Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Your Near Death Experiences | Ear Biscuits Ep. 339
Episode Date: June 13, 2022Have you ever had a close brush with death? It seems that a lot of you have! This week, Rhett and Link listen to your voicemails talking about your near-death experiences. Some close calls include fal...ling off of waterfalls, choking in the most American way possible, go-kart catastrophes, and many more. Plus, Link details his harrowing new venture into SCUBA diving, and nearly drowning in his own pool. Check out "Dispatches From Myrtle Beach", an all=new podcast starring Link's dad Charles! Follow on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. First episode premieres Thursday, June 16. And don't forget to shoot Charles an email at ratherbshaggin53@aol.com and it might just be featured in an upcoming episode! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
Unmissable show coming up?
Good news.
We've got access to pre-sale tickets so you don't miss it.
Meeting with friends before the show?
We can book your reservation.
And when you get to the main event, skip to the good bit using the card member entrance.
Let's go seize the night.
That's the powerful backing of American Express. Visit amex.ca slash yamx. Benefits vary by
card. Other conditions apply.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast where two lifelong friends talk about life for a
long time. I'm Rhett. And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're hearing about your near death experiences.
We're taking advantage of this line.
We got this phone call line.
This phone call line.
A hotline.
Man, I love it.
I love people's voices.
EarPod One.
I love people's voices. EarPod one. I love people's voices.
All you gotta do is call in
when we put a prompt on the Twitter machine.
Yeah, so, and these are literally-
We have a Twitter machine.
Near death experiences.
And what I mean by that is like people almost died.
And we asked- And nearly died.
We asked for ones that were funny or bizarre specifically.
And maybe there's a serious one or two in there too.
I am embarking on a journey.
I'm making an investment.
I'm learning something new.
I am currently being trained to do something,
to be certified.
Taekwondo.
Nope.
And it could lead to a near death experience.
It could lead to a death experience.
Parachuting.
But it could also lead to like an eye opening,
heart opening, life changing.
Heart opening?
Yeah.
Future defying experience, relationship defying experience
for me and a significant other in my life.
I'm really building this up.
Yeah, so I think this is the right episode to let you know.
You're gonna start playing Magic the Gathering?
Nah, I'm open to it, but that's not it.
I am learning to scuba dive.
I am becoming scuba certified.
I was just playing dumb.
Yeah.
Ever since, and let me tell you,
I just wanna tell you, I've been waiting to tell you
about the process of training.
Did it get wet?
But the thing, you know, back when we went on tour,
we were in Australia, we were like, you know what?
When you're coming back from Australia,
there's that place called Fiji.
We could stop there. Might as well fly over it.
And we went scuba diving that one day.
No, we didn't. Snorkeling.
We went snorkeling.
None of us are certified.
And I had just a magical experience under the water,
like swimming in the reef in the tidal zone
on this island that this boat took us to.
And it was just like so meditative.
I thought I was,
and I think I talked about it on the podcast
as a highlight of that vacation years ago,
that I was gonna cry in my mask.
It was just- You can't do that
because you'll die.
No, it was just so awesome.
And that's when I started to think,
man, I'd really like to scuba dive.
And then I started talking to Chase,
you know, Chase is scuba certified.
Well, okay.
So I'm having some conversations with him.
Let me interject,
because when you started talking about scuba diving,
you talked about it in a way that there was,
there seemed to be a heavy dose of fear involved.
And every time you brought it up,
it was like you were stepping across a precipice
into like a gauntlet of sorts.
Because- So explain that.
I have a fear of being under water.
That's the problem.
And specifically holding my breath.
Like, I mean, I jump in my pool and I go under water,
hold my breath, I'm swimming around.
I'm like very much aware that there's this timer
going off in my body that's like,
if you don't get to the place where you can breathe air soon,
you're gonna die.
It's like, it's very, it's an immediate feeling for me.
Well, it's an important survival mechanism.
But you know, and I always chalked it up to,
I was never a pool boy.
I was never, you were a pool boy.
You went to the Keith Hills pool growing up,
did a lot of swimming.
I did very little swimming in a pool environment
where you like hold your breath
and you get comfortable holding your breath.
You're mostly bathtub swimmer.
Yeah, or like a river swimmer.
And you don't spend a lot of time on,
you're more of wading and treading water.
No ocean swimming.
Not a lot, I mean, ocean, it's more like
you body surf and stuff like that, you're on the surface.
You're not, I didn't do a bunch of like-
Oh, the diving in the ocean, that's a fun part.
When I would go to freaking the Keith Hills pool
with for the pool parties, they would do that thing
where everybody would cross the pool
and be one guy in there trying to tag you.
And you and a bunch of other people could just dive in,
swim to the very bottom of the pool
and come up on the other side and never get tagged.
And here I am like flailing around on top.
I can swim, but something about being underwater.
You're not a submarine.
My mom is afraid of swimming.
As a kid, she dove into a pool and hit her head
and then she never swam again.
Well, maybe her DNA was altered when that happened
and it got passed to you somehow.
That can happen, you know, DNA gets altered by events.
I didn't experience any trauma,
but the Fiji snorkeling experience was so formative for me
that I was like, I wanna do this.
I wanna be able to go under that water
and not have to come up.
It's a great idea.
And plus, I think I'm gonna have to overcome this fear.
And then I tried to have to overcome this fear.
And then I tried to talk Christy into it. She wasn't going for it, but Lincoln was up for it.
I was like, Lincoln, we're going,
we're planning this big trip to Hawaii.
I was like, dude, we're gonna scuba dive in Hawaii.
And he was like, all right, yeah, I'll do it with you.
This is also maybe the plot of White Lotus.
Did that enter into your?
Yeah, the teenage, the teenage,
yeah, they actually did that.
Let's get scuba certified, man.
Well, I'd made up my mind before then,
but then I didn't put any plans in place.
And then when I watched White Lotus, I was like,
I'm gonna put these plans in place.
See how this teenager's life was changed?
Like he found his calling in the ocean.
Spoiler.
Oh, well, it's a nice storyline,
but I wouldn't call it a spoiler.
I mean, you're the one who's sensitive to spoilers.
I'm just joking.
And so I said, all right, I'm gonna do this.
Started talking to Chase about the process.
He made a recommendation to Hollywood divers,
shout out to Hal and the team that I linked up with.
You gotta take an online course.
Because Lincoln and I were doing it together,
it took a number of months for us to get through it.
You watch a video, you read some stuff,
you answer some questions.
If you don't get it right,
you gotta answer all the questions again,
but there's like five questions at a time.
And it, I mean, it was probably cumulatively
over three hours worth of stuff.
And then at the end, there's like a 70 question test.
I'm like, Lincoln, you're, dude,
you're used to taking tests.
You show up and go to school any day of the week.
You're like, all right, another test.
Last test I took was a freaking driving test
when I moved to California.
Before that, when's the last test I took?
Like, test taking is a skill.
So I was like, man, I'm gonna be out just because
a freaking, I don't even know how to take tests.
Like, I don't know how to retain information.
Did he beat you on the test?
I let him take the 70 question test
a little bit ahead of me and he's moving fast.
I'm like, how are you moving so fast?
You're gonna get these wrong, you're gonna fail.
And then he passed with like a 73.
And then it showed him all of his answers.
And I was like, well, let me scroll over here.
Okay, oh no.
Just let me, you know, I don't wanna,
I just wanna like see if what I'm thinking
is the right answer.
Your certification is about to be stripped from you, sir.
I'm just saying, well, of course I didn't do it.
I just thought about it.
Okay, all right, thanks for clarifying.
I didn't go over there and actually verify
that his answers agree with mine,
but I bet you that they did if I would have checked.
What'd you get on the test?
A 91.
Okay, well, okay.
It helps to, it helps, you know what?
I'm not even gonna say anything.
Yeah, it just helps to be knowledgeable.
I don't want you to be stripped of your license.
But dude, I mean, they'd spend very, very, very little time
in this course talking about how amazing scuba diving is.
Matter of fact, there's basically no part of the curriculum
that says, remember how awesome this is.
So by the time I got to the end of it,
all I learned was that like,
you can die in a million different ways.
You can maim and your body
and be in all types of internal pain.
I mean, the one thing that put me at ease was like,
all right, I have a fear of holding my breath underwater.
But one of the first things you learn in scuba class is
never hold your breath.
Yeah, you don't hold your breath,
you're breathing the whole time.
Not just because you have air,
but because the further you go down,
the more pressure gets on your lungs.
And if you hold your breath under pressure
and then you start to ascend,
your lungs become a closed system when you're holding your breath under pressure and then you start to ascend. Your lungs become a closed system
when you're holding your breath
and then all those little balloons.
It's like a paper bag.
All those little balloons,
the air inside starts to expand.
Your freaking lungs explode.
That's not good.
Your freaking lungs explode.
So you have to have a discipline
to be constantly breathing.
How deep does that become an issue at?
I don't know.
They don't want you knowing the exceptions.
And maybe I did know, but I can't remember that.
But not pool depth.
Not pool depth.
No, not like eight or 10 feet.
Okay.
Don't ask me questions that then I'm like,
don't listen to any of my facts
that I'm stating about scuba.
The one thing I'm a little bit worried about
is there's so many numbers involved
and there's like math and there's calculations.
Oh gosh, yeah, because you got all this nitrogen.
And your life depends on it.
You get this nitrogen that has to off gas.
And so depending on how deep you are,
you have to do these calculations
and keep all these records.
You're gonna need a laminated chart
like they made
for the gut check episodes that you take down and dive with.
Either that or like a dive computer
that does it all for you.
But if you have to just- That exists?
Yeah.
Get that.
I can rent one of those.
But if you have to, but it's really, okay,
I can't dive past like 60 feet for more than an hour.
I'm just throwing out numbers here.
But then if you wanna go on a-
You're gonna be 60 feet under the water.
How does that make you feel? Well, I'll just throwing out numbers here. But then if you wanna go on a- You're gonna be 60 feet under the water, how does that make you feel?
Well, I'll tell you how it made me feel
when I did the next level of training.
But yeah, they're talking about like,
you got all this nitrogen in your body
and it has to off gas and it will accumulate over time.
So if you don't wait 24 hours after a dive,
you have to calculate how deep you can go for how long
in any subsequent dives
in like in the same 24 hour period.
Think of all the people who learned this the hard way.
Yeah, so you don't come up to,
and you don't get the bends.
And then the- Is that a TikTok dance?
It's the name of an album.
You then move to the next phase,
which is you get training in a pool.
So we did this at our pool.
It was just me, Lincoln, and Matt, and Ray
were doing, they were supervising,
the two of them were supervising our training.
And so we spent like four and a half hours in my pool
this past weekend learning how to dive.
With the breathing apparatus and the tanks and everything.
The full kit and caboodle.
You're like, wet suit?
Oh yeah, wet suit and everything.
Wet suit, hood, boots, gloves,
everything that I'm gonna have for the next phase,
which is going into the open ocean water certification,
which is two days.
I'm doing that this coming weekend.
Oh gosh.
I think I am.
It's nice knowing you.
So this past weekend we get in the pool
and they're like, first of all, it's like,
even snorkeling when you put your face under the water,
like everything in your being is telling you,
don't breathe.
I mean, you're underwater, do not breathe.
That's why you can throw a baby in the water.
Yeah, it's instinct that you have to overcome
that you have to start breathing under water.
And it's pretty nerve wracking.
I mean, if you've ever snorkeled,
there's like that moment of acclimation that's like,
oh, yes body, you can do this.
Chill out brain, you can do this.
Then you put on the regulator.
Like, yeah, you have, it's an amazing system
that you're putting this vest on
that then it connects to the tank behind you
as well as you having a regulator
that you breathe the air out of the tank
and a backup octopus regulator
that you can share with somebody in an emergency
or use yourself.
Or share with an octopus.
They don't need it.
But then there's also a hose that you hook to the vest
because you wear this vest and you put weights in it.
Depending on how much you weigh,
you've gotta be able to sink.
So you weigh yourself down,
even more than just the tank and the vest, just ballast.
And that's how you get back up.
You fill the vest with more air.
Yes, you have this trigger over here.
I always wondered about that.
Instead of breathing the air in,
it pressurizes, it's pressurized,
and it fills up your vest like a PFD.
And you can fill it up a little bit at a time.
And it's so interesting that-
And then you can let it out.
When it goes into your vest.
So you've got the pressurized mixture, whatever is in there.
And then when it goes into the vest,
it creates a buoyancy that wasn't a force that was existing
when it was pressurized.
That's crazy.
Yeah. I didn't know about this.
I always kind of thought that they like dropped weights
or something. I knew they didn't, but like, that's, I don't know about this. I always kind of thought that they like dropped weights or something.
I knew they didn't, but like, that's, I don't like,
how do you get back up?
Yeah, the air mixture, which there's, you know,
the air we breathe is mostly nitrogen.
Yeah.
And so that's why when you're down at depth,
I can't, you know, the nitrogen content
in your body increases.
Do you have to like dial in what the mix is?
No, no, no.
It's all predetermined.
Yeah, it's just a tank.
You breathe out of it.
Okay. You suck it down.
So yeah, there's this,
the thing that we had to learn was getting in the pool,
I mean, everything.
How do you put on fins without killing yourself?
How do you put on your goggles, you know,
in a way that they-
And then fall back into the water?
Is that what you did?
Did you do that on the side of the pool?
We walked into the pool.
We did one of those like long step into the pool,
but we didn't do the like back flip
off the side of a dinky into the pool.
You'll do that next time.
You'll do that this weekend.
That's the one thing that I don't know.
I'm not-
Oh, you're like, I don't want to do the back flip thing.
But over the course of the four hours,
it's like the first thing to do is,
all right, you're gonna start breathing under water.
Let's go down and sit on the bottom of the pool.
And they say breathe constantly.
You've gotta breathe calmly, in and out.
And then I get down in there
and I'm just starting to breathe.
And I mean, there's a little bit of,
you have to suck the air out of the tank a little bit.
It kind of feels that way.
Like it's a restricted flow of air.
It's not just like breathing air right here right now.
There's a little resistance.
Gotta coax it out.
And then your brain is still telling you,
this is not a good idea.
This is a bad idea.
This is a life ending idea to breathe down here
under this water.
Don't do it.
And so at a certain point very early on for me,
that sensation started to creep back in.
And then he's like, come up, telling me thumbs up.
So I come back up and-
He could tell?
No, he's like, how you doing?
I'm like, I'm doing pretty good.
Just taking an adjustment.
He's like, you guys are doing great.
Now we're gonna fill up your mask halfway with water.
And I'm gonna teach you how to get all the water
out of your mask without coming up for air.
Without coming up to the surface.
I mean, basically you have to learn everything
that could go wrong or make you uncomfortable
or need adjustment that you can fix it
without giving into the urge to try to come up
to the surface, because you're 30, 60 feet down,
you have to get rid of this notion of,
well, I gotta go to the surface to take care of this.
Right. No, no, no.
You gotta take care of it right there.
How's Lincoln doing at this point?
Better than me.
Okay, I just wanted to make sure. You gotta take care of it right there. How's Lincoln doing at this point? Better than me.
Okay, I just wanted to make sure.
So he taught us how to clear the mask,
but we go under water, he points at me
and he like does a mask sign,
like fill up your mask with water.
So I like, you seal the top of the mask.
Well, first of all, you let water in the top of the mask.
You just wanna like take it off
and then it fills up with water.
You can fill it up halfway if you wanted
to kind of ease into it.
Then you put the mask back on, you're like, okay.
Now you seal the top of the mask against your forehead
and you look up towards the surface
and you raise the bottom of the mask out.
And blow.
And then you blow out of your nose,
which of course is part of the mask.
And then the air from your nose fills up the top of the mask
and down, down, down, forcing all the water out.
And then you can put the mask back on.
It's a freaking magic trick.
Well. Did you know this?
I didn't know it, but before you explained it,
I would have guessed that that's what you did.
Yeah, but you've never done it. When you snorkeled, you've never done it. No, because I haven't been, yeah, I mean, I would have guessed that that's what you did. Yeah, but you've never done it.
When you snorkeled, you've never done it.
No, because I haven't been, yeah, I mean, I haven't.
Yeah, because you can come up to the surface and clear,
I mean, we also had to learn to clear your snorkel
and stuff I didn't know.
But the first time I did that,
like my mask is filled up with water,
I'm opening my eyes in my pool,
I'm like, I don't like to open my eyes in my pool.
And then I'm like, oh, I forgot to breathe. And then I take a big deep breath, I'm opening my eyes in my pool. I'm like, I don't like to open my eyes in my pool. And then I'm like, oh, I forgot to breathe.
And then I take a big deep breath, I'm like,
and then like my lungs are filled with air
and I breathe out just a little bit
and then I breathe in again and all of a sudden,
I'm like having this panic.
Why are you making me panic by telling your story?
Like you're in the pool.
It was freaking scary,
because I was like, I packed my lungs with air
and I just felt like I kept trying to pack more air in there
and I started panicking.
And then it's like, I had to come up
and then I was, I, you know,
took a breath at the surface
and then I was like, all right,
I gotta get this under control, I gotta calm down.
I'm not, and I talked to my instructor about it
and he gave me some tips about like,
make sure you breathe out, empty your lungs,
like you breathe out all the way
before you start breathing in again.
And I just had to start telling myself,
as long, doesn't matter what happens with your mask
or anything like that, as long as you're breathing,
you can handle everything else.
And you don't need to get worked up here.
Stay calm.
It's a meditative exercise of discipline
to train your brain and your instincts
to turn off in certain ways and to stay chill.
Because, you know, even if you start sucking down
a lot of air, it's just gonna limit the amount of time
you're able to enjoy your dive anyway,
cause you're gonna run out of air.
Or die from panic.
So I got- I gotta say,
I'm a little worried about you.
I got used to that, and then he's like,
now we're gonna lose your regulator.
You're gonna lose the thing that is keeping you alive.
You're gonna lose the hose.
And then he taught us how to find it
and put it back in our mouths.
And like, that was scary.
Cause like now I am holding my breath.
He's like, don't hold your breath.
You have to be breathing out constantly.
So I'm breathing out,
assuming that I'm gonna find the regulator
to put back in my mouth.
So you're saying that you can't hold your breath
at any point because even if you're not moving vertically. You technically can, but when you're saying that you can't hold your breath at any point because even if you're not moving vertically?
You technically can, but when you're learning,
you need to develop a discipline of constantly breathing.
Just so you don't forget, make it a reflex.
Yeah, yeah, and like, because when you're panicking
and if you have to do an emergency ascent to the surface,
I'm gonna keep it coming out.
You have to keep your airway open by breathing out
so that your lungs don't explode.
your airway open by breathing out so that your lungs don't explode.
So we did that and like put in a regulator
and then it's like practice losing your regulator
and then using your backup regulator.
And now it's like, all right,
now let's practice the symbol for I'm out of air,
which is like slitting your own throat symbol.
And so then it's like Lincoln and I had to rescue each other
underwater by sharing our air with the other guy.
Gross.
From the, now you keep your regulator in your mouth,
but you've got a backup that you haven't used.
The one for the octopus.
That you put, yeah, the octopus,
you put on the other guy and you link up
and you do the hand signals like you're okay.
And then you ascend.
Hold on, was that white power?
No, okay.
Okay, I'm just making sure.
The okay symbol is thumbs up does not mean okay.
Thumbs up means go to the surface.
And I did not learn any racist symbols.
I'm just making sure.
I don't know this company that you're dealing with.
I just, I'm just trying to look,
I'm just looking out for everything.
Thank you.
It's like, yeah, yeah.
I made sure that I wasn't working
with a racist scuba company.
Good, that's- It is important.
I mean, just as important as not dying.
And then we had to practice rescuing someone
who's potentially dead at the bottom.
Wow, who got to do that?
Ray played dead at the bottom of the pool
and then each of- He's done this.
This is Ray's favorite part.
Ray is a she, you know, think like Star Wars.
Oh, R-E-Y.
R-E-Y, yeah.
Mythical Beast too, turns out.
Oh wow.
Yeah, she told me that after I saved her life
a couple of times.
First time I saved her life,
I got a cramp in my calf and I just let her go
and I went into like,
fix my cramp mode.
And then I had to retrieve her from the bottom again.
Is there a symbol for cramp?
No, there's just a technique.
You grab the end of your fin and pull it towards your knee
to stretch it out.
Okay.
And then I got her up and I was like,
hey, listen, if you were already dead,
I'm at least gonna handle my cramp.
She's like, actually, you did the right thing.
You're supposed to take care of yourself before you-
It's like being on a plane.
Yep, before you take care of somebody else.
Oxygen to yourself.
So it's like all of this,
like learn to just stay cool, honey bunny,
no matter what happens,
because you're gonna be underwater
and you ain't gonna not be underwater.
And if you're panicking and sucking down air,
it's like you have to learn.
So by the end of five hours, he was like,
you guys are fast learners.
We're gonna go out to Catalina.
We're gonna spend two days in the open water.
You're gonna get your certification.
And I'm thinking- Sharks.
I don't care about sharks.
I'm not afraid of sharks.
Okay, I'm just letting you know, they'll be out there.
Some people are that. I'm not that. I'm't care about sharks. I'm not afraid of sharks. Okay, I'm just letting you know, they'll be out there. Some people are that.
I'm not that.
I'm just afraid of suffocating.
Okay.
So I'm thinking to myself, I'm not ready, I'm not ready.
But I kept the equipment in between last weekend.
Oh, so you're contemplating not going
because of like your-
The first time I panicked,
that I told you about, I definitely had a thought of,
I can't do this. Like we've already booked our trip to go out to Catalina
to get certified, we've already booked our trips in Hawaii.
Like I've really built this up.
I just can't.
You can't back out now.
I can't do it.
And then I'm like, I can't back out now.
It's like this in and of itself is a test.
I can do this.
I just need to chill out.
And that was like in the first 30 minutes,
like the first time I was breathing underwater.
So it got better.
I can only imagine how harrowing your story is going to be
when you leave the pool.
I know, man.
I don't think you would not have any trouble with this.
And I asked Lincoln last night, I was like,
"'Dude, were you panicking at any point?
He was like, that one time you mass filled up with water,
you did shoot to the surface.
He was like, yeah, but after that, I was totally cool.
I was like, you're too young to think about dying.
The main issue I would have is the issue that I have
while snorkeling is my beard.
And people say, oh, you put the silicone stuff or whatever,
but like I've tried it and my mask leaks
and you know me, I'm not losing the beard.
No, just all you'd have to do is shave your mustache.
Yeah, you know me, Amish Rhett.
You would have to be Amish.
If I make a commitment to the Amish lifestyle,
I'll become a scuba diver, but that might be a conflict.
I don't know if they believe in that technology.
Last night, I said, Lincoln,
let's get back in the pool and practice one more time.
There's some air left in our tanks.
And we got in, I spent probably an hour and a half
in the pool last night, losing my regulator,
holding my breath underwater and like, well,
breathing out while I try to recover my air supply
and just laying at the bottom of the pool
and just trying to put myself in that mental space
of if you get worked up, just breathe,
just calm your breathing.
So I feel more comfortable after doing that.
And I also know now what it feels like to run out of air
because I practiced until literally the tank was empty,
which that's a scary feeling.
So I go up to Lincoln and I'm like,
mine ran out before his and I'm like doing the symbol
and like, he's like, we actually did it.
It's like I took his and we, but like,
it's a scary feeling when you're sucking your air and it's like,
it's getting more difficult and then all of a sudden
it's like.
How, is there any sort of warning?
No, you just have a gauge.
Well, there's a gauge.
There's a gauge that you're constantly monitoring.
But I've forgotten totally about why I got into this.
So I'm trying to get back into that space.
And I hope when I go to Catalina,
that like it's gonna be a beautiful experience
that's gonna be like, yes, this is why I was doing this.
Cause all I've been thinking about is worst case scenarios.
Well, it's not gonna be Fiji, just so you understand that.
Like, I mean- He said there could be-
I've seen like beautiful videos
from people who dove around Catalina,
but it's not, Fiji, you were like in an aquarium.
Yeah.
Like it's not gonna be that great.
So, I've just kind of talked about like
all of the stuff that's made me really scared,
but I'm balancing that with the experiences
that I'm gonna have with my son and with nature.
So he's not nervous?
Not nervous, no.
So he's a good buddy.
I was like, Lincoln, if I start doing this like
zen breathe in, breathe out symbol with my hands,
it means that I'm panicking.
Don't try to get me to do anything else.
Just come over and just like smile. Is that part of the training? No, that's'm panicking. Don't try to get me to do anything else. Just come over and just like smile.
Part of the training?
No, that's something I developed.
Okay.
Maybe they'll add it to the curriculum.
Man.
So we'll get to your near-death experiences,
but I've got to talk about Dispatches from Myrtle Beach.
Have we talked about Dispatches from Myrtle Beach
on this show?
Not on this show.
We talked about it on GMM this week.
We've announced it.
And I just, I mean, I just listened to the trailer.
Which is out.
For this podcast, which is Charles Neal and Link Neal.
That's Link's dad.
And let me just tell you, I mean, I'm very excited.
I know that you've already recorded an episode.
Yeah.
Well, it comes out this Thursday.
When you just, I mean, your dad's voice.
Or last Thursday if you're watching the video version.
Your dad's voice is iconic
and now we're monetizing it.
He has been so excited.
Once I started talking to him about doing a podcast
and I'm like, dad, this is your podcast.
And I'm just like your sidekick.
I'm here to, I'm just here to talk to you and catch up.
Every Thursday, we're gonna publish our conversation
where we catch up, but there's gonna be,
we have different segments planned,
different things that he's gonna talk about.
So yeah, he's driving the ship
and I'm an interesting passenger on this journey
of what is this gonna, is this gonna become something?
And I think it really comes down to,
is it gonna become something in my dad's mind
and in his life? Like, is it gonna become something in my dad's mind and in his life?
Like, is this gonna legitimately be an outlet for him?
Like so far, he's got hundreds and hundreds of emails
from people ever since way back when I tweeted
his email address, people didn't believe me.
And then he's like elated to be getting,
I got 300 emails.
It's about to get more. In one night.
He's about to get more. Yeah, night. He's about to get more.
Yeah, ratherbeshagging53ataol.com.
That's his email address.
So yeah, every Thursday, wherever you get your podcast,
Dispatches from Myrtle Beach,
my dad has a podcast where he talks to me.
So go over there and subscribe and follow
whatever you can do, even though an episode's not out,
if you're listening to this.
But if you're watching the video, the episode's up.
The first episode's up.
You can go and actually listen to it right now,
wherever you get your podcasts.
The things that we talked about in the first episode,
I ended up giving him quite an education.
Of course, I learned some things about him too.
I don't wanna give anything away.
I just want you to go over there.
I'm excited about this.
I haven't listened to it.
I'm gonna listen to it as a-
As a fan of Charles.
As a consumer.
Yeah. You know what I'm saying?
We're trying to keep the episodes at like 30 minutes.
So it's like, it kind of feels a different niche
in your like listening routine than say your briskets.
So yeah. Hmm. Thursdays, Dis, dispatches from Myrtle Beach.
Summer's here and you can now get
almost anything you need for your sunny days
delivered with Uber Eats.
What do we mean by almost?
Well, you can't get a well-groomed lawn delivered,
but you can get a chicken Parmesan delivered.
A cabana, that's a no, but a banana, that's a yes that's a yes a nice tan sorry nope but a box fan happily yes a day of sunshine no a box of fine wines yes uber
eats can definitely get you that get almost almost anything delivered with uber eats order now
alcohol and select markets product availability may vary by regency app for details. Let's start with hearing a near-death experience.
So this is actually a very American story.
I almost choked to death on a corner of a hot sauce packet while eating lunch at work.
I had ripped it off, and I guess I didn't throw it away properly.
And it somehow made its way into my sandwich.
And when I tried to swallow, it got stuck in my esophagus or whatever it is that blocks, you know, stuff that isn't supposed to be going into your stomach.
Well, you know, it blocked your wimpy. I was all alone.
I had my own office and no one was around.
I had a walkie talkie, but couldn't use it because I couldn't speak because I was all alone. I had my own office and no one was around. I had a walkie talkie,
but couldn't use it because I couldn't speak because I was choking. And I had no clue what
to do. I ended up trying to dig it out of my throat. It didn't quite work. And I ended up
just trying to make myself throw up. And that did work. So I did not die and I lived to tell the tale, but that's the story of me being American and
Most choking to death on something that could have been prevented if I had just not been so hasty while I was eating
Thanks for sharing your story, but there's a couple of I just can't believe this happened. I mean that
Typically the corner of a hot sauce packet
is not a chokeable size.
It depends on how good of a rip you get
and how deep it goes, I think.
And if it just went into the windpipe,
she said esophagus, but-
Trachea and esophagus, right, they meet.
It must've been at a spot where,
because making yourself throw up
is gonna bypass your windpipe if it's gone deep enough.
Well, it was probably right there
at the intersection of the two.
And I don't know, I'm no doctor,
but I think that if something is like lodged
right there at the top of the trachea,
it's more than anything, it's super unpleasant,
but if you were to stop and not cough,
you would find that you're still able to,
especially in this case, get oxygen into your lungs.
Now, I'm not a doctor either,
but my understanding is-
But you've taken that scuba test.
You do not give someone the Heimlich maneuver
if they're making noise,
because that means that there is some sort of airflow.
Well, if they're like,
they're beating a table, that's noise, just to clarify.
If there's no noise coming, it's like, you must be silent.
If they're- Calm down and don't say a word
or make a sound before I do the Heimlich.
If they're coughing and making noise.
If there's still air coming from their lungs
in some capacity.
Right, then there's not a complete blockage.
And it won't work, it'll just break their ribs or whatever.
Again, not a doctor, this is not medical advice.
In the event of choking, go to Google
and figure out what you're supposed to do.
Or do that right now and then be ready for when it happens.
The American part of it, like she said-
Hot sauce packet.
So Americans are associated with hot sauce packets?
I mean, I'm sure they've ventured out beyond America,
but I think that it was like this super convenient
little pack of something in this disposable thing.
It feels very American.
It's interesting that it was in the sandwich
and that's the foreign object in the sandwich
is what made her choke.
But any part of the sandwich could have made her choke.
But she knew it was the hot sauce.
I guess so.
The hot sauce packets, I mean, it's gonna grab on
in a way that food's not gonna grab on.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm not a doctor.
This is disturbing.
Let's go to another one.
Hi Rhett and Link.
My name is Jacqueline and my near death experience
was when my boyfriend at the time, who is now my husband,
left me alone at his apartment complex.
While I was there, I heard a really loud chainsaw noise
and it was so loud.
And I heard girls outside my apartment screaming bloody murder, and I thought there was a chainsaw man on the loose.
I even filmed it.
I have a video of myself wondering where the chainsaw was coming from.
And I, in the moment, did not think to call the police or do anything rational,
but I ran out of the apartment without my shoes on, down three flights of stairs,
jumped into my car car and drove and parked
in the nearest Piggly Wiggly parking lot.
When I got back after sobbing,
thinking I almost died from a chainsaw attack,
I found out it was a man doing donuts
on his motorcycle in the parking lot.
And I literally thought I was going to get chainsawed to death.
So that was my near-death experience.
Man doing donuts.
Yeah, I think she was a chainsaw man, man doing donuts.
I will say,
I think the Piggly Wiggly parking lot
is maybe not the safest place on the planet.
I mean, I think there's,
I listen, not a sponsor.
I hope maybe Piggly Wiggly will sponsor us at some point,
but just based on my Piggly Wiggly parking lot experiences,
you know what, being at home is probably safer.
Yeah, I've watched a Piggly Wiggly
burned to the ground before.
That one in Lillington.
You were present for that?
Yeah, I just walked over
to the edge of Nana and Papa's neighborhood
and sat on a berm and just watched it burn.
You're joking.
No, don't you remember when that happened?
I remember hearing about it, but I didn't see it.
I remember driving by afterwards.
You know, typically when somebody like arsonists,
this is the type of thing they do.
Yeah, look at that little teenager sitting on a berm
watching it piggly-wiggly burn.
Suspect number one.
The chief of police grandson.
Yeah, it all adds up.
Hold on, did you burn it down? I didn't. For the record, I did not burn the piggly-wiggly down. the chief of police grandson. Yeah, it all adds up. Wasn't me.
Hold on, did you burn it down?
I didn't.
For the record, I did not burn the Peekly Weakly down.
Do you think somebody did?
Was it arson?
No, it wasn't arson as far as I recall.
We had a lot of arson in our parts.
Hearing a chainsaw and immediately thinking
of a chainsaw man is, you know, that's kind of a leap.
The screams though.
The screams, yeah.
That's scary.
And now that we do understand what was happening
and it was a donut man, not a chainsaw man.
Doing donuts.
Were the screams screams of glee?
Yeah.
Because that's a good way to get
a Harnett County woman excited.
I don't know where this was.
In a Piggly Wiggly parking lot,
there's no way to get a woman more excited more quickly.
Can you do a donut?
Yeah.
Now it does remind me of Lincoln's gotten into manga
and he was reading, I was like,
let me look at this one that you're reading.
He was like, okay, it's called Chainsaw Man.
Whoa. And I just started flipping through the book He was like, okay, it's called Chainsaw Man. Whoa!
And I just started flipping through the book.
And he's like, first of all, you're flipping backwards.
It's, you gotta start from the back, Dad.
And I was like, well, spoiler alert,
it's the most disturbingly well-illustrated,
disturbing scenes I've ever seen.
Like the creatures,
there's this creature called Santa Claus
that has nothing to do with Santa Claus
that then like is an amalgamation of all of these things
that it like starts to control,
like baby doll heads that turn into,
that like they group into like the legs of a spider creature
that is walking around.
Oh, it's like one of those, what do we call it?
The things where you just have eyeballs and hair.
Oh, you love this type of stuff.
You would really be into it.
But the chainsaw man-
You can have one of those.
Is a guy that I don't know what triggers it.
It's a very famous manga written and illustrated
by Tatsuki Fujimoto.
So this is in Japanese.
So he's just looking at the pictures or is it translated?
I think it's translated.
I was just looking at the pictures.
It's mostly pictures.
So then when they translate it, they don't also flip it.
But the chainsaw, no, the chainsaw man,
it's like when he turns into chainsaw man,
a chainsaw comes out of his head and out of his hands
and it destroys his body as he's transforming
and it's very grotesque.
Quite a sacrifice.
It's very grotesque and there's a video series
that's coming out.
Well, I hope so.
He's very excited about it.
I was like, I don't know if I can watch that with you.
That stuff is scary.
What is it like to have,
to be a child and have a dad
who is the one that gets scared of scuba diving and manga?
It's scary, man.
What is that gonna do for him
as he grows up? It's legitimately disturbing.
I was like, son, doesn't this disturb you?
I think he's in the wrong. I was like, son, doesn't this disturb you? I think he's in the wrong.
I was like, if this doesn't disturb you.
No, it's cool, man.
It's cool.
It's troubling to me.
It's troubling to me.
But I'll watch it with him.
I'll give it a shot.
Shop Best Buy's ultimate smartphone sale today.
Get a Best Buy gift card of up to $200 on select phone activations with major carriers.
Visit your nearest Best Buy store today.
Terms and conditions apply.
Hey, guys.
My name's Amber.
And about four years ago, during a nice thunderstorm, I went outside
to record the water coming down the road. There was a lightning strike really close,
and I don't remember much, but I ran inside and watched the video back to see that it was like
right next to me, and slowing it down frame by frame is even scarier, and I haven't been out
during a thunderstorm since. I still have the video if y'all want to see it too, and I don't really know if it's considered near death,
but it was definitely scary.
So yeah, thanks, bye-bye.
Well, we're watching the video
and I can tell you right now, yeah, this is near death.
Turn the sound on to Amber's video.
At Minjie Poo.
M-E-N-J-I-E Poo with two O's.
Okay.
All this water, guys, it's awesome.
We can freaking tube down.
All this water, guys, it's awesome.
We can freaking tube down.
Wow.
All this water, water.
I like the way she said that.
I obviously, she's just being funny, but.
Amber.
Amber was so excited about the ability to tube down that
creek ditch.
Wow. Good Lord.
I mean, so see if you can,
it lights up like half the screen.
Go back to there and kind of do the frame by frame thing
she was talking about.
I don't know if you can do that with Twitter,
but basically, oh, like, whoa!
I mean, it phases out the camera on the...
But look, it's like lighting up the whole...
It's pink.
It's very pink.
Wow.
That's crazy.
That is crazy.
And she screamed at the same time it hit.
Water.
I'll just water.
Amber, we like how you say water.
Thank you, Amber.
And then she said,
I left a voicemail and I think I talk too fast.
No, we like it when you talk fast.
Yeah, that's good.
Keep it short.
Keep it sweet. Wow. Yeah, we like it when you talk fast. Yeah, that's good. Keep it short. Keep it sweet.
Yeah, man.
Glad you're okay, Amber.
I think that I miss thunderstorms.
I seem to remember like the baddest,
scariest thunderstorms happened when we were at church
on like a Wednesday night.
There'd be like, there'd be pink lightning.
You know, you got that pink lightning.
Only at church?
I just have those memories. Yeah yeah they happen quite a bit hi red and link my name is jacob and i'm from charlotte north
carolina and my near-death experience happened on the second week of my freshman year at college
at western carolina university up in cullowhee near asheville a group of friends and i went
up to waterfall one saturday and i was not being particularly wise as I was walking on some rocks on top of a waterfall.
So, of course, I slipped and I fell on my stomach down one small waterfall and then another until I fortunately landed in a pool deep enough to stop me about a small car's width from a 50-foot drop to just a pile of rocks.
about a small car's width from a 50-foot drop to just a pile of rocks.
To make matters worse, the pool I landed in was full of leeches,
and they were all over my legs, all the way up my swimsuit.
And one last thing, I was with a group of friends from a campus ministry I was in at the time.
I have a similar deconstruction story to y'all's.
And the guy that helped pick the leeches off my legs kept complaining about how weird it was and how uncomfortable it made him.
So that was a great Saturday.
Yeah, that, getting a little homoerotic there,
made me a little uncomfortable.
Is that what was happening?
I think it was, it was just like, oh, I don't know.
No, I just kind of think pulling leeches
off somebody is weird.
I don't know, spirituality No, I just kind of think pulling leeches off somebody is weird. I don't know, spirituality aside,
like belief system aside.
I think my understanding was why he made the connection
is the guy was a little uncomfortable
with getting close to his junk or something.
Dude, freaking going off of a water.
You gotta be freaking careful, man,
if you're like hanging out around a waterfall.
And if you're in the water
that then starts to eventually falls,
it's just not a good practice.
You don't want to be in pre-water fall water, you know?
Yeah, and-
It just seems like something to live by.
Well, the most-
I don't swim in pre-waterfall water.
The most visceral this has ever been for me
was when we visited Niagara Falls.
And so there's been plenty of times in my life
when I've been like in a creek or in a river
that had a waterfall and you're like kind of swimming
and you're like, I'm not gonna go there
because it's a waterfall.
Yeah.
There was one time we were swimming in Yosemite
when I was a kid.
Like, I mean, I remember this very clearly
because my dad was like, there's a waterfall down there.
And then years later, we heard about people
who would be swimming in Yosemite and get swept down
and go off a giant waterfall and die.
Yeah, the year that I was there,
we hiked to the top of Yosemite Falls
and they were doing a helicopter rescue
of someone who had gone over the falls.
Yeah.
But when we went to Niagara Falls,
when we visited Niagara Falls with our wives.
Yeah. And we were on to Niagara Falls, when we visited Niagara Falls with our wives. Yeah.
And we were on the Canadian side, right?
Which is the better side.
Nothing against America, but just it's a cooler side.
More picturesque, I believe.
Of the river.
It's crazy, like you get right down there next to,
you can't really, if I remember correctly,
you can't like walk to it or correctly, you can't walk to it or whatever
if you're just a civilian.
But obviously you don't wanna go off Niagara Falls.
And just the other day, I saw a video going around,
I think on Twitter, and it was the guy who cuts the grass.
What?
Above the falls, and he's got a rope tied to him.
So like the person who's like mowing the grass.
Is he on a riding lawnmower with a rope attached to him?
In my mind he had a push mower
because it was like kind of like,
it was a place you didn't want to be like
on a vehicle that could fall in.
It was just like, okay, I'm kind of mowing the grass here.
Oh wow.
And I'm buckled in.
Here we go, there you go.
There he is right there.
Dude using a push mower.
And he's got like this giant-
Yeah, that makes sense.
Harness around him.
And a sleeveless shirt.
Well, you don't wanna be weighed down.
I think he's just wearing...
That's a mow job I don't want, you know?
Really?
Extra challenging though.
That's beautiful though.
That's advanced mowing.
People go, yeah, there was a person who drove their car
and was like, the car with the person in it
was like close to the edge of Niagara Falls
like a few months ago.
And they had to do a rescue to get the person out of the car.
They were in the water?
Yeah, yeah.
And yeah, I guess if your car is up there,
don't get out of your car
because then you're in serious trouble.
Good gracious, I mean, yeah,
but imagine going over a waterfall,
landing in a pool and then struggling,
but then Jacob went over again,
landed in a second pool.
And then he finally got it together.
Cause if he'd have gone over that third one,
he would have been, he'd have been in a thousand pieces,
man.
And then yeah, pool full of leeches
and a uncomfortable moment with a friend.
Man.
What was the last thing that filled you with wonder
that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic?
Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is...
Anime!
Hi, I'm Nick Friedman.
I'm Lee Alec Murray.
And I'm Leah President.
And welcome to Crunchyroll Presents The Anime Effect.
It's a weekly news show.
With the best celebrity guests.
And hot takes galore.
effect. It's a weekly news show with the best celebrity guests and hot takes galore. So join us every Friday wherever you get your podcasts and watch full video episodes on Crunchyroll or
on the Crunchyroll YouTube channel. My bizarre near-death experience happened when I had to get foot surgery on my big toe, they thought it was a bone infection or something like that.
So went in for the surgery at an outpatient center, proceeded to apparently go into anaphylactic shock on the table,
allergic to some of the medications they gave me for the surgery.
I woke up, was told about it, and I was the outpatient center's first code blue ever.
So that is my bizarre near-death experience that my big toe tried to kill me.
Dang.
I mean, that's scary.
Because this is a group of doctors
who are not accustomed necessarily to dealing with-
Outpatient, yeah.
You know, code blue.
Yeah, it's like, we're just gonna take care of your toe.
I mean, it just makes me think, every time they ask me,
are you allergic to anything?
It's just like, I always brush it off.
Of course not, pollen.
When I was little, my mom would say,
he's allergic to amoxicillin because as a baby,
he had a little reaction to it.
But then at a certain point, I just stopped saying that.
Well, when was the last time you had antibiotics?
I don't know.
Many years.
Because I mean, there's still a big class of antibiotics.
I mean, it might be worth finding out.
But usually what will happen is you're not gonna die.
Like you'll be in like the first or second day
of taking them usually.
And then you'll be like, this happens to Jesse.
She'd be like, oh, I'm reacting to this.
Yeah.
And then you just stop and get on another one.
That's-
I had toe surgery.
It's the only, that's the only surgery I've ever had.
When you broke your toe after the basketball tantrum?
No, ingrown toenail.
Oh, you got that?
I had an ingrown toenail in high school
and went to the podiatrist.
And still, the one of the,
I got some messed up toenails in general,
but one of them on my big toe,
like you can kind of tell that what they do
is so that there's one side of one of my big toes
doesn't go under the skin.
The nail doesn't like go, it doesn't like meet the skin.
I mean, listen, you gotta know how to scuba dive
and you gotta take this kind of stuff, man.
And so they did something where they like cut it
so that it would, and I was fully awake
and it was just like numbed or whatever.
No code blues for me.
But yeah, that's the one surgery I've had is toe surgery.
Big toe surgery, that's what we've got in common.
It's so interesting to wake up from an outpatient surgery
and they say, oh, you died for a second.
It's like, what? My toe died for a second? No, you died for a second. It's like, what?
My toe died for a second?
No, you died for a second.
Well, this is kind of crazy,
because for two reasons,
two things that I've been looking into lately.
The first is I just happened to see like a article yesterday
and it was like a collection of people who woke up during surgery and their stories.
See, I wonder if we're gonna get the numbers back
on this episode and be like, nobody clicked on,
no one's listening to this episode
because they're smarter than I am.
No, that's the thing.
I didn't realize that I didn't wanna hear this.
Well, here's the thing, you don't like Chainsaw Man,
but there's a market for it, okay?
I'm the market for it and I'm speaking right now.
Why are you reading about people waking up during surgery?
Because I have a fear of that happening.
But then why read about it?
To know how bad it's gonna be, to be prepared.
Yeah, so you're convinced it's gonna happen to you.
It wasn't as bad as I, it was,
I mean, there was a couple of people who were like,
it was the worst pain I've ever experienced,
nothing has ever come close. But there was a couple of people who were like, it was the worst pain I've ever experienced. Nothing has ever come close.
But there was a couple of people who were like, I woke up,
everybody saw me, they gave me a little bit more of the juice
and I went back to sleep.
I won't go into any more details about that.
But the second thing I've been reading about-
So you're telling me it made you feel better
reading about those things?
I felt the same.
The second thing I've been reading about,
and I'm interested, I find it interesting
that we didn't get any of these.
And Daniel, is it that we didn't get any at all
or that they're not in these ones that we're selecting from
in terms of people who actually like saw something?
Saw the light? Saw the light.
Okay. No one in the Mythical
Beast community has seen the light. Okay. No one in the Mythical Beast community has seen the light.
And I wouldn't say that I am,
I haven't gone hardcore, like deep into this,
but I'm finding myself reading about
and watching documentaries
about people's near-death experiences
and actually experiencing
out-of-body stuff, I mean, I still don't know
what I think about it.
I'm in an open place.
Is it like, okay, this is just something
where there's DMT released in your brain when you die
and you feel like this is what's happening?
Yeah.
But it's pretty fascinating how,
I was actually hoping we would get some of those submissions
based on some of the stuff I've been reading
because they are relatively common
and there's all these scientists,
people who had like a completely materialistic,
naturalistic view of the world where they're like,
consciousness is completely contained in the mind,
who basically began looking into this
and were like, I can't in good conscience
continue to believe that that's the case.
Something else must be going on
with all these things that are happening to people.
And of course, this is not anything new.
People have been talking about this forever,
but I don't know, it's a little intriguing.
My granddad, my mom's dad, he passed away in 1996.
Oh, I remember that.
So in 19, I mean, he had two separate
open heart surgery procedures,
like where they split you open, at least back then,
from sternum down your thigh.
Like the scar that he had is just like crazy,
train tracks. Why did it go so deep?
I don't know.
It's like trying to open a book
and you really just gotta.
You gotta keep ripping it.
Yeah, right.
You keep rip, like you gotta stretch the spine of it.
Oh, nasty.
I actually don't know if it was related
to one of the second one of those or something else,
but I definitely remember sitting at the kitchen table
after while he was recovering.
And he said that when he was under,
and I don't remember if they said that he coded
for any period of time.
Like this is not the type of story
that you wanna go back to and like talk to relatives about
when you're just shooting the breeze.
But he described going to a place
that was like a ultra dark warehouse,
like a real creepy, huge, dark warehouse.
So like the opposite of going to the light.
And he's telling me this story and I'm thinking,
man, my papa went to hell.
He went to the hell warehouse.
He went to, is that like the, I don't know.
He went to like an abandoned Sam's club.
He said he was scared.
He said it scared the shit out of him.
He start living right?
He started living right.
No, I don't know.
His jokes were always very colorful.
He kept saying fart-blaws.
Yeah, but I remember being concerned about his soul
after he told me that, but he wasn't,
that wasn't the implication when he was telling it.
It was just kind of matter of fact, like this happened.
Well.
I was like, what do you do with this information?
And it isn't-
Seemed like not much. Well, I was like, what do you do with this information? And it isn't- Seemed like not much.
Well, based on what I'm seeing,
there are things that people have in common,
but also it's not like everyone who is a professed Christian
sees a light and everyone who's not sees a dark warehouse
or feels a little bit of heat.
It's like, it isn't like, oh no,
this is supportive of a Christian worldview,
but it is, it's supportive of the fact
that something happens when you get near the point of death.
And I question if consciousness is completely contained
physically in the mind, in the brain,
and that there is no mind beyond that
or any consciousness beyond that.
Like what is the evolutionary advantage of this release
in this thing that happens at death?
Like, I mean, of course, if you're essentially a computer
and the computer is shutting down,
some weird shit could happen in your mind
that then if you come back from,
that if you actually reboot,
some weird shit might be still in there, but-
Maybe it's just a gift.
It's like the gift of existence is that
when you're transitioning, as some people call it,
or dying, as other people are calling it,
giving up the ghost or however you wanna say it,
that there's a little bit of a release
of something that gives you a positive experience,
ushers you out.
But this is the thing that's so interesting.
And we could do a whole episode on this.
Maybe we will, maybe we'll do a Flatliners episode
where we do it to ourselves.
Maybe so you don't fight it as much, you know?
But see, here's what I'm saying.
So I don't want you to dismiss it if you're listening.
The thing that is they're no longer conscious,
their brain stops functioning.
This one woman was dead for 30 minutes, okay?
Drowned and got like a kayaking accident.
Okay, not scuba.
Pinned underwater, she went over a waterfall
in a kayak because somebody was in the way.
This is like episode one of one of those Netflix series.
She goes under the water, she's under the water.
Basically after 15 minutes,
it turns into a recovery operation, not a rescue operation,
because she's been underwater for 15 minutes.
They eventually see her life jacket
and a guy is going to get it to be like,
I think her husband would want this.
And she's attached to it.
Whoops.
Pull her out, she's blue, her eyes are fixed open.
She's dead.
I don't remember exactly how they got her out, she's blue, her eyes are fixed open. She's dead. I don't remember exactly how they got her to,
I think they like put her on top of a kayak.
She was in Chile, I think, and she,
not a big bowl of chili, the country Chile.
And she, they go up the path and there's an ambulance there,
like some serendipitous stuff happens.
Anyway, she has all this stuff that happens
where she basically saw all this stuff happen
as she was like out of her body watching it happen.
She was a person of science, she was a doctor,
she didn't believe any of this stuff,
she didn't have any sort
of supernatural paranormal disposition.
Or enough kayak training.
But she spent time with people who were very welcoming
and like it felt awesome and warm and everything.
And they told her, you have to go back.
But they also told her basically that her son
was going to die.
What?
And so she had this feeling or it had been communicated
to her that her son was gonna die.
And that he wouldn't make it past his 18th birthday.
And he, it was like on his 18th birthday,
he was in like a skiing competition.
And she like goes to him the night before and she's like,
I've never told you this
because I didn't want to freak you out,
but I don't believe you're gonna,
I think you're gonna die.
And he lives through the skiing competition.
But then what?
Two years later he dies.
Oh, so they were off by two years?
I don't know if they told her specifically
that it wouldn't be until 18, but that's what,
anyway, so she like, her whole worldview has changed
and she's just one of like thousands of people
who've had weird shit like this happen to them.
Again, I don't know, I don't know.
I hate this episode.
Why are we doing this?
But it's so interesting that you don't like it.
All right.
So I got a near-death experience that's pretty comical and terrifying at the same time.
Good.
So me and my friends, we were hiking up Ravencliff Falls down here in Georgia.
You guys from North Carolina might have heard of it before
nope heard of georgia hiking up the waterfall and we've made it up the waterfall we already stopped
so we're on the hike down and i slip i slip way up high on this little mountainside. And I don't know how. Somebody up there might have been looking
out for me. Not sure. But I was able to grab a hold of a tree and kind of maneuver my way back up.
And, you know, I get two people come rushing out at me and they're like are you okay
like what's going on my friend's laughing panicking i'm like yeah i'm fine i don't i don't realize how
bad it was until later i'm brushing myself off i i continue walking and we get down the cliff and my friend that was with me she uh
she points up at the tree and goes that's what saved your life i look up at that tree
it's about a 200 300 foot fall from where that tree is so that tree wasn't there I probably would not be leaving this voicemail right now.
But yeah, so I became a tree hugger that day.
I don't regret it.
Love your show.
Keep on keeping on and being your mythical best.
Hey, that was good delivery, man.
And especially that tree hugger part.
That's tough, man.
If you're gonna have a near-death experience,
it's better to not realize it until after the fact.
Yeah.
That's the way I wanna do it.
Well, it might happen to you, man.
You're stepping into the gates of hell.
No, it's just the ocean.
Poseidon.
And I'm gonna ease into it.
You know, it's two days of being guided
into like more comfort.
It's gonna be fine, Link.
That reminds me, another thing that happened on that show
is that there's a series of people-
What's the name of the show?
So you don't even know what it's called.
"'Surviving Death."
Okay. That's the name of it.
But the other thing that they talked about, I'm only like two episodes in, it's not even new. it's called. Surviving Death. Okay. That's the name of it. But the other thing that they talked about,
I'm only like two episodes in, it's not even new.
It's been out for a while.
People falling great distances
and having these like blissful experiences.
While falling?
It's kind of hard to understand exactly.
I think it's, they fell great distances and nearly died.
Like there was an impact at some point.
And, but they look at that experience
as like the best moment of their life
because of what they experienced
in some sort of like transition.
So, but I mean, that can't happen to you
in the water necessarily,
but I'm sure something cool could happen to you.
You can have a moment that you could do
a whole episode on.
I written link in my fellow podcasters.
My name is Maddie and living in the south
was absolutely nothing to do.
I've almost died a few times, but the funniest
was definitely when my brother was given a go-kart
for his eighth birthday and and little three-year-old me, he decided that we were going to go on a little trip on the field.
And to his benefit of the doubt, he told me to hold on, and I did not.
And he took a very sharp left turn, and according to my dad and him, he turned left and I did not.
I was ejected from the cart
and I just started barrel rolling
down the field of a little three-year-old.
And apparently my dad was sprinting towards me
because I was just laying there lifeless.
That's what they thought.
But I'm fine.
So yeah., thanks guys.
Go-kart. You bought a go-kart for your children?
Yeah, let's see, I mean it was six years ago.
I don't have it anymore, I sold it,
because Lincoln was afraid to drive it.
It was a two-seater go-kart, my neighbor sold me because his kids had gotten older
and it had like a roll cage on it and they wore helmets.
But like Lincoln had had a bad experience
riding the golf cart at my nanny's house
and like he was riding it with Lewis
and Lewis fell asleep in the golf cart.
In the gator?
In the golf cart. And the gator? In the golf cart.
And then Lincoln hit the bird bath,
the cement bird bath and then ran over it.
So Lincoln was driving and his driving instructor
fell asleep.
Yeah, yeah.
So he was scared to drive the go-kart that I bought.
Kill any birds?
Nope.
No birds were bathing at the time.
That bird bath stayed teetered over for quite a while.
Yeah, and then Lando was not,
his legs weren't long enough to drive it.
So I got rid of it.
But when I was a kid,
Jimmy got me and Emmy a go-kart,
had no roll cage, no helmets, two seater.
And we would zoom around the house
and she would be driving and she would turn so sharply
that the whole thing rolled.
It didn't roll all the way over,
it teetered all the way up and dumped us out
and then kind of landed on top of us.
And it was like, you get out from underneath it
and you're like, it's kind of like when you fall,
you're like, did anybody see me fall?
We're still good.
We're still good.
Turn that thing back over.
Did you have any-
Do you remember ever riding that go-kart?
I don't think I drove that go-kart.
At my house?
That go-kart because my cousins had three wheelers.
I mean- Those are dangerous.
Like the first ATVs were three wheelers.
Yeah.
And they had a little one and they had a big one.
And I remember going down there to South Georgia,
going to their house.
And of course they like just had this like, you know,
like just woods and fields and stuff behind their house.
And of course, no helmet, no shoes.
I just had on a pair of shorts and I'm like six.
No instructions.
Living free, man.
They just put you on the thing
and then they're just like, this is how you go.
Like they didn't even tell me how to stop, you know?
And my parents are just like inside,
just drinking Cokes with, you know, with my aunt and uncle.
It was just such a different time.
And then my other cousins, they had a four wheeler.
That's safer.
Well, doesn't roll as easily. You can do they had a four wheeler. That's safer.
Doesn't roll as easily.
You can do two wheels on the front too.
Same deal though, no helmets.
Got away, I mean, boy, it got away with so much.
A lot of people weren't so lucky.
Yeah, those are accidents waiting to happen.
Let's pick one more.
Grab it up.
Hi Rhett and Link.
Hey. My name is Memjie.
At the beginning of 2021, I did something really stupid and nearly died when I had an accidental drug overdose.
I stopped breathing.
I couldn't move.
But my thoughts were still really clear.
Oh, gosh.
And in my mind, I saw my mom's face, and I thought about how terrible this was going to be for her.
I saw my dog, and I thought about how much I loved her.
And the last thing I saw was Rhett and Link sitting behind the desk. I'd been watching lots
of GMM at the time and it made sense. But I had this moment in my mind where I just laughed at the
absurdity that my last thought in this life was going to be about two guys who do goofy things on the internet,
smiling gently at me.
And it made me feel better as everything went black.
But I didn't die. I got to live.
And the next day when I was trying to decide what it all meant,
I thought, well, I am going to need a therapist, a program,
and a third- degree membership in the
mythical society. And you comforted me when I thought I was dying, and it seemed the least I
could do. So that's what I did, and it's going really well. And it feels good to be able to tell
you and to thank you for your contribution to my life and millions of others. So thank you,
for your contribution to my life and millions of others. So thank you and love you like a friend, fellas.
Take care.
I am so glad you're alive.
Wow.
Oh man.
I'm so glad that we could be there for that moment.
I don't remember it.
Like I've established, I don't know how this all works.
I'm open to the fact that we may have somehow
like been transferred to your brain for a moment
and just smiled at you peacefully.
I don't know how it works, but glad you're okay.
I mean, I'm honored.
I'm honored to be the last,
I mean, we could have been the last thing
that somebody thought of.
But she thought it was, she got a laugh out of it.
Got a laugh out of it.
Going out with a laugh.
That's good.
And then coming back
with a third degree Mythical Society membership.
Yeah, yeah.
What a great average.
That's right.
Can we just use that as a commercial?
You know?
Yeah, we save lives.
We appear to dying people, bring them back
so that they can join the Mythical Society.
That is wild, man.
I mean, don't you feel honored?
I feel so honored.
It's like her life is flashing before her eyes.
We got in there with the mom and the dog.
The final slide of her life flash is us.
Oh man.
Man, that's wild.
That is wild.
So you, I mean, it feels like you got a little bit shaken up
on this episode.
I mean, it's just, I'll never watch that Netflix series.
That's just not my type of thing.
And I'm not gonna ever find myself reading accounts
of people waking up during surgery, I'm sorry, but.
Those feel like different things though, right?
Because if I told you, the near death experience thing,
of course, the waking up during surgery
is just like a horrific thing, I get it.
But the near death experience.
There's a fascinating aspect to it.
For me, it's just like, I've just,
I've lived a life of just dismissing,
and I still mostly dismiss all of it, right?
I'm like, of course, you've got this perception,
this perception network, you know,
all your senses and everything, you've got this brain.
Of course, I would be surprised if there were not stories
like this as people approach death.
As the system is shutting down,
of course you're gonna see some weird stuff.
But if I could tell you that,
like if I had one of these experiences
and I was telling it to you,
or like I'm just fascinated by it.
It would carry some weight.
It is a Netflix show, it's just a show.
I don't know these people.
It's obviously produced, it's obviously curated in a way
from a certain disposition.
The whole point of the people behind this thing
is to get you to believe it.
You gotta know that there's some propaganda involved.
And so you gotta know when you're being subjected to that.
But like, don't you just wanna know?
Aren't you just fascinated by it?
I get that.
The what happens afterward, but like the,
when she's talking about like,
the nightmarish parts of like being conscious,
but being unable to move.
I know I'm not trying to go back to the surgery part of it,
but like, yeah, it's just like thinking of the ways
that you die.
That's it's, I'm fascinated by the afterlife part of it,
but the actual death, especially-
The getting there is the problem?
Yeah.
But it's about the journey, man.
It's not the destination, it's the journey.
I mean, am I gonna appear to myself smiling
along with you?
Well, no, it'll probably just be me.
Okay.
It'll just be me sitting next to you.
I'll be in your periphery.
You'll have to turn to see me.
Right.
You'll be in my right as usual.
From your seat at the desk.
Well, this is fine. I mean, the thing that I do like,
I like hearing people tell their stories.
It makes it believable.
I mean, of course, I don't believe anything
anybody said today, but I almost do
because I'm listening to their voice.
1-888-
EarPod One.
I have a rec.
Rec it up.
It is a TikTok account.
Oh, I'm always looking for more TikToks.
Well, I recently shared one of the TikToks
from this particular account with a group thread
that we're on.
Oh, you're talking about the guy?
Talking about VCR underscore party.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
VCR underscore party.
I have found my love language
and it is watching old footage. It turns out that this is the, okay, yeah. VCR underscore party. I have found my love language and it is watching old footage.
It turns out that this is the, okay, I mean-
Not a lot of followers.
I mean, it's not even a verified account,
but it says official TikTok of found footage festival.
Yeah, yeah, found footage festival,
been going for many years.
I knew about that.
So I mean, I guess it is the official.
Well, y'all need to get verified.
Come on now.
So I don't know how the rights to this stuff work,
but I mean, the thing that is the most entertaining
to me thus far, and I haven't dug deep,
the thing that I sent the group is that dudes like,
there's these dating profiles where people-
From the 80s.
These dudes would go on and they would like
talk about themselves and apparently it would like
go out on a videotape for women in the area to watch
and figure out if they were willing to date these guys.
And there's just this one guy and he is just the best.
It's like, they don't make people like that anymore.
Like, you know what I'm saying?
I was like looking, not just this hair
and the way he was dressed, but like the way he talked
and the way he moved his face and stuff.
Yeah.
I mean, he had a marionette quality to him.
Just go to the account and just start watching.
It's either, you're either gonna love it or hate it.
You know what I'm saying?
Like either this is what you like,
or this is like, why does anyone like this?
It's a lot better than reading about all the other stuff
Rhett's been reading about.
Find out what kind of person you are.
VCR underscore party on TikTok.
Love it.
All right.
I think I just choked for a second.
A little hot sauce bag?
I choked on my thoughts.
For me, the lyrics to the song Sledgehammer
went totally over my head.
I watched that video a million times
because it was like a fun music video
and I was a little kid.
I don't know, six years old, seven years old
when it came out, I watched it constantly.
But like, open up your fruit cage and let me in.
Like, wow, I had no idea.
Hi, my name's Rachel.
I'm a big fan.
So song lyrics that went over my head as a kid.
My parents were musicians, so we always had music playing in the house.
And I remember a couple of specific songs.
The song Hair of the Dog by Nazareth features a lyric,
now you're messing with a son of a blank.
And when I was apparently a small child, and my sister too,
my sister and I would run around singing it in our squeaky little voices,
and Dad loved to tell that story.
singing it in our squeaky little voices. And dad loved to tell that story. Another time we were listening to, gosh, I forget the name of the song, but it's by Steely Dan. And the lyric is,
the Cuervo Gold, the fine Colombian makes tonight. I can't remember, but I asked my dad what Colombian meant,
and it was a reference to drugs.
But he told me it's coffee, baby.
And he loved to tell that story, too.
Anyway, I'm a big fan of you guys.
Thank you so much for doing what you do.
Bye.
Hey, Rhett and Link.
My girlfriend, Sokata Desert Tortoise, and I are tanning out in the grass, and we just wanted to say, 1-888-EARPOD-1.