAH: So, it's either going to happen before the end of the year or it's going to happen next summer

KAYLA: Well, only time will tell 

SARAH: So. Rate your mental health one to ten. 

KAYLA: Uh 

SARAH: Like right now 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm 

SARAH: Not good, but that's also because… okay, I haven't been to the gym in like three weeks 

KAYLA: Oh, that’s tough 

SARAH: Because I was home for Thanksgiving and then I got sick and I have not been able to… I have not been physically well enough…

KAYLA: That's fair 

SARAH: To go to the gym and so then my mental health is bad because I haven't been able to go to the gym, but I can't go to the gym because my physical health is bad 

KAYLA: Yeah

[00:40:00]

SARAH: I've been meaning to put up my Christmas tree for nine days. 

KAYLA: I have not put any decorations either

SARAH: Usually I'm like… well, because I'm only gonna be here like a week and a half longer

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: So, like yeah put up the fucking tree right away

KAYLA: Fair 

SARAH: I took half of it out of the bag this morning

KAYLA: Oh 

SARAH: I keep just doing one thing, like I dragged the thing into the room and then like the next day I unzipped the bag. And then… 

KAYLA: Every day you get closer… 

SARAH: And then this morning I pulled out half of it

KAYLA: Hmm

SARAH: But every day I keep being like, oh, I'll do it tonight and then I'm like tired

KAYLA: Yeah, it is a lot of effort 

SARAH: Last night I fell asleep without eating my dinner 

KAYLA: I am unfortunately not surprised

SARAH: How confident… oh wait… 

KAYLA: And I never answer 

SARAH: And I didn't either

KAYLA: Okay, well 

SARAH: How… rate your mental health one to ten

KAYLA: Right now, I would say an eight 

SARAH: Wow

KAYLA: Pretty good right now. 

SARAH: I was gonna say three 

KAYLA: For me? 

SARAH: No

KAYLA: Oh. 

SARAH: For me 

KAYLA: Well, it's very… I am worried, because a couple of months ago it was much lower because 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: I don't remember if that… I think this was my beef at some point but like my medication got fucked up. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: And I was like so fucked in the head about it, I was so unwell. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: But I eventually leveled out. But I'm picking up a new prescription soon and I'm worried that now that my medicine is going back to normal that my body is gonna take time to adjust again 

SARAH: I see 

KAYLA: Even though I'm going back to the way it should be

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: I feel like my body is either gonna be like super happy and my body is gonna be like fuck yeah, and I'm gonna actually feel like a bit euphoric for a couple of weeks until I level back out or I'm gonna have brain bad again

SARAH: Mm, I see

KAYLA: It’s very temporary

SARAH: Very temporary. 

KAYLA: I worry 

SARAH: I think…

KAYLA: Seven

SARAH: Okay. I'm gonna bring mine up to a four just because the three is because I haven't been at the gym

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: I don't have control over my own brain, it's very cool and fun 

KAYLA: Um, I did bring it down to a seven because of how much I've been procrastinating a lot of life activities like… 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: And I was like, well, if I was really an eight I think maybe I probably wouldn't be putting stuff off that bad. So maybe it were not as good as I think

SARAH: Yeah, I do think one of the downsides of me not having a roommate anymore is… I've said this before, there's no one to disrupt me

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: And when there's no one to disrupt me it on average makes my mental health worse

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But like I like having my own space and like… 

KAYLA: You just need someone to disrupt you 

SARAH: I need a cat

KAYLA: Yeah, I do think a pet would help you along

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: Like a lot

SARAH: I've been thinking about that a lot. Like I… like as… once I get back after Christmas, I need to start talking to my landlord and be like, please.

KAYLA: Couldn't you get like a medical thing? Like… because I do genuinely think it would be extremely good for your mental health

SARAH: Yeah, I mean, I will see what happens if I ask like we'll see

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: How confident are you in your identity one to ten? The aro-ace part, yeah. The other part, clearly no one knows 

KAYLA: Clearly not. I'm gonna give myself a nine and a half, I struggle to give it a full ten because like you never fucking know. 

SARAH: Yeah. Yeah, that's fair

KAYLA: Okay, well, I want to leave wiggle room for like… because I had been confident before and then it changed so I… 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: You know?

SARAH: Yeah, I'll give my aro-aceness a good nine and a half. The other one? Fuck, I don't know, four, I keep just defaulting to four

KAYLA: Yeah, you know

SARAH: Because we talked about our relationships with our bodies as aspecs, how comfortable do you feel in your own body one to ten? Less than last time, whatever I said last time, just less

KAYLA: This one I… If I… This one also, I feel like fluctuates a lot for me. 

SARAH: Hmm 

KAYLA: Depending on, am I on my period?

SARAH: Mm-hmm. 

KAYLA: Well, if I’ve been exercising lately. Which like recently I have been better about exercising. So, I feel better. Also, time of year right now I'm just like wearing sweaters a bunch. So, I'm not like looking at my body as much, you know what I mean? 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: Like not trying to like fit into summer clothes and be like my skin is exposed. 

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: Anyway

SARAH: That's fair 

KAYLA: I'm trying to look at what we said last year 

SARAH: We love giving ourselves rank one to ten questions and then not giving one to ten

KAYLA: And then we're both really bad at it

SARAH: Yeah, that's fine. Do you want to find it or should I just go to the next one?

KAYLA: I don't… I'll give myself a seven, I don't care. 

SARAH: Okay

KAYLA: It's not that I don't care, it's just all the one through ten questions are the same to the transcript is just us saying numbers and I can… 

SARAH: Us… yeah, great

KAYLA: Wait, just kidding. I found it. I said the exact… 

SARAH: It's possible. I said the same thing last year, too, like slowly jump dumping down a number every year. 

KAYLA: I said this one is hard for me because it really varies like link to my period. I gave myself a six last year. And I gave myself a seven this year. So that's nice. 

SARAH: Okay. I gave myself a less

KAYLA: You gave yourself a six 

SARAH: Really? 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: I'll take it definitely down to at least a five 

KAYLA: It was gonna be a six and a half and then you changed it to six

SARAH: Okay, I'll give it a five. I'll give it a… No, I'll give it a 4.67, so, take that

KAYLA: Okay, great. And now I do need to read some transcript from last year because it… 

SARAH: I did the same thing last year, didn't I?

KAYLA: Well, no, it's that two years ago you said, whatever number I said last year two numbers lower

SARAH: Uh-huh 

KAYLA: And I said two years ago, six

SARAH: I said eight two years prior? Two years ago? That's not right

KAYLA: I don't know. 

SARAH: I'm gonna bring it down to a four

KAYLA: Okay. Three years ago, you also said that, you also said whatever I said last year, however many lower

SARAH: Uh-huh

KAYLA: But you had never given, two years and you didn’t give a number 

SARAH: I have never given a number

KAYLA: So… 

SARAH: Good

KAYLA: You went up then down and then down again, last year at a six and now we're down again

SARAH: Fuck it, 4.2, 4.28, 4.28125 

KAYLA: And then I talked about how I was excited to do this again this year, this cutting-edge math. So, this is gonna be really fun because now next year…

SARAH: It's just…

KAYLA: I'm gonna have this to read. This is the problem with rereading is because we're always… we always go back to the previous year

SARAH: Uh-huh 

KAYLA: So that when I'm reading the transcript, I'm reading that year and the year before

SARAH: Like we could just write our answers in the doc and say this year we said…

KAYLA: No, no, no, no, no

SARAH: But that's not fun

KAYLA: No, no, no, no

SARAH: Um, how often do you should?

KAYLA: Mm, I need to think about that. I always have to like… because I don't know what I'm shoulding, you know? 

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: Lately, I guess I've been shoulding a lot because of all of the things I'm procrastinating. 

SARAH: Mm. I thought you were gonna say the delusion

KAYLA: That's not so much shoulding, there's nothing I should be doing 

SARAH: Right 

KAYLA: Vis-à-vis the delusion

SARAH: Well, how cryptic this is 

KAYLA: One day when you're older…

SARAH: One day when you’re older 

KAYLA: We’ll discuss the delusions 

SARAH: We’ll talk about the delusions

KAYLA: No, my biggest should right now is I haven't bought… the only Christmas presents I've bought are for two white elephants that I have had and nothing else and I keep telling myself, it's like, oh, because I'm studying for my final, that's not why

SARAH: Mm

KAYLA: My brain just doesn't want, I just don't want to do it. 

SARAH: So

KAYLA: So

SARAH: Absolutely fun. How often do I should? You know, more than I would like 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But not an unreasonable amount

KAYLA: I will say I think taking classes again has made me struggle with shoulding more again

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: Because it's back to the thing of like, there's always something I could be doing

SARAH: Mm

KAYLA: And so, then there's often… like I've had to work again at being like, okay, yeah, there is always homework you could be doing but that doesn't mean you should do it right now

SARAH: Right 

KAYLA: You know?

SARAH: I think my increase in shoulding has to do with my decrease in how comfortable I feel with my own body, he heee

KAYLA: Mm-hmm, interesting

SARAH: What do you want most for the aspec community in the next year? I say this with so much love and affection… 

KAYLA: Oh, oh 

SARAH: I want the aspec community to leave me alone

KAYLA: It already is, who is coming for you?

SARAH: No, just like… Like I don't want to get caught up in shit, and I don't usually

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But I'm just saying like I want to not have to worry about shit, does that make sense?

KAYLA: Yeah, but this is... I think this you're not answering the question. 

SARAH: No, I'm not

KAYLA: Okay. Like that's not something the community is… that's not…

SARAH: I want the community to leave me the fuck alone. 

KAYLA: I don't think that's constructive. I don't think that's a constructive thing to say 

SARAH: It's not. And the community is not coming after me

KAYLA: Right, like they are leaving you alone

[00:50:00]

SARAH: The thing I really want to say is that I don't want to be an aspec activist, like I… but I don't want… I don't want

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Like… 

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: But I am

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: But I don't wanna be 

KAYLA: Yeah. I'd say we're pretty far removed at this point. 

SARAH: Yeah. Hell, yeah

KAYLA: I think we're really incredibly irrelevant these days, which is crazy. 

SARAH: It’s why we’re losing followers

KAYLA: Yeah, and… great, good

SARAH: The aspec community in the next year, I want it to grow big and strong and not fight with itself. 

KAYLA: I want… and I think this gets at maybe part of what you were trying to say, is I want there to be even more of an influx of like aspec creators and activists and… 

SARAH: I want to see aspecs on TV

KAYLA: I think like I want more Alice Osemans who is like this is a person who they are not only known for being aspec, they are someone who is like making a change in the queer community who also happens to be aspec and does speak up for aspecs 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: Not just like, oh, this person is famous and like not that it's bad that like the only thing that you're known for is aspec activism 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: But I think it goes further when you are also in great… 

SARAH: You’re not known just for that 

KAYLA: Right, again, there's nothing wrong with that, that's what we are, but…

SARAH: But it's more accessible to the outside world 

KAYLA: Yes 

SARAH: People who aren't already in the community when they're introduced to it organically through someone who they know from something else

KAYLA: Yeah, and then also when there's more people like that, we become more irrelevant, which is great for us

SARAH: I love becoming irrelevant 

KAYLA: Sarah and I, I feel… I hope people don't take this as us being like having a pity party or that like we don't care because we do. 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: But I think we had our few years of being very relevant 

SARAH: Uh-huh

KAYLA: And we did a really bad job at being relevant

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: We weren't responsible 

SARAH: And we didn't like it 

KAYLA: We didn't like it. We weren't responsible. We made mistakes, it was bad for us and everyone else and now we're really enjoying kind of just like fading

SARAH: We're enjoying just like observing 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Like, you know, um in the Muppets those two like angry guys?

KAYLA: That's us, that's us

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: Like we're just… we have our little corner and our little people and that's how it is

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: And you can tell that we wrote these questions when… 

KAYLA: When we were relevant and wanted to be relevant. 

SARAH: Yeah. 

KAYLA: Yeah. Yep

SARAH: What gives you hope? I think young women, young non-cis men

KAYLA: I could not agree more, because here's something that I was thinking about this year is often my answer to this question every year is young people. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: Because in general that's true…

SARAH: But this year young men…

KAYLA: However, this year I looked at the election results and I looked at the demographics and I saw the young men and, in my head, I said I thought of this episode and I said what have I been saying? 

SARAH: Yeah, not the men 

KAYLA: Not the men

SARAH: Not the men. 

KAYLA: Um, I… What gives me hope is Greta Thunberg’s face

SARAH: Thunberg

KAYLA: The little girl, she’s not little anymore 

SARAH: She's not little, she's an adult, she’s…

KAYLA: She’s an adult now. But people like her 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: And the girl from Flint, who is also not a child anymore

SARAH: Copeny 

KAYLA: I just know her by little miss Flint

SARAH: My brain is trying to tell me Maria Copeny, but it's not Maria. 

KAYLA: It doesn't sound familiar, but also, I don't do names. 

SARAH: Oh, I know why. I know someone with the last name Flint and they have a name that is not Maria, but is similar to Maria 

KAYLA: But is similar to Maria, great. Good.

SARAH: But her last name is Copeny. 

KAYLA: Okay 

SARAH: I bet that's correct. Hold on. This is gonna bother me. 

KAYLA: Oh, no

SARAH: Her name is Mari, M-A-R-I. Okay. 

KAYLA: Little miss Flint? 

SARAH: Yeah. 

KAYLA: Okay. 

SARAH: It's short for Amariyanna

KAYLA: Oh cute

SARAH: It's probably Mari, it's probably Mari Copeny

KAYLA: Probably. That's a good name 

SARAH: It is a good name. Anyway, I have another thing that gives me… what gives me hope is people who continue to like protest and work hard to make change even in the face of things being bad. Speaking of which, what are you most worried about right now? Um, so in this doc I actually… this’s one of the few ones where I actually did write down what I wrote last year because I wrote it in advance and I just never took it out of the doc. I said genocide, fascism and the decline of global democracy

KAYLA: Oh. Little did you know 

SARAH: Little did I know

KAYLA: Why did you say that? Why did you do that? 

SARAH: What is in store.

KAYLA: I don’t want you to answer this now because I'm afraid of what you’re gonna…

SARAH: I'm just gonna say that again because I'm still worried about that and perhaps worried more than I was last year. 

KAYLA: I think, yes, I agree 

SARAH: A year from now, where do you hope the pod will be? The same place

KAYLA: Same fucking place 

SARAH: In my backyard, I don't have a yard but… 

KAYLA: In our little pocket of internet with our lovely little internet friends. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm 

KAYLA: Chilling, having a silly time. I think I said this maybe last year too, but I just… I really enjoy the turn we've had and I think it was mostly out of necessity of just fully running out of topics that are like truly aspec central like… 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Core aspec culture, core aspec, like… 

SARAH: Yeah. We're not like a current events aspec podcast. 

KAYLA: No 

SARAH: Like there's not like…

KAYLA: Yeah. I just, I very much enjoy that we are just a podcast where we talk about like things happening in the world from an aspec perspective. Like I just… I like that that's what we are now 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: I find that more enjoyable

SARAH: Yeah, I think it's good. A year from now, where do you hope you will be? I said writing last year, I say that again with the hopes that I will be doing it more than I did this year. 

KAYLA: I hope I'm still in this apartment, it'd be so insane if I moved 

SARAH: That’d be wild

KAYLA: Especially because my lease wouldn't be up, wait… 

SARAH: Your lease will be up; your lease is going to end at the end of August, next year

KAYLA: Yeah, I don't know, I don't know. 

SARAH: Kayla doesn’t know how numbers work 

KAYLA: I don't know. I hope I'm in this apartment, I hope… I guess, I hope I'm fucking chilling, I don't know. 

SARAH: Yeah, I hope that as well. What's something you couldn't do this year that you hope to be able to do next year? Well, 2025 finally be the year I get a therapist. 

KAYLA: I wish it would be

SARAH: Maybe, maybe, I haven't had one since 2019

KAYLA: It’s so bad 

SARAH: And what a five years it has been 

KAYLA: It's so bad. Meanwhile, I've been in therapy consistently for like 11 years

SARAH: My brain

KAYLA: I hope to visit more friends. I feel like especially during the summer I get caught up in a lot of travel which is really fun, but then it leaves me exhausted the rest of the year so I don't like visit friends that I have around the country. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: So, like there are certain friends that have lived in other cities for forever and I've like never…

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: Been out there to see them, and I'm like, that… I'm a shitty friend, I think 

SARAH: I hope to have friends, I hope I… 

KAYLA: You do have friends

SARAH: Mm, debatable, I have got like two friends

KAYLA: That’s not true 

SARAH: Okay, three. I would like to go on a trip somewhere with friends

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Like away, like overnight 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Because I…

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: Travel to Michigan several times a year to see my family, but I don't ever go anywhere with friends 

KAYLA: You don't like do a vacation 

SARAH: Because I don't have any. And also, because, again, the whole thing like I don't have a partner, I don't have a built-in person to go with

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: So, I would like to… I would like to go on a trip with somebody, somewhere

KAYLA: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. 

SARAH: Not anybody, like I don't want to go on a trip with like… 

KAYLA: A rando 

SARAH: George Bush

KAYLA: Oh, well, yeah. 

SARAH: What's the one thing you want out of next year?

KAYLA: Is that not the same question? 

SARAH: No. I want a new job, respectfully 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm. 

SARAH: Respectfully, I would like to advance in my career. 

KAYLA: I would also love that for you

SARAH:  I'd like to submit to one fucking writing contest, just fucking one time

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: Which means I have to have a script done

KAYLA: Yeah, that would be good. What's the question? 

SARAH: One thing you want out of next year?

KAYLA: I want to be successfully closer to finishing the like education program I'm working towards 

SARAH: I should hope so. 

KAYLA: I should too 

SARAH: Imagine you're less far, imagine…

KAYLA: That's what my hope is, is that I'm like closer to wrapping it up

SARAH: Okay, not further. What's one thing that made this year better? I got in this K-pop group Seventeen, and my friends. One of my friends sent me an album, a Seventeen album and it arrived in the mail today and I got it and I was like, oh my God.

KAYLA: It’s so nice, see you do have friends 

SARAH: I don't see them, I don't… 

KAYLA: But they do exist

[01:00:00]

SARAH: I don't have friends that are available to hang out with me. 

KAYLA: That's fair, that’s fair

SARAH: They all live too far away or if they live nearby they only live kind of nearby and they're busy and they won't drop everything to hang out with me one time

KAYLA: That’s pretty fucked up

SARAH: And that's fucked up. 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: And I only ever ask them once a year

KAYLA: Yeah, well. What made this year better? I've continued to be really into reading this year

SARAH: I'm so jealous 

KAYLA: Which I really enjoyed and I think was very good for me. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm 

KAYLA: My friends, my family

SARAH: A baby 

KAYLA: A baby, well, no, not well to that, cut it off there. I want to say… So don't put that in

SARAH: Okay. If you could give the you from a year ago advice, what would it be? Buckle up bitch

KAYLA: Yeah. Yeah, lock the fuck in

SARAH: Keep your hands and your arms and legs inside the ride at all times

KAYLA: Lock the fuck in and make sure we're taking our meds every day because that's the bare minimum that we can do to keep it going. 

SARAH: Mm-hmm. If you were to give the you from a year ago advice, what would it be? Get a therapist

KAYLA: Mm-hmm, yeah 

SARAH: Um, what's something you're putting off doing right now? Getting a…

KAYLA: Buying Christmas presents

SARAH: Dentist-related things

KAYLA: Okay

SARAH: I went to a dentist but then I couldn't go to… I can't… I would have to make my plan so much more expensive to go to this dentist again. So, I'm… it's not worth it

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: So, I still have like this assigned dentist and… so, I'm doing the same plan, it automatically renewed. But I want to switch to my assigned dentist but I don't know who to switch it to 

KAYLA: I see, I see

SARAH: I guess that's not super urgent though. Like I could do that in March, it's not like it has to be done before the beginning of the year. Um, did you answer that question? What was the question? 

KAYLA: Yeah, I said, I need to buy Christmas presents. 

SARAH: Oh, right. Why do you do the pod? I don't know. 

KAYLA: I think it's nice to talk to my friends 

SARAH: I talk to Kayla and I talk to you and you talk back but I don't usually hear you

KAYLA: Me?

SARAH: No, sorry, the audience 

KAYLA: Oh, the listeners, yes. I like reading what the listener has to say. I like going in the Discord… 

SARAH: The listener? The one listener

KAYLA: The one, I mean at this point, I’m just kidding. Yeah, I don't know. I like having a silly time. 

SARAH: Yeah. Sum up the year with one song. Okay, the past couple of years... 

KAYLA: Ugh, I'm so bad at this one.

SARAH: I know you are, the past couple of years like I've had…

KAYLA: This one is just for you

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: You put this question in for you, with no regard for my feelings. 

SARAH: Yep. Um, I actually don't have like… 

KAYLA: I should get a question. 

SARAH: You can add one. I actually don't have like one specific one that like stood out this year as the song, but I was thinking and I was like, it should be a Seventeen song, so and I was like, okay, of the Seventeen songs, what should it be? Of the Seventeen songs, it would be the song ‘Fuck My Life’

KAYLA: Mm

SARAH: But then also I realized ‘Quarter Life’ by Tomorrow X Together, which I was like wait, did I do that song last year? And then I was like, no that song came out this year, I've just mentioned it on the pod before. The other one that I thought of was ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ by Chappell Roan because it's how I feel about going into next year

KAYLA: I was gonna say, ‘My Kink Is Karma’ by Chappell Roan. 

SARAH: Mm, that's a good fucking song

KAYLA: I think it really sums up my like feelings of rage. 

SARAH: Yeah. Yeah, that's very you, I see that

KAYLA: And that was… that's like my favorite song of that album, thank you very much. 

SARAH: I…

KAYLA: It's very you, my rage, thank you, thanks 

SARAH: I the other day was listening to ‘California’ on loop because I hate myself

KAYLA: I often listen to ‘California’ on loop

SARAH: My sister-in-law was like, that's like the one song on the album that like I don't really love as much and I was like, it's because you don't have a personal connection to it

KAYLA: Here's the thing Sarah, I also like originally didn't think that much of that song and then you told me about you liking it and so, then I listened to it with your ears

SARAH: Uh-huh 

KAYLA: And then I was like, this is so sad. 

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: And now I love it

SARAH: Yeah, I was listening… it like came on shuffle because it was on my… I was listening to my Wrapped playlist

KAYLA: Yeah 

 SARAH: And so, it came on shuffle and I was like, oh man, I got to put this on repeat 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: So, I listened to it on repeat for a couple of times and then the next song that came on was ‘Home’ by Seventeen and that fucked… that combination fucked me up. 

KAYLA: That's ouchie. 

SARAH: Okay. You don't even know that song, but just the title is… 

KAYLA: Yeah, I get the vibe. 

SARAH: Yeah. Ending fun, what's the most memorable thing the allos did this year? Last year, I wrote, every year, I'm like, damn, I should have prepared for this one, and earlier this week, I thought of something, I think it has to be the boy-moms because…

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: I think… listen, we're constantly going after men for being insane and misogynistic and patriarchal  

KAYLA: And maybe we should go after the women

SARAH: But I think we should attack women more

KAYLA: Equal opportunity attacking 

SARAH: Exactly 

KAYLA: I just this week had a run-in with some boy mom rhetoric

SARAH: Yeah, that's why I wrote it down

KAYLA: Yes

SARAH: It’s because you told me about that 

KAYLA: And then I was telling Dean about it and he was like, imagine if you became a boy-mom, like wouldn’t that be so embarrassing? And I was like, I would kill myself 

SARAH: Aside from the fact that I don't want kids, like the fact that if you have a child yourself it's a fucking coin toss as to what flavor it's gonna be. And again, gender isn't fucking real, but if the flavor is penis, I'm scared. I fear for my life

KAYLA: I have the same thing because again…

SARAH: I don't know what to do with that 

KAYLA: Again, gender is not real. However, I have spent my whole life mostly around women 

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: So, I'm like, I don't know about you 

SARAH: Gender is not real but the fact that people enforce it on to you is 

KAYLA: Yes, because that's the thing, even if I don't enforce the maleness onto my baby someone else will and then I have to deal with the repercussions of that in my own home

SARAH: Mm-hmm

KAYLA: And I don't know what to do with that. 

SARAH: Yep. Horrifying. 

KAYLA: I have a nephew, what's your deal?

SARAH: Yeah 

KAYLA: What's this whole thing gonna be? I don’t know

SARAH: Like when I found out that someone who I know decently well had a child recently and it turned out to be flavored girl, I was like, thank God

KAYLA: Yeah, I don't know what… 

SARAH: Thank God flavored girl. 

KAYLA: I don't know what… How my sister gonna raise this boy

SARAH: I don't know

KAYLA: What does she know about a boy?

SARAH: Hopefully she's fine 

KAYLA: She knows everything

SARAH: Who is your most hated person this year? Last year I wrote BB Netanyahu and I think that's still true. 

KAYLA: Yeah, I do think that it is true 

SARAH: Donald Trump, no, Donald Trump, he pisses me off 

KAYLA: Both bad

SARAH: Elon Musk

KAYLA: Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, I don't like them

SARAH: I don't think Joe Rogan is inherently… Here's the thing… 

KAYLA: Wrong

SARAH: Here's the thing, in 2016 he was a Bernie bro

KAYLA: That's why I think he's an even worse person

SARAH: Joe Rogan is not irredeemable 

KAYLA: Wrong

SARAH: He has just been lured by the siren sound of the Right and the Right takes him more seriously

KAYLA: That's why I think he's even more evil though because he is conscious, like he's doing it just for the power, he’s like a JD Vance where like previously he was like, fuck these people and then he was like, oh but they're gonna give me more power so, I'll move over there. 

SARAH: I don't think he's the same as JD Vance at all. My vibe of… because Joe Rogan… like he'll have anyone on his podcast. Like he will have an open discussion with anyone, the reason Kamala didn't go on his podcast wasn't because he said no, it was because of scheduling issues

KAYLA: Mm 

SARAH: And because he won't come to you, you have to come to him 

KAYLA: But then he endorsed Trump though

SARAH: He did. I think… I just… I don't think he's beyond Yanking back into more sane territory. Do I think… 

KAYLA: I disagree, also because he is friends with some whack ass people. 

SARAH: That's true 

KAYLA: Some terrible people

SARAH: Do I think we are going to drag him back into sane territory? Probably not, but I think theoretically it could be done

KAYLA: Mm, I disagree 

SARAH: Whereas like Charlie Kirk, no fucking way

KAYLA: I don't know

SARAH: You know? I'm not here to be a Joe Rogan apologist, But… 

KAYLA: I hate that guy

SARAH: You know how the Time person of the year thing comes out and they're always like, oh here were the finalists, and everyone is like, all of these are horrible people, why are we platforming them? 

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: And I'm like, here's the thing that people ignore every time, is that the Time person of the year is not best person of the year

KAYLA: Yeah, it's who are we all talking about this year? 

SARAH: It's who had the biggest impact on the world this year

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: And like I understand that you don't want that to be fucking Trump or Netanyahu or fucking Elon Musk

KAYLA: It would have been Hitler, if Times was doing it back then it would have Hitler 

SARAH: Yeah. It would have been Hitler

KAYLA: Several times

SARAH: And y'all would have been like, I can't believe we're doing this, but it's like, it's not best person. 

KAYLA: Yeah, it's not. No, it's not

SARAH: Person of the year Hitler. 

KAYLA: It's like when we were the… 

SARAH: Hitler was the person of the year in 1938

KAYLA: See? It's like when the person of the year was like you, like everybody. 

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: You're not the… we're not the best, we all suck. We were still person of the year 

SARAH: Yep. Is that true? Fact-check. Fact-check, yeah, he was the person of the year in 1938

KAYLA: See, there you go. Has Greta ever been person of the year? Give it to her

[01:10:00]

SARAH: Gandhi was person of the year in 1930. Well, the fourth person of the year was a person who was not white, Congrats. Hitler ’38 Wow, what a run, Hitler ’38, Stalin ’39, Churchill ‘40 

KAYLA: Wow 

SARAH: FDR ’41, Stalin ’42. 1950 was the American fighting man

KAYLA: Ew 

SARAH: ‘52 Elizabeth, 1960 was just US scientists, ‘63 MLK, 1966 the inheritor, representing a generation of American men and women aged 25 and under, the baby boom generation. I don't even understand what that means, how is that the inheritor? ‘69 was the middle Americans, fucking ‘72 Nixon and Henry Kissinger

KAYLA: Ew 

SARAH: Anyway, we'll stop, we'll stop, we'll stop, I'm just checking for Greta, 2019, yeah 

KAYLA: Okay, good, the last good year

SARAH: In 2022 is Volodymyr Zelenskyy and also the spirit of Ukraine

KAYLA: Yeah, that was an interesting one. 

SARAH: And then last year it was Taylor Swift and then this year it is Donald Trump again

KAYLA: Yeah 

SARAH: In 2020 it was a Joe and Kamala. Imagine every election year it's just whoever wins. 

KAYLA: I mean, sometimes it is

SARAH: I mean, in terms of like the category of people, 23 of the person of the years have been presidents of the United States

KAYLA: Yeah

SARAH: 14 unique leaders and then a couple of the… like other leaders of parties and popes. We're gonna… we're almost done. 

KAYLA: We have to finish 

SARAH: We have to stop. What's the one thing you'd like to say to our listeners? This is our last question. I'm sorry, this was so long, that’s what I would like to say

KAYLA: Yeah, it didn't need to be like this, I'm so sorry. 

SARAH: Sorry. We're doing our best. 

KAYLA: Um, maybe that should just be the blanket sorry 

SARAH: Sorry. Thanks. Thanks for being around and sticking around and listening to us for some reason, I don't know why you do that. That's it. Kayla, what's our poll for this week? 

KAYLA: Um 

SARAH: Give me song. 

KAYLA: What? What? What? 

SARAH: Give me song. 

KAYLA: You want Song Recs? 

SARAH: Song of year

KAYLA: Oh, what was your song of the year? 

SARAH: Song of year and if there was anything memorable the allos did?

KAYLA: Mm, yeah. Ooh, The Golden Bachelor, that was a good allo this year. 

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: What a fuck up 

SARAH: Yeah

KAYLA: Um, so do you want people… Like this was my top song of the year or like a song to describe the year? 

SARAH: A song to describe the year

KAYLA: Okay. Okay. 

SARAH: Okay. We also have a Patreon… no, yeah. What's your beef and your juice? I feel like we can skip that, that was this whole episode. 

KAYLA: I think yeah, a little bit 

SARAH: Sure, that was our beef and our juice, you got it. We also have a Patreon, patreon.com/soundsfakepod if you for some reason want to support us. I will say if you want to become a patron maybe wait until January because you're not gonna get anything for the next month. Our $5 patrons who we're promoting this week are Scott Ainslie, Simon, Snordstorm, Sophia P and Tall_Darryl. Our $10 patrons who are promoting something this week are Elle Bitter who would like to promote normalizing the use of tone indicators /srs, my Aunt Jeannie who would like to promote Christopher’s Haven, Kayla's dad who would like to promote JandiCreations.com and Maff who would like to promote the Don't Should sweatshirt. It makes a wonderful Christmas present

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: Or a Hanukkah present or a Kwanzaa present 

KAYLA: Or a just because present 

SARAH: Or a New Year's present, or a Boxing Day present 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: Or a Winter solstice present, or a… 

KAYLA: Okay, okay 

SARAH: What's the pole, the metal pole 

KAYLA: I don't care 

SARAH: Also, Martin Chiesl, Olivia O’Shea, Parker, Phoenix Leodinh, Purple Hayes, Barefoot Backpacker, SongOStorm, Val, Alastor, Alyson, Ani, Arcnes, Benjamin Ybarra, Bones, Celina Dobson, Clare Olsen, and Derick & Carissa. Our $15 patrons are Ace who would like to promote the writer Crystal Scherer, Andrew Hillum who would like to promote The Invisible Spectrum Podcast, Hector Murillo who would like to promote friends that are supportive, constructive, and help you grow as a better person and will hang out with you when you ask them to 

KAYLA: Mm-hmm

SARAH: Nathaniel White who would like to promote NathanielJWhiteDesigns.com, Kayla’s Aunt Nina who would like to promote katemaggartart.com and Schnell who would like to promote accepting that everyone is different and that's awesome. Our $20 patrons are Dragonfly, Dr. Jacki, my mom and River who would like to promote…Yay. Thanks for listening, tune in, not next Sunday, but like four from now, January next year 

KAYLA: January next year 

SARAH: January 19th in 2025, for more of us in your ears, enjoy your little break 

KAYLA: And until then, take good care of your cows

[END OF TRANSCRIPT]

Sounds Fake But Okay