Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Armchair Anonymous: Family Secret

Episode Date: July 3, 2026

Dax and Monica talk to Armcherries! In today's episode, Armcherries tell us about a crazy family secret.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https:...//art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Anonymous. I'm Dax Shepherd. I'm joined by Lily Padman. Family secrets. Juicy. Family secrets are dangerous. One was so juicy, they didn't even show up. So juicy, they pulled a no-show on us.
Starting point is 00:00:15 That's right. But the others, yeah. Yeah. Family secrets are fun. There's a really fun one in here I've retold. Yes, there's a really repeat-worthy one in this one. Please enjoy, because your own are hard to enjoy. So enjoy other people's family secrets.
Starting point is 00:00:34 All times. Come and go. Take them slow. You got an old money. Hello. You seem to be at work. Are you at work? I am at work.
Starting point is 00:00:58 Today is, of course, of all times. It's like an annual huge celebration where I work. And so it would be noticed if I were missed. So we're making at work. An annual celebration. That sounds like a fun place to work. It is a great place to work. I'm keeping it kind of vague there. Yeah, it's a big annual celebration, kind of celebrating how well we did like the previous year. And yes, they treated very well. As long as it's not to honor the founder. That kind of yearly celebration might be dicey. The founder's birthday. Yeah, yeah. Everyone is to celebrate the founder. It's about the people that work here and nothing but good things. That sounds beautiful. Lovely. And are you allowed to tell us what part of the country you're in? Absolutely. I am in Arizona with just in Sedona thought of you guys and your love for that.
Starting point is 00:01:42 space as well. I have a lot of affinity for Tucson as well. We used to have a lot of car shows out there, and we would always stay at the same hotel. It was a very desert landscape in the back patio, it felt like a movie set, and there's mountains in the background. It's lovely there. Most things I can agree with you on, that one I'm not going to. If you're a native to Arizona, which both my husband and I are, you're not usually a fan of Tucson unless you want to go of A, then you have to get like indoctrinated into saying good things about Tucson. Right, right, right. Okay, so you have a family secret story. I sure do. So first, I have to give credit to my niece, Jossie, way back when she used to do my
Starting point is 00:02:17 lashes of, like, non-consensually sitting there listening to you guys. So anyone that sat in her chair is an armchairy. But over the years, hearing all of the prompts and the stories, like, oh, God, I hope one pops up for this because it's such a, I think, bizarre story. At least it's felt bizarre for me because it's like an onion and I've peeled back the layers starting at, like, age 12, to even like as of a year ago. Oh, exciting. Wow, wow, wow. Late 1900s or really 1997, 1999. I'm in middle school. biology class and we're learning about dominant recessive traits. Big R little R, you're doing your punant square. And the assignment is to go home and find out what your mom's blood type is,
Starting point is 00:02:51 your dad's blood type, put yours in there. It should all make sense. The math didn't math on that for me, which probably teachers hadn't thought about that in this age of like what happens when my kind of case comes up. So as an only child, two older parents, my first thought was like, maybe I'm adopted. I go to my mom and I ask her, hey mom, curious, am I adopted? Can I ask a quick question? Yeah. When you asked dad for his blood type was like, oh, yeah, oh, positive. And when you asked mom, mom was like, um, did you detect any hesitation on mom's part with cooperating with this?
Starting point is 00:03:22 Great question. So I think she was the first one to be like, oh, nag. And then my dad came around. And he just didn't really think much of it, just said it really quick. So when I asked my mom, that question, she like paused and then she started to cry, which really freaked me out. And she goes, why would you ask me that? And I was like, well, it's either that or you cheated on dad.
Starting point is 00:03:41 So I was just going with the best of two. Okay. Wow. Yeah. She starts crying and tells me, your dad and I had fertility issues, and we ended up going to a sperm donor. And she was like, you know, your dad just was never very interested in sex. And he was done with doctors touching him.
Starting point is 00:03:56 So we went the sperm donor route. But we were assured that it was a credible donor. They were a medical resident, like all of this stuff. Spoiler alert, that wasn't the truth either because it was the 80s and it was the Wild Wild West with fertility, which I'll get to that too as another part. it. So I was happy with that answer. I actually never approached my dad ever and ever told him I knew. And it just stayed between my mom and I, because as far as I was concerned, like, that's my dad. Fortunately, I look almost identical to my mom. There's pictures to come later. But then I start noticing other things as I'm getting older. Like, you're going to sleepovers and I can remember a group of girls complaining, oh my God, I totally heard my parents doing it the other night, like gross. And my first response was, oh my gosh, are you getting a little brother or sister? Because in my mind, I had never seen like affect. between my parents, I just associated sex with it's when you have a baby. Still dealing with unraveling some of those pieces too, but kind of just noticed some different
Starting point is 00:04:48 things about my dad, one of his best friends. And then flash to I'm now like 19 and moving out. And I'd come over for dinner like after moving out. And my mom pulls me a sign was like, hey, I came around the corner to your dad's den, like his little office area the other day. And he was looking at gay porn. And his response was I was just trying to access a link that was in men's health magazine to like take a quiz. That's a pretty good excuse. It's not bad. Especially when you say men's health magazine. You're like yeah. I could see it. Which then she's like kind of makes sense. You know, I always wondered if something happened to him growing up or when he was in the army. Like it just makes sense a lot of these things. So it's like I'll do some digging. I'll look in the computer
Starting point is 00:05:28 for you. I'll let you know what I find. And just pause for half a second. It's crazy to me. But of course, I've never been in this situation. I'm in no position to judge. But it's wild to me that it took your mother, minimally 19 years, that she needed something that concrete. To start questioning. Right. Or is she fibbing to you either or those are interesting. I think that there's other pieces to that. Probably deep down, she knew definitely had some self-esteem issues.
Starting point is 00:05:53 And, you know, at that point, they had been married so long. It was almost just like this mutual understanding or agreement. Like, they're just good partners. He had retired before her. She was still working at that point. It was just kind of fine how it was. And they were just also the mind, it was just better to have two parents in the home and not. And so like that kind of drove a lot of them making their own sacrifices come to
Starting point is 00:06:12 find out like as I've gotten older really the sacrifices each one of them made, not having true love, not being their authentic self. But when I got on there, definitely wasn't him trying to get on to men's health. Definitely had a type big Keith Ledger fan. Oh, like the rest of us. Not judging. He's in the 99th percentile. So I put everything on a desk, gave it to my mom. I just kind of said, do what this, what you want. Ultimately, she decided never. to bring it up. She was really afraid he might harm himself or he was just from that era. It wasn't going to happen. He ended up passing away in 2017 and still never said anything. I hope he came to peace with it and just shift from like sad to funny again. We had him cremated and in between like
Starting point is 00:06:54 moves and we had my mom move in with us. We lost dad for a few years, lost his ashes. Oh, okay, a little mix up. Turns out when we were trying to look for a very obscure object in the guestroom closet. It was in there. So even in death, my dad is still in a closet. Oh, it is sad. It is. It is sad he didn't get to live his life. But then it was just maybe a year ago that his only sibling, his brother was in hospice. And I was visiting with my aunt and telling her, it was the first time I talked to anybody about the sperm donor about losing dad's ashes and finding them and like the stuff about my dad being gay. And she was like, Honey, I know your dad was gay.
Starting point is 00:07:34 I thought he was with, I don't want to say this person's name, we'll just say, Sam. I thought they were partners. It was my dad's college roommate friends till the end until he brought your mom over for dinner. And I was like, oh, but I'm like, if you knew, how come my mom didn't know? So like, there's other things to confront me. I'm like, how did you not know? And so I also went on to ancestry after my dad passed. I was like, what if there's other people in the world that looked like me?
Starting point is 00:07:56 also would love to know like about health concerns. I think between 23 and me and ancestry, there's like 18 habsies, no regulation. And to boot, this donor was not a vetted donor. He was just a friend of the doctor who was getting like 20 bucks a Dixie Cup. Sure. Yeah, this is common from back then. It's so interesting. You're lucky it wasn't the doctor. I mean, that's very common. Yeah, it's common. And this guy didn't tell his family either. So like I guess some of the early folks that had gone on to ancestry reach out because you can message people in ancestry. I guess they got like a nasty ground back like you're making this up. This is a conspiracy.
Starting point is 00:08:36 So that's his family's secret. I won't expose that for them. But like he did not tell his family. I'm even a few months older than like his oldest biological son. So you were out there shooting into Dixie Cups before. That's a young man's game for sure. I had to look up to say like what would 20 bucks be? And today it's like 61 bucks.
Starting point is 00:08:52 Like that's a great gig. Yeah. I tried it at UCLA. I feel blessed that I didn't. and have a good sperm count. I know. Because I would now have to meet a bunch of people. Would you really?
Starting point is 00:09:04 Well, I think I'd have to support all those people. There'd be that. I'm not looking to go to anybody's Christmases or be written into the will. Just wanted to know some hell stuff. So the pictures that you have there, there's going to be one. I don't know what order they're going to be. There's one of my mom and dad, like, way back when. Well, your mother's so cute.
Starting point is 00:09:21 She was a hottie. She still is. Now as I've taken my rose-colored glasses off, and like, he was an emaculate dress. I was just going to say. Yeah, he's very stylish. Once I married my husband, the in-laws all were like, yeah, he's got Lord Farquard hair. I think I saw my dad's ears once in my entire life when we were on a boat and the wind blew his hair back. But like, he blowdried that every morning.
Starting point is 00:09:39 And I did include a picture of the donor in there to just to prove like I do not look like him. There's just pictures of my dad over the years. He maintained that look, man. Yeah. But it was like writing on the wall, everyone but me. And even more, like, I get it. I was a kid. I didn't know any different.
Starting point is 00:09:53 But my mom, I'm like, what the hell, mom? Well. She was probably just in denial. Or even maybe sadder, like, I'll take whoever loves me. I just want to be loved. Yeah. Is this gentleman with your father in this photo? Is that the presumed?
Starting point is 00:10:07 Yes. That's the college roommate. They would go to dinner and be gone for like five, six hours. Well, good. And I hope they were. And did that man have a family? He did. He also had a wife and one child, one daughter.
Starting point is 00:10:19 It was like a mirror. Wow. How ironic your father loved Heath Ledger, because he was living brokeback mountain. Oh, maybe that's part of why. Okay, now here's your biological father. He looks so different than your dad. I just like continue to find things.
Starting point is 00:10:37 Like that was a new one just even last year talking to my aunt and being like, what I mean you knew and you just assumed? Like how we never talked about this? Like I'm 41 years old and like we're just talking about it. I'm delighted that you had that moment with her because that makes me less sad for your dad. It makes me feel like he did have some kind of outlet. Yeah. And one or two people that really saw him.
Starting point is 00:10:54 Wow. Wow, family secrets. It's a juicy one. Thankful for the donor in the end. Thankful for my dad, all the things. Yeah. A great story. Get to come meet you guys.
Starting point is 00:11:03 Well, Ashley, we're so grateful that you were willing to take a little time out of the celebration to join us. Absolutely. I'll get back to those free food trucks downstairs. Oh, wow. This is a good party. That is. Yeah. Not like a little hot bar with fucking catering.
Starting point is 00:11:17 Microwaved Nuggets. There's a couple of tents. One of them was like an 80s tent with some ski ball down there. Oh, my God. Well, Nice to meet you. You guys take care. Bye.
Starting point is 00:11:27 All right. Bye. These genetic ones, there are a dime a dozen these days. Well, the lesson that should be learned for anyone who donated sperm, don't ever take a 23Mee or genealogy or at least minimally don't check that box. Definitely. Right. Or they're coming. They're coming for you.
Starting point is 00:11:46 It's a really interesting thought experiment, whether I'd want to know. So that was in 2000, or 99 in 2000. Yeah. So my child would be 26 years old. Yeah. Do you think you would think of it as yours? If you thought of it as yours, I think that would be hard for you. Well, I know me.
Starting point is 00:12:03 Yeah, I would have to get super involved. Right. Exactly. And like, yeah. So for me, it would be a bummer because I'd be like, I wouldn't have picked to have 10 kids because I know I have limited bandwidth. And yeah, I would be like if they're struggling, are you kidding me? And they're struggling with addiction. I gave them those fucking genetics.
Starting point is 00:12:18 Well, that's not. I would feel like I need to help them because I gave it to them. Well, no. you jerked off and then someone else picked out of a binder. I remember filling out that questionnaire, you know, vaguely. You just want to make money, ma'am. I'll be honest with you. Then that is bad.
Starting point is 00:12:37 I'm glad you didn't. I think I lied to the extent of like. I've never done drugs. No, I don't even know if it asked that, but maybe some health stuff. You know, like I had cancer pretty close to my family. I think I left out some health things because I was like, I need this hundred bucks. Well, it worked out. You didn't get it. By the way, so they told me.
Starting point is 00:12:58 Right? Because I gave him a sample and they're like, yeah, you don't have a high enough sperm count. That was that. But what if I do get a knock knock? Now I've got at least a juicy lawsuit against the sperm bank. That's probably already out of business. But wasn't it? UCLA? The ad was in the Bruin. That was our newspaper. Sure. And then the medical office was in the UCLA medical campus. But I don't really know if they were officially affiliated with the school or not.
Starting point is 00:13:22 I guess you can rent space. Should I sue UCLA, which is suing basically the state of California, which is suing the taxpayer. Wow. Yeah, wait until the news gets out that I had the taxpayer, giving me $10 million. I'm sure America's going to love that story. It'd be for those fucked up kids I created. Oh, you give them to all those addicts? It would be the fun to support all these kids I have that are addicts.
Starting point is 00:14:05 Hello. Hello. Hi. Is this Shane, in quotes? This is Shane. Shane, where are you? So I'm located in Vancouver, Canada. Oh, our second Vancouverian today. What do we call people from Vancouverites?
Starting point is 00:14:20 I hope that's right. Oh, Cambuverites. Oh. Camboverites. And have you been in Vancouver your whole life? I have. I had moved around to a few different cities when I was younger, so Australia and out east, eastern Canada. So, yeah, I've been a few places, but Vancouver's all.
Starting point is 00:14:36 always been my home. Was it parents' job taking you to Australia in Eastern Canada? No, I did a university exchange, so I did a semester out that way. In Australia? Yeah. Did you have so much fun? I had a great time, not so much studying, but lots of time on the beach. Did you have an Australian lover while you were there? I did not. No, I was in a relationship. Oh, okay, okay. Okay, so you have a family secret. I have a family secret. That's still a secret to this day. Oh. This story takes place way back in 2008. I was just 22 years old. And I just graduated college. I was also recently single. And so before, you know, entering the working world, I wanted to like just have some fun. So I thought, okay, I'm going to go do a solo backpacking trip through Europe. I thought
Starting point is 00:15:31 that that would be a great idea. It just so happened that a cousin of mine was getting married in London. in England. So I thought, okay, normally I wouldn't go to this wedding, but I thought the timing aligned. I'll go for a week with my family and then I'll go off. So leading up to the trip, I was seeing someone casually and did see this person a few days before the trip. Didn't think anything of it, but it does become a little relevant later in the story. So it's the day of the trip. I'm on the plane. I'm in the middle seat. It's my mom to my left on the window. And there's a stranger to the right. And about halfway through, I just start to feel this itch down there. Okay, great. Itchy, itchy. Scratchy, scratchy. Just in the general area there. Great way to start your trip.
Starting point is 00:16:33 Yeah. And I'm just like, worst place because there's a little. There's no privacy. It's my mom and a stranger, and I'm right in between these people. And so I realize if I put my hands in my pocket, I can briefly, you know, just subtly relieve myself. If I put the tray table down, pull it out. That gives me a little cover. And I just figure it's like dry, irritated skin. Wishful thinking. Oh, no. After a very difficult flight, we make it. I'm okay. I survived. I'm just relieved to be off this plane. And just for context, I'm of Indian heritage. I'm pretty Western, but my mom's side of the family, which this wedding is, is a lot more traditional. We're staying at the bride's house. So there's a week long of things going on every day. Yeah, these Indian weddings where people don't know are the most spectacular events on planet Earth, right? A buddy of mine went to one in Chicago and there's like elephants and stuff. They go hard for weddings, no? It is a big, big life event. It's a little bit. much for me, but I was doing my family obligation and, you know, going to this wedding. And it's a
Starting point is 00:17:41 typical London home, pretty small. There's going to be 15 people in this house. So mattresses on the floor, one bathroom. There's just no privacy, right? And so the next few days go fine. And we're about two days before the wedding. This is getting worse. To the point now where I'm realizing I won't be able to survive the wedding day in this state. I decide I'm going to go have a look. So I go to the bathroom, I lock the door, and that's when I discover it's crabs. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, my God. You bet your ass it is.
Starting point is 00:18:16 Okay, so crabs are actual. Lice. You know, they're like a, yeah, bugs. Mikes. Is it an STD or you just get it? Well, yeah, it jumps from the pubic hair of your sexual partner onto yours, and then you lie in a very communal bed. But you could get it, even if someone's sleeping on the bed, he is good. Let's find out.
Starting point is 00:18:35 That's my heart. That's my hope, not my hunch. Oh, no. We don't want that for anyone else there. Okay. But do you realize it is crabs? I mean, do you know enough to realize that's what's happening once you look? As soon as I saw that, it just clicked.
Starting point is 00:18:52 Yep, this is crabs. Knowing who I was with, it all kind of had to. Oh, wow. I was panicked and I never had this happen before. And in my mind, I'm not the type of person to be in this position. Like, I don't contract crabs. I'm just in complete shock at this point. I'm really inexperienced with these sorts of things.
Starting point is 00:19:14 I don't know what to do. And there's just a few problems that I'm faced with. I, one, cannot confide in anyone. My cousins are all just younger, innocent teenagers, and I don't really know them that well. And then everyone else older, there's no way I'm going to be telling them. There's no smartphones. there's no car. Where we are is not super walkable. And probably the biggest issue is no one can leave the
Starting point is 00:19:43 house without it just becoming a field trip. So I couldn't just say, hey guys, I'm going for a walk to go find a doctor. Like, there's just no way anyone would let me leave. Yeah. Yeah. So I need to come up with a plan to get this solved at this point because I'm really starting to have a hard time and I'm just feeling completely trapped. So I come up with a plan that I think is going to jump over these obstacles. So I decide to go to the bathroom. I find one alive. I relocate it to my arm.
Starting point is 00:20:18 I would say that they're similar to lice, but just more crabby looking. So now it is on my arm. I go down to the family room where there's a big group of people. And I just yell, oh my God, it's light. pointing to my arm. Oh, wonderful. And then there's just immediate panic. The bride is panicking.
Starting point is 00:20:38 I just say in my head's been itchy, little kids are being checked. Everyone freaks out. And then things just kind of get out of control, out of my control. So my aunt takes the specimen and puts it in a jar. No. Of course, no one finds any lice. Right. Right.
Starting point is 00:20:59 Oh no. What if they were like, there's one here, there's one in my. My hair and it's one of the crabs. So it's in my pubic hair. They're just looking in the wrong place. So the reaction was just so much bigger than I anticipated. I thought there were like, let's get him some treatment. But it was like because nothing could be found, we're in close quarters.
Starting point is 00:21:20 People are already stressed because of this wedding. It was like, we need to hit this with everything we got and get this under control because people are coming over. There's all sorts of stuff happening. And so luckily no one pursued trying to ID this thing. And the plan was after things settled down, let's go to the pharmacy. And this is perfect because this is what I wanted. I needed something to fix my problem.
Starting point is 00:21:46 So we lead admission to the pharmacy. This is the most pivotal moment for me because I need to get something. I'm completely panicked. And I've raised the stakes so high now, putting my family through all this chaos with wedding events and people are trying to sort out their outfits for the wedding, and I'm just trying to treat my crabs here. Yeah. So I just need this to work. And so we go to the pharmacist, and the pharmacist brings out your standard, like shampoo. And I just think to myself, this maybe could work, but I don't know if it will. It might, it might not. I couldn't walk away there with the maybe.
Starting point is 00:22:22 And was any family member standing directly next to you as you were interacting with the pharmacist? There was about five of us. It was a group effort. I'm just sitting there thinking, I got to do something. So I asked the pharmacist, I say, do you have anything else? And he says, yeah, there's this. It's just a little more expensive. I look at the bottle, and it's labeled for head lice and genital crabs. Yes.
Starting point is 00:22:47 Let's go, Shane. Just so relieved inside. But I need to play the act that we're just shopping for head lice. I asked for both bottles, I just stare at them, discerningly for about 30 seconds comparing and contrasting, really putting on this show, like, I'm really trying to decide here. Isn't it fun everyone gets to be an actor at some point in my life? We've all, like, long before I got to Holly, when I was doing bullshit like this.
Starting point is 00:23:15 Oh, man, maybe I'll get, you'll go like, hmm, you're acting like you're on the fence. You are not on the fence. I know, exactly. After that few seconds, I just point to the one that was labeled for crabs, and I just say, I think this one is better. No one questioned it. Oh, nice. And we bought enough for the house.
Starting point is 00:23:31 Wonderful. So we went back. I got myself. I was totally relieved. Everyone else is getting shampooed. Betting is being washed. Did it panic. Up until that point, I was a trapped animal.
Starting point is 00:23:49 But at this point, I'm now, like, feeling guilt because I look over and the bride is stressed. The mother of the bride is literally like scalp massaging my 78-year-old grandmother. Listen, it's not going to do anything bad. Maybe it's good. Maybe one of them did have life. Four grams. So in the end, everything worked out. The wedding went on.
Starting point is 00:24:15 I had a great trip. And we were all free of any bugs or insects going forward. Oh, that's a crazy. And they never found out. They never found out. Although, I will say, about 17 years later now, so my wife knows this story and some of my friends. And my daughter, who's in elementary school, there was a recent lice outbreak in the classroom. And we were telling my mom about this.
Starting point is 00:24:42 And so my mom decides to retell the London Lice story to my wife. Like she's hearing it for the first time. She just says to my wife, and these weren't normal lice we have. here in Canada. They had bigger legs and much stronger. They almost look like crabs. You're also so lucky, and I'm surprised, that none of those Indian people were doctors. Shocking, actually.
Starting point is 00:25:10 Yeah. That would have been like, that is not a life. No, that is a sexually transmitted disease. And they were shouting it out. Shame, shame. Oh, wow. Oh, I like that story. It's also very cute and sweet.
Starting point is 00:25:27 It is. When you got home, did you ever share what had been passed on from your previous lover? Did you let them know? I didn't. Okay, sure. Should I have? I didn't. Well, listen, you got it from them and not the other way around.
Starting point is 00:25:41 So I feel like you're less inclined to do it. But the ethical thing is to go like, P.S., you're passing along this. You need to get this. Although, I guess the nice thing about crabs, like you can have chlamydia, especially if you're a dude, for years and not know. Which is really bad. Yeah. Maybe even vice versa. You're not missing crabs.
Starting point is 00:26:00 You probably didn't need to tell her. She probably figured that out. That's what I figured. Oh, man. Great story. Yeah, I love it. Thank you so much. And would it be possible for my wife to say quick hello?
Starting point is 00:26:11 She's a huge fan. Absolutely, yeah. Hi, guys. Oh, you remind me of Elizabeth. Oh, yeah. Elizabeth lame. It's a compliment. It's a high compliment.
Starting point is 00:26:21 High praise. High praise. This is so surreal. my gosh. That was a great story. I'm glad he submitted it. So that's good. Me too. It's so innocent. It is. It is. I know. And it's funny. I was at work today and I left at lunch to come home. And my coworkers are like, oh, what's the story? I'm like, I don't know. Like, it's kind of personal. Until next Friday. Exactly. Yeah. Exactly. Well, it's so nice to meet you, both of you. You too. Thanks. Yes. Thank you guys. Have a good day.
Starting point is 00:26:54 Okay, you too. Right, take care. Bye. Have you ever had lice? No. You know my thing with lice, though, is they would come check in my room, the teachers, and then when a new mom got to me and said, did you get checked, I'd lie and say, no. Yeah, I'll try to get it three times.
Starting point is 00:27:26 Jessica, can you hear us? Yes, can you hear of me? Yes. Did they check your head for lice in elementary school with, like, the mom's volunteer and come in with those big cue tips? Lice and Scolio. Yep. Yeah. I was just saying I used to lie and pretend they hadn't checked my hair so that I could get multiple checks.
Starting point is 00:27:45 Some hairplay. Yeah. Yeah. That's right. I can feel myself sitting at my desk. I know. Feels so good. My daughter got it twice.
Starting point is 00:27:54 And you never got it? No. Wow. That's lucky. Shared custody with her dad. So at her dad's house, they got it. Oh. Didn't bring it to me.
Starting point is 00:28:02 I had to monitor. God. I really live in fear of it, honestly. I'm trying to do context. Do you live in San Francisco? No, I live outside of Charleston, South Carolina. Does your family secret take place in South Carolina? Not really, no.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Where are you from originally? Michigan. Yay, where about? I grew up in Dearborn Heights. Oh, wonderful. Those moms were definitely checking Lice over in Deerborn. Oh, God, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:27 Did your family work for Ford? No, actually, my uncle worked for Chrysler. I don't think anybody in my family worked for Ford, but yeah, he was long-term at Chrysler. All right, so let us know what is the family secret. We love secrets. A bit of a buildup, of course, because it's a secret. It can't be all told at once. That's right.
Starting point is 00:28:43 I grew up in Michigan. My sister grew up in Michigan. My mom grew up in Vermont in a little tiny town called Winooski, Vermont. So shout out Winooski, Vermont. All 12 people, six of whom I'm probably related to, said a lot. She grew up there, but had to move to Michigan right after junior year of high school. So she had to finish senior year, like, in Michigan. So, 1958 in Michigan, she had to move, was not happy about.
Starting point is 00:29:08 it actually like very angry at her parents about it for a really long time. So she lived her life. She had my sister in 76 and she had me in 78. So we're all Gen X here. And then eventually we all kind of ended up down south. I moved here in 2005. My sister moved to Florida in 2008. And then my mom moved down here in 2010 two years after my daughter was born. So she moved down here to be close to her granddaughter. And she stayed here until she passed away in 2021. Thankfully, it wasn't like a super prolonged terrible illness. It was COPDs. And like shortly after she died, I got a message on Facebook from somebody saying, hi, this is your sister. I have been in touch with mom for a few years. And I just want to know like where she's going to be buried so that I can visit.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Oh, boy. Oh, wow. I was like at my daughter's volleyball. game. I'm like, this is a joke. Not a funny one, but this is weird. Well, and obviously your mom is just recently died, right? If we're talking about the funeral. Yeah, and like, she grew up Roman Catholic. She's like one of 11 kids. So I'm like, okay, this is not at all happening. Oh, she plays like these online bingo games. I'm like, it's like an unstable person who has adopted my mom. And my mom's been nice to her. But then she started sending me like screenshots of their text messages. And I was like, okay, she's not saying she's not her mom. So what the heck?
Starting point is 00:30:35 So we finally, like after exchanging messages, it became apparent that she is. My mom's daughter. My mom gave birth to her in 1966. So 10 years before my sister was born, gave birth to her. Her father is biracial and they were not married. And my grandfather was a Detroit police officer in 1966. And his unwed Roman Catholic daughter, was not about to have a child out of wedlock.
Starting point is 00:31:06 So they made her give up the baby for adoption through Catholic social services. But there isn't a lot of my uncles left, but I do have one uncle left who's younger than my mother. So we were like, how would you not know about this? And he said, oddly enough, in 66, he was away at the Air Force. Him and another uncle were away at the Air Force. So they weren't home that whole year except for like two weeks. Oh, wow. And he's like, we're not looking at our sister,
Starting point is 00:31:33 she's pregnant. That's just not a thing that they clock, you know? Yeah. And so we got to know her. She's a super nice person. Like, we're very close. She's very sweet. We talked on the phone shortly after that, and she did get some documents from Catholic Social Services, even though it was a closed adoption. She had some paperwork and she's reading it. And it says, like, Mother also gave birth to a boy in 1964 and also given up for adoption under Catholic Social Tourism. Oh my God. Mom did that twice. Twice, I guess. So I was like, sorry, pause.
Starting point is 00:32:12 What did you just say? And she was like, oh, my gosh. Because she had been in touch with our mom for three years before our mom passed. Had your mom done a 23 and me or something? No, the sister did. She did a 23 and me for ancestry, masked with some cousins. And through that with what she had from Catholic Social Services,
Starting point is 00:32:31 they pieced together who it was in the family. that had given birth to her and traced it back to my mom and got my mom's number somehow called her and was like, hey, I think I'm your daughter. My mom finally called her back and was like, why do you think this? And she gave her all the explanation and she was like, well, yeah. I did have a couple of kids before my kids. She asked her about the boy she had in 1964. My mom was like, I can't talk about that. That's too much. But she had said, yeah, you know, I was like dating your father casually and it happened. and, you know, I didn't name him in the paperwork. She did find also all of her siblings on her dad's side.
Starting point is 00:33:08 So she's got this enormous family now. So she had the boy in 1964, and we were trying to find him, could not find him whatsoever. And so we just kind of let that go. In the meantime, interestingly enough, both sisters have the same first and middle name. What? My mom had no idea that the people that adopted the other girl had named her. her this. So when my mom had my sister 10 years after that named her this name, same exact first and middle name, same spelling and everything. Yeah, he gives me chills. And she said she was like,
Starting point is 00:33:44 did you know that that was my name? And she was like, I had no idea. Wow. That is wild. So they had a really nice relationship for the three years that they talked. And I think it kind gave my mom a little peace of mind. But she did say there was a text between them, the sister asked, When you pass away, I'm going to reach out to the girls because my mom did not want us to know at all. So they had a secret relationship for three years that we didn't know about. My mom said, just tell them. I hope they forgive me. Like, I'm so ashamed of these choices and they weren't really choices, but I hope they can forgive me that I could never care this.
Starting point is 00:34:19 And I mean, that's just sad because, like, we would have been totally fine with it. Yeah, even more than you'd be fine with it, I would be dying to know what mom's experience was where dad is saying, no, you're going to do this, you're going to do that. I mean, that relationship between your grandfather and her sounds interesting. It was very interesting because looking back growing up, my mom never said many nice things about our grandfather at all. He passed away long before we were born. And there was always this like underlying tension and underlying something.
Starting point is 00:34:50 And we were like, well, they just made you move from your home right before senior year of high school. And also, he was a raging alcoholic. Well, you said Detroit cop. You didn't have to say raging alcohol. Oh, man. In the 60s, yeah, you go. But yeah, she can get called out of work to pick him off the lawn and stuff. So we just kind of chalked it all up to that.
Starting point is 00:35:09 But having this other information, it made a lot more sense. And I wish we could have given her a little piece that we were excited about this development. And apparently the only people in the family that knew were her parents, her mom and dad. And then she had one sister. And the one sister apparently knew. But literally nobody else in the family. I guess it was maybe a year or two ago now. another cousin. So the half-sister is in touch with all of our family. Another cousin reached out to the half-sister and was like, I think you girls have a brother because I matched with somebody on this other DNA website. And she was like, holy shit. Yes, we actually do. And so now we're in touch with him. And he's just a sweetheart. And his parents don't know. He's found some birth families. They're very old. So we're not letting them in on that. But I went to Michigan in April for work. So I got to meet him in person.
Starting point is 00:35:59 and I've met the half-sister in person, and they're just so sweet. I mean, like, I always grew up wanting more siblings, and I guess I have them now, which is really nice. And did you feel an uncanny closeness and bond to them immediately, more than you would, a stranger? Very much so, especially with the half-sister. Like, we talked on the phone the first time for, like, two hours. So I sent some pictures.
Starting point is 00:36:20 There's such a strong resemblance with the brother and my uncle. So there's a picture of us at a Bob's Big Boy that I sent. Oh, your favorite. Oh, yes, it is Bob's. Okay, so that's you with your brother. And half of them. Oh, it's both of them. Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:38 Are they full? Two different fathers. And then the other one is just an old picture of my mom's family. Okay. And then who's the little person here? That's my daughter and my mom. Oh, that's at Disney. This is the cutest picture ever.
Starting point is 00:36:55 Yeah, that baby is 17 years old now. What? I know. I like this family secret. This is a good family secret. Not a bad one at all. I wish we could have given my mom a little piece at the end to be like, we totally get it. Like, we forgive you. It's fine. But it's kind of a gift that she left on her way out the door. But the uncle that's still alive, when I told him about the brother, when we found him, I called him and he just was like, I don't even know what to say anymore. Like, this is just crazy. Stop calling. I know, right? And became friends on Facebook.
Starting point is 00:37:28 Facebook. I was like, you have to go look at his Facebook right now. And he did. He said, you have got to be kidding. If we saw him on the street, we'd be like, are we related to that man? Yeah, yeah. Is that one of our uncles? Like, he looked so similar. It's crazy. Jeans are strong for sure. My uncle had a theory that maybe there was a little rebellion with my mom after moving to Michigan and maybe she had a wild few years. It does seem like a couple repeated fuck used to dad. Although, Well, think back then, you didn't have condoms, you didn't have the pill, you didn't have a portion. Well, he was Catholic.
Starting point is 00:38:01 Didn't have education. I can't imagine they had any sex conversation with her at all. There was none of that happening. But this big of a secret for this long is crazy word. Well, thanks so much. I love a Mishigander. I have to show you my cherry. I was looking at it the whole time.
Starting point is 00:38:20 It's beautiful. Yeah. I love Blue Jays. They're very special to me. for multiple reasons. They're kind of the assholes of the bird world, and I kind of like him for that. I had to add the cherries. I'm a long-term arm chair. You guys got me through COVID. We went on so many walks together. You don't even know. All of the walks we took all the conversations. Yay. I'm glad we were there. Me too. I'll have 10 years sober in September.
Starting point is 00:38:50 Get out. Come on, girl. Congratulations. Both of our daughters were in Mary Poppins. Oh, so many people. Wow. Well, lovely meeting you, Jessica. This has been delightful. Thank you so much. All right. Have a great day.
Starting point is 00:39:03 Love you. Bye. Monica, that was really fun. Do you want to reveal any family secrets at this time? I'm good. You know, I can say this because it's the nature of my family. We have no family secrets. My mom's like, this happened.
Starting point is 00:39:20 My dad was like, you know. We don't have family secrets, but we have. of things I wouldn't share with the public. That's right. But within the family, everyone knows. Yeah. Okay, I'll share it. No, I'm just kidding. Okay, love you. All right, love you. Do you want to sing a tune or something?
Starting point is 00:39:38 I know a theme song. Oh. Okay, great. We don't have a thing song for this new show, so here I go, go, go. We're going to ask some random questions, and with the help of our Jerry's book, it's suggestion On the flyer rhyme dish On the flyer rhyme dish Enjoy

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