1.5 HOUR English Conversation Lesson

Vanessa: Hi, I’m Vanessa from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.

Dan: And I’m Dan.

Vanessa: My husband, who is also going to
be giving another perspective in today’s conversation.

Today we’re bringing you an amazing, long,
English conversation, so prepare your ears,

prepare your mind.

We’re going to be talking about 12 different
topics, and hopefully providing some new expressions

and new ways to think about life.

I don’t know about that, but at least some
English help for you.

Dan: Yeah, it’s going to get personal today,
so get ready.

Vanessa: Yes.

All right, are you ready to get started?

Dan: I’m ready.

Vanessa: Let’s go.

Our first topic is family, and my question
is, who do you think that you’re the most

like?

Dan: Who am I the most like, in appearance?

Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: Both appearance and character?

Vanessa: Yeah, both.

Dan: Okay, so appearance I look mostly like
my mom, I think.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: I have more of her skin tone, I have
her eyes.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: And on her side of the family, most of
the people are pretty skinny, and I’m a rather

skinny guy.

My dad’s side is German, and they tend to
be a little bit bigger.

So yeah, I definitely got my mom’s side.

But character wise, I think I’m a little more
like my dad.

Would you agree?

Vanessa: Yeah, I’d say you have shades of
your dad.

Dan: You know me so well, so you can answer
this, too.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah, I think you have shades of your dad.

Yeah.

Dan: Shades, yeah.

I think I’m more silly than my dad, that’s
not very hard because my dad is pretty serious.

Vanessa: Ah, he’s got a silly side though.

Dan: He does, yeah.

But for the most part, I think I’m more like
my dad because he has a very calm demeanor,

he’s very patient, and he doesn’t get stressed
about anything.

And actually, my dad gets so unstressed about
everything, I can’t even understand it.

I’m like, “How are you so calm right now?”

And everybody I know thinks that I’m the most
stress free person they know.

Vanessa: But your dad is even more stress
free.

Dan: Yeah, but we’re similar, like growing
up when my parents would be going somewhere,

and needing to get out of the house, me and
my dad would be the last one out of the house

every single time.

Then we would be like, “What?

We’ll make it.

We’ll be okay.

No problem.”

Vanessa: And your mom, and brother, and sister
were saying, “Come on, hurry.”

Dan: And my mom is like, “Ah, let’s go.”

My mom is much more high stress, anxious kind
of personality.

Vanessa: That’s kind of a typical family situation,
I think.

Dan: Yeah, how about you?

Vanessa: I think I have both my parents in
me as well.

I think I look a lot like my mom.

Dan: Yeah, she looks exactly like her mom,
though, like to a T.

Vanessa: Sometimes when I see pictures of
myself, and then I look at a picture of her

at the same age, I think, “Whoa.

We look really similar.”

And she looks a lot like her mom, so I can
kind of imagine what I’ll look like when I’m

getting older.

Dan: Yeah.

I mean, you have darker hair, and darker features.

You got that from your dad.

Vanessa: Yeah, somewhat.

But I think a lot of my features are similar
to my mom.

But I think I also got my facial expressions
from my mom.

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: A lot of comment that, “Wow, Vanessa,
you have a lot of expressions.”

Dan: Your mom is very expressive, just like
you.

Vanessa: And I think it’s true that I use
a lot of expressions, but it’s just natural

for me.

I do this in daily life as I’m talking about
things.

And I think that I get that from my mom, sometimes
I see some of her expressions and I realize,

“Oh, I do that too.”

Dan: Yeah, I remember when we lived in South
Korea, every single Korean person was commenting

on Vanessa’s expressions.

They’re like, “Your face, it’s so exciting.

How are you making so many faces?”

Everybody was surprised.

Vanessa: I don’t know.

Dan: I guess in Korea they don’t make as many
faces.

Vanessa: I don’t know, maybe it’s just not.

Maybe it’s just an unusual trait.

I’m grateful for that, especially as a teacher,
I can hopefully help to explain some different

concepts with my face as well.

But I feel like I also have parts of my dad.

My dad is a pretty rational guy.

Dan: You’re rational like your dad.

Vanessa: Yeah, but I think I also have his
sense of humor, sometimes a little strange

sense of humor, but we laugh at the same things,
we enjoy playing games, and being competitive,

so I think that that side of me, maybe some
of the character side of me, is similar to

him.

But I feel like I also have parts of my grandma.

My grandma is a go, go, go, go person.

Dan: Oh, that’s true.

Yeah.

Vanessa: She never stops, and I think my biggest
flaw is that I have difficulty slowing down

and relaxing, I just keep going and I think
that-

Dan: That’s why she’s with me.

Vanessa: … I need help relaxing.

Dan: I help her relax.

Vanessa: Yeah, so I think that my grandma’s
like this too, that she’s always going, and

always doing things, and it’s healthy to slow
down every now and then.

And so, I need to do that, she probably needs
to do that too sometimes.

But I don’t know if I learned that from her,
but maybe that’s just part of my-

Dan: I think it’s your personality.

Vanessa: … DNA, my character.

Dan: Yeah, I can remember even when I first
met Vanessa, she was more go, go, go than

she is now.

Vanessa: Oh, you think so?

Dan: Yeah.

More like so this thing, then the next, and
the enthusiasm was always, she was like bouncing

everywhere.

Vanessa: I always have a lot of enthusiasm,
that’s true.

Dan: Yes, it was off the charts.

Vanessa: Yeah, so I want to know for you,
who are you most like in your family?

Is it maybe your physical traits or for your
character?

All right, let’s go on to our second question.

The next topic is childhood.

I want to know when do you think childhood
ends, and when do you become an adult?

Dan: When does childhood end?

Vanessa: This is a deep question.

Dan: Well, I don’t think it can be a specific
age, I think it’s different for everyone.

I think it’s at any point you can leave this
house of your parents and live on your own,

take care of yourself, and you’re not dependent
on somebody else.

Like if you’re living with your friends and
bumming off them, you’re probably not an adult

yet.

So if I had to pick an age, I’d probably say
16.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: Yeah, I’m saying kind of young.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: In an ideal world, I think a 16 year
old should be ready.

Vanessa: Okay.

Okay.

I get it.

At 16 were you ready?

Dan: No, of course not.

Vanessa: Ideally.

Dan: Ideally, yeah.

I don’t think our society prepares us to be
ready at 16.

It prepares you to be ready at 18.

Vanessa: Or later.

Dan: Right, or later.

But you know, in an ideal world I think you
could be ready at 16, but it’s a kind of complicated

world now, so maybe 18 is an acceptable age.

Vanessa: I feel like, for me, I have less
ideas about childhood ending and adulthood

starting that are physical.

I feel like it has more to do with making
your own decisions.

There might be a lot of reasons why you have
to live at home, or you have to be dependent

on someone else, but if you are making your
own decisions you are not a child, you’re

an adult.

And I’m sure as our children get older and
become teenagers, that’s going to be a little

bit harder for us to make that line for someone
else, but I know for myself-

Dan: Well, this is-
Vanessa: … making more decisions.

Dan: … assuming you are capable as a person
to live on your own, of course.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah, I think you can still be an adult just
making your own decisions, but we still need

help from other people as adults, so there’s
a… it’s a gray area.

Dan: Sure.

Yeah.

I would-
Vanessa: Yeah, it’s not so clear.

Dan: … also add, I don’t know, for myself
personally, having children really makes you

an adult.

It doesn’t have to be true for everyone, but
I think it’s easier for some people to just

kind of be really selfish, and do their own
thing, and kind of live like a kid, especially

nowadays because we have so much entertainment,
you could just watch TV every day.

A lot of guys I know play video games a lot,
and I’m not knocking on video games but playing

video games every day is a good way to remain
a child, at heart anyways.

Vanessa: Sure.

Dan: This is my opinion, it’s a little judgemental,
but-

Vanessa: Yeah, I think if you are a good person,
and you have a child, then you feel forced

to be become an adult.

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: There’s still bad people who have
kids, who remain children themselves-

Dan: That’s true.

Vanessa: … and then they’re bad parents.

But I think if you’re generally a good person,
when you have kids, it’s kind of a shock.

Dan: Yeah, well-
Vanessa: Like, “Whoa, this child is so dependent

on me.

I need to be responsible.

I have to organize myself somehow.”

You have to change.

Dan: … I think being an adult, part of it
is having a burden of responsibility of some

kind, whether it’s a job, or your house payments,
or whatever it is.

Some people add those burdens of responsibility
anyways without children, but I don’t know,

for me, it’s just different.

Like, “This is the person I’m taking care
of in my life.”

People now-
Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: … because we’ve got two.

Vanessa: Well, two coming up soon.

So I have a question for you, when do you
think childhood ends?

When does adulthood start?

It’s going to be different for every culture,
too because this is a pretty cultural specific

question.

Maybe in the U.S.-
Dan: Yeah, maybe you have a-

Vanessa: … it’s different than your country.

Dan: … maybe you have a rite of passage
in your country.

Vanessa: Oh, can you explain what a rite of
passage is?

Because that’s kind of a nuanced thing.

Dan: Yeah, a rite of passage is something
that every boy or every girl does to become

an adult.

Vanessa: Oh, like some ceremony, or activity.

Dan: Yeah, like a ceremony.

Yeah, I mean, we don’t really have this in
the U.S., some people say college is a rite

of passage, but not…

I mean, more and more, almost everybody goes
to college now.

Vanessa: A lot of people do, but-
Dan: Yeah, so it kind of is, but it’s a really

bad one because usually people just go, and
they have parties, and they live really irresponsibly.

Vanessa: It’s not a way to become a responsible
adult.

Dan: Yeah, and then you do more school.

Vanessa: Ah, yes.

Dan: It’s not really becoming a man.

Vanessa: Changing your life completely.

Yeah.

So I’m curious, in your country is there something
that signifies, “Now you are an adult.”, this

kind of rite of passage ceremony, or festivity,
or party that you have.

In the U.S. we don’t really have that, but
I think it’s kind of a cool idea that you’re

celebrating-
Dan: I wish we did.

Vanessa: … this big change, going from childhood
to adulthood, and it is a gray area, at least

in the U.S. it’s a really gray area, so it’s
nice to celebrate that as parents, that your

kids are adults, hopefully.

And that as a child, “Oh, great, now I’m an
adult.

Society sees me as an adult.”

So I think it’s kind of a cool idea, but maybe
it’s something we can do with our future kids.

All right, let’s go onto the next topic.

The next topic is jobs.

I want to know what was your worst job ever.

Dan: Worst job ever?

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Well, I have two competing jobs.

Vanessa: Hopefully it’s not your current job,
making English lessons.

Dan: It’s video editing and doing these videos.

Vanessa: Oh, no.

Dan: I can’t stand working with my wife.

Just kidding.

It’s the best.

Yeah.

So yeah, really my worst job, if I had to
pick just one, it would be being a dishwasher.

Vanessa: Oh, okay.

Dan: Now notice, there’s no differentiation
between the machine, a dishwasher, and the

person who is a dishwasher, it’s the same
word.

Vanessa: So you were like the machine, you
were washing dishes.

Dan: Yeah.

I mean, you did have a machine, so you’d have
something on the side you’d slide the dishes

in and all that, but it’s just, I was also
like, I think I was 16 at the time, an adult

and I had no friends in the restaurant.

They were all older and they were all really
tough.

I don’t know, in America, when you… the
kitchens have a reputation for having really

kind of tough kitchen cooks, and they all…
they swear a lot, and they make foul jokes-

Vanessa: They’ve had a lot of life experiences.

Dan: … and I was just like a little Christian
16 year old kid, washing dishes in the corner,

trying to look like relatively normal.

But I didn’t talk to anybody-
Vanessa: And you were homeschooled.

Yeah, no experiences.

Dan: Yeah, well at that time I was in high
school.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah, yeah.

Dan: But it was a small, private school.

Anyway-
Vanessa: You were very different from the

other people.

Dan: … not only was that really awkward,
it was also bad because washing dishes just

kind of stinks.

You just get all the dishes, and some of the
guys used to make fun that I wasn’t going

fast enough.

One guy said, “Dan, you have two speeds, slow
and stop.”

Vanessa: You’re like a turtle?

Dan: Yeah, I’m like a turtle.

Vanessa: Well, sometimes I still say that.

Dan: I wasn’t fast enough, and another time
I reached into the mucky, dirty water and

I cut my finger on a broken glass and I was
bleeding in the water.

Vanessa: Oh.

Things you don’t want to know when you visit
a restaurant.

Dan: And I was paid under the table.

Vanessa: Oh, really?

Dan: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Vanessa: Why’d they have to pay you under
the table?

Dan: I don’t know, because it’s an Italian
restaurant-

Vanessa: Because you were too young?

Dan: … in rural Pennsylvania.

Vanessa: They didn’t want to pay taxes on
their employees or something?

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: Plus who wants to pay taxes on a dishwasher?

Vanessa: I wonder if it was because you were
16, like was there an age limit?

Dan: I might have even been 15 at the time.

Vanessa: Okay, maybe you were under the legal
age that they could hire someone-

Dan: Could be.

Vanessa: … so they just paid you under the
table.

Dan: Yeah, so that was pretty bad.

Vanessa: That sounds pretty bad.

Dan: Yeah, it was an awkward job.

Vanessa: Especially as a first job, it just
seems uncomfortable.

Dan: That was my second job.

Yeah.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Well-
Dan: How about you?

Vanessa: … I feel like-
Dan: Could it beat that?

Vanessa: Well, I feel like my worst job wasn’t
bad because of the social situation like yours,

it was bad because it was so boring.

I worked for a summer at this office, I was
like a temporary employee just for the summer,

working kind of like a call center job.

But every day they gave us these scripts and
we had to call companies who maybe this company

bought a printer within the last couple months.

Dan: I’m bored just listening about it.

Vanessa: Yeah, and I called the company and
said company and said, “Oh, I saw that you

recently bought the HP Inkjet printer, and
we have a upcoming training session on this

day.

Would you like to attend the training session
about this printer?”

Dan: She does have a really good call voice,
though.

Vanessa: And I called so many companies again
and again, talking with secretaries, talking

with other people, just saying, “Do you want
to go to this seminar about…” some electronic

device that they had recently bought.

Dan: If you called me, I’d be like, “Yeah,
I do.

Can I buy more?”

Vanessa: Well, people were generally nice
to me, it was just… it wasn’t a subject

that I was interested in, it wasn’t something
I was trained to do, so I didn’t feel like

it was my specialty, it was just a temporary
job to make money.

Dan: And you were sitting in an office all
day, right?

Vanessa: Yeah, it was my first office job.

Dan: Vanessa doesn’t like to sit very long.

Vanessa: No, I have to go, go, go, like we
talked about.

So sitting in that office desk, it was just
not my thing.

But the office, on the other hand, did really
try to make it interesting for the employees,

because they knew most of the people I worked
with were in a similar position as me, where

it wasn’t their life-long dream to work in
that job.

So about once a week, we had these game show
competitions-

Dan: That sounds fun.

Vanessa: … where at lunch, during the lunch
break, everyone would go to the lunchroom,

if you wanted to of course, and they had these
competitions kind of like Wheel of Fortune,

or Jeopardy, and the company just had them
for the employees.

Sometimes we had dress up days where we dressed
up like cowboys, or dressed up like… they

were trying to make it interesting.

Dan: Come on, this is better than being a
dishwasher.

Vanessa: It’s probably better than being a
dishwasher, but I just felt like they were

trying so hard to keep employees-
Dan: To make it interesting.

Vanessa: … to make it interesting-
Dan: All right.

Vanessa: … because they knew this is not
an interesting job.

Dan: Yeah, can I say my second worst job?

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

Sure.

Dan: Can you guess what it is?

Vanessa: I know you worked at a lot of coffee
shops, but those weren’t that bad.

Dan: Working at a coffee shop is good.

It’s fun.

Vanessa: Okay, well what was it?

Dan: It’s the sharpshooter.

Vanessa: Oh, can you explain about that job?

Dan: Yeah, so I don’t know if you’ve ever
seen this in your country, but have you ever

been to a place where somebody takes your
picture, and then later they try to sell you

that picture?

I was that guy.

So we took the same pictures, it was going
onto a boat on one of the rivers in Pittsburgh.

Vanessa: So it was kind of like a cruise boat,
but a river cruise.

Dan: Yeah, kind of.

It was very kitschy though, like not high
class at all.

So people, before they got on the boat, we
forced them to stop and go through the line,

and we’d take their picture.

And it was required, but people were like,
“I don’t want to get my picture taken.”

Vanessa: And everyone had their own cameras
and phones.

Dan: And this is…

Yeah.

Mind you, this is in like 2010, where people
already have phones on their cameras and stuff.

I mean, that’s at least getting more popular.

Vanessa: Yeah, they didn’t need your picture.

Dan: No.

So I had to take everybody’s picture, and
then when they got off the boat, I stood at

the side and said, “Hey, come over here, buy
this picture.”

And they were like $20 for one picture.

Vanessa: Crazy.

Dan: A terrible rip-off, even I knew it was
a terrible rip-off, just not a worthwhile

business, at least in 2010 when I was doing
that job.

Vanessa: Yeah, maybe 10 years before that
it would have been cool.

Dan: Yeah, it was a viable business like 30
years ago.

Vanessa: But not now.

Dan: Yeah, but not any more.

That was really bad, and one time somebody
stole one of my pictures and I actually got

fired from that job.

Vanessa: Because they stole a picture.

Dan: Because they stole a picture and I couldn’t…

I didn’t catch them on time, and I was like,
“Good riddance.”

Vanessa: Yeah, “Goodbye to this job.

Goodbye forever.”

Dan: Yeah.

The only reason this was better than the other
job, than dish washing, is because I worked

with some people who were funny and we got
along pretty well.

Vanessa: And you were outside, you were by
the river.

Dan: It was okay.

Vanessa: Except you did have to drive an hour
to get there, that’s crazy.

Dan: I did drive an hour to work.

Vanessa: You should never drive an hour to
get to a part-time job.

Dan: But that was my fault, I wanted to work
in Pittsburgh, and I still lived… did I

live with my parents?

Vanessa: Yeah, I think so.

Dan: I think I did.

I wasn’t an adult yet.

Vanessa: Oh.

Oh.

All right.

Well, I’m curious for you, what is the worst
job that you’ve ever had?

Let us know.

And let’s go to the next topic.

The next topic is travel.

I want to know what are three locations that
you would like to visit or revisit in the

U.S.?
Dan: In the U.S.?

Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: Why just the U.S.?
Vanessa: Well, the world’s a big place, so

I had to narrow down the question somehow.

Dan: Okay.

All right.

The first place I’d say is the Grand Canyon.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: Because of course you have to see the
Grand Canyon, right?

I’ve never been there.

I used to live in Colorado, but my family
never made a trip to the Grand Canyon, and

it just would be an amazing sight, I’m sure
of it.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah.

Dan: Second would be the Pacific Northwest,
just in general.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: Because I’ve heard it-
Vanessa: Not like Portland, Seattle, and specific?

Just-
Dan: I think I would like to go to Seattle

because it’s a big city and the city sounds
cool.

Not many cities in the U.S. are that interesting
to me because I’ve traveled in other places

in Europe and in Asia.

And those cities are so much more vibrant,
except for New York City, which is an awesome

city.

Vanessa: Yeah, I’m sure a lot of students-
Dan: Sorry, U.S.

Vanessa: … want to visit the U.S. and they
want to see these places.

Dan: But I’m also from America, so it’s like
not as-

Vanessa: It’s always less interesting, yeah.

Dan: Yeah, it’s less interesting to me.

But Seattle seems like a really cool town,
and it’s higher on my list than, say, Los

Angeles, which just kind of seems like a big,
sprawling, stinky place.

Vanessa: It seems like a lot more-
Dan: No offense, L.A.

Vanessa: It seems a lot more intimidating,
at least.

Dan: Okay, that’s a nice way to put it.

Vanessa: Like there’s a lot going on there,
but Seattle feels more comfortable.

Dan: Yeah, it seems pretty hip, too.

Vanessa: The Northwest.

Dan: Yeah, the Northwest also because there’s
big mountains there, and then there’s really

lush and green forests.

Vanessa: Oh.

Okay, cool.

Dan: And I love taking hikes, and if you go
at the right time of the year, because I’ve

heard it’s very rainy in the Pacific Northwest,
I’d like to go and take a nice hike up to

a big mountain-
Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: … and maybe hop over to Canada, go
to Vancouver, Vancouver Island.

Vanessa: That’d be cool.

Dan: All of that area sounds really, really
cool to me.

Vanessa: Yeah, I’d be up for that.

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: Let’s do it.

Dan: Let’s do it.

Vanessa: Tomorrow.

Dan: Okay.

Vanessa: Maybe not tomorrow-
Dan: Okay.

Vanessa: … but I think that’d be really
cool.

Dan: And third would be Colorado.

Vanessa: So revisit Colorado?

Dan: This is a revisit.

I used to live in Colorado.

I grew up there for five years of my life,
and it was when I was a kid, and I used to

really consider it my home.

But now I haven’t been back in probably 15
years, or so.

Vanessa: Oh, that’s a long time.

Dan: It’s been a really long time since I’ve
been back, and I’d like to go and maybe travel

to where I was when I was a kid.

It’s gotten so much bigger than it was when
I was a kid, so I’m sure there’s so many more

people there.

But also, there’s really great nature, there’s
a lot of really big mountains in Colorado,

there’s the Garden of the Gods, which has
really interesting rock formations.

As you can tell, we’re very nature driven,
we want to go see natural places.

Vanessa: Yeah, yeah.

Well, a lot of my places have to do with nature
too.

Dan: Yes, let’s hear them.

Vanessa: I almost said the Grand Canyon, but-
Dan: You knew I was going to say it.

Vanessa: … I kind of figured you’d say,
and I think it would be really cool to camp

in the Grand Canyon, or go for a long hike
in the Grand Canyon because you can’t just-

Dan: With two children?

Vanessa: Well, maybe when they’re older, or
maybe we’ll just leave them at home.

Dan: They can take it.

Vanessa: Because when you are just… when
you’re looking down at the Grand Canyon, that’s

incredible, but I imagine going down into
the Grand Canyon, that would also be just

another part of that-
Dan: Oh, yeah.

We’d have to-
Vanessa: … it would be so amazing.

Dan: … hike down in the Grand Canyon.

Vanessa: Yeah, that’d be really cool.

Dan: I should have mentioned that for sure.

Vanessa: Maybe with a donkey.

Dan: Because we’re big hikers, we like to
hike everywhere.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah.

Well, one of my places is kind of the opposite
of yours.

It’s not a big city, but you said the Pacific
Northwest, and I said the Northeast.

I’ve never been to Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont,
this area.

And I feel like one of the best road trips
would be driving all the way up the East Coast

of the U.S., and going around Maine, and coming
down through Vermont.

I think all of that geography is just really
different than everywhere else I’ve visited

in the U.S. I’ve heard the coasts, like the
Northeast coasts are really rocky, and lots

of just kind of rugged coastline, that I think
would be really cool to see.

And the forests, I’ve heard the forests in
Vermont are amazing, just a different type

of feel.

We live in the mountains here in North Carolina,
which is also a great place to visit-

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: … but we already are here.

Dan: We live here.

Vanessa: But I feel like the mountains, and
the forests, and the coast, and other places

are pretty various.

Dan: Yeah, it’s also close to Canada.

Vanessa: Yeah, that’d be cool.

Dan: Got to hop over to Quebec-
Vanessa: Yeah, maybe do that.

Dan: … because that sounds like a really
cool place.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Vanessa speaks French, so-
Vanessa: That’d be cool.

Dan: … she’d like to speak some French to
some Quebecois.

Vanessa: That would be fun.

Well, one of my others was kind of similar
to what you were saying with Colorado and

that area, is going to Yosemite National Park.

I feel like it’s just a classic place to visit
in the U.S. because there’s so many national

parks on the West Coast, it’s kind of hard
to choose.

So I feel like-
Dan: Yeah, well that one’s a must, I think.

Vanessa: Yeah, it’s kind of one of the top
three.

Dan: Although I’ve heard it’s gotten crazy
popular.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

Dan: You have to be on lists to get in.

Vanessa: Whoa, really?

Dan: Maybe it’s to just camp, I don’t know.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

Dan: Your dad went through a lot of stuff,
didn’t he?

Vanessa: Yeah, when they camped, they had
to…

I think the camping spots were opened, say
like May 3rd, the camping spots were opened

and you had to go online to sign up, and the
website opened… or the camping registration

opened at 6:00 AM, he booked at like 6:05
and there were two spots yet.

Everyone was cramming to camp in that spot.

Dan: Camping season.

Vanessa: So yeah, I guess it’s really popular.

And that was for the whole year, that wasn’t
just for that day.

That was to book a spot to camp for that whole
year.

Anyway, that’s crazy.

So maybe we’ll do that.

Maybe we need to book it five years in advance,
but I think it’d be cool to visit national

parks in the west because most tourism, well
there’s a lot of city tourism in the U.S.,

but I feel like a lot of tourism is natural
tourism.

Dan: Yeah, the meat of our tourism is nature.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah, because I feel like the U.S. is such
a young country that we don’t have Rome, we

don’t have these old cities, and this kind
of stuff you can visit in cities, it’s more

nature, which is also old.

Dan: Except New York City.

Vanessa: Yeah, except New York’s got a lot
of cool stuff.

Dan: As you can tell, I’m a big fan of New
York.

It’s just-
Vanessa: It’s a cool place to visit.

Dan: … it’s a wild animal.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: There’s some quote about New York City,
it’s like, “You’d be crazy to live here, you’d

be crazy to leave.”

Which is perfect.

Vanessa: Oh, well I heard another quote that
said, “New York is twice as fun, but it’s

three times as expensive.”

So it’s really fun, but it’s even more expensive.

Dan: That’s also true.

Vanessa: Especially if you live there.

Well, my third and final place is, can you
guess?

Dan: I don’t remember.

Vanessa: Hawaii.

Dan: Oh, I read your list before, but I don’t
remember.

Vanessa: Well, I feel like Hawaii, it’s in
the U.S., but it’s not.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: It’s so far away, but it’s still
part of the U.S. and it would be incredible

to visit Hawaii.

Dan: It’s kind of like cheating, it’s like,
“I’m in the U.S.”

Vanessa: And it’s so far away from the U.S.
Dan: But it’s like, “This isn’t America, come

on.”

Vanessa: Yeah, it would be really cool.

I’m curious, if you’ve ever been to Hawaii
if you’d recommend it.

I know your parents are planning on going
there next May.

Dan: Yeah, and get this, my mom was like,
“And I booked these extra rooms just in case

somebody wanted to join.”

She winked at us.

Vanessa: We will have a two month old baby
when they go.

Maybe we’ll go to Hawaii, I don’t know.

It’s a little soon, I think.

Dan: I’m saying, “Yes-
Vanessa: We’ll let you know.

Dan: … let’s go.”

You’ll find out.

Vanessa: I think it’d be really cool to go
to Hawaii, just to see volcanoes, and hiking,

and moving around, and scuba diving, and it’s
so different.

Dan: That would be the problem.

Trying to do all we want to do.

But if my parents are there, they can watch
the kids.

Vanessa: They can watch our kids, so we’re
going to crash their vacation and make them

watch our kids-
Dan: Yes.

Yes.

Vanessa: … while we go have fun?

Dan: Vacation crashers.

Vanessa: Sounds great, so I’m curious for
you, what are some locations that you’d like

to visit in the U.S.? Or maybe somewhere that
you’ve already been that you’d like to go

back to.

Let us know.

Let’s go on to the next topic.

The next topic is food.

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: I want to know, what are some of
your favorite foods, specifically to cook

at home?

Dan: To cook at home?

Well-
Vanessa: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Not to eat, not that someone else makes, but
that we cook at home.

Dan: Yes, usually I go for bulk items.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: Not bulk items, bulk meals.

Something that I can get for days, and days,
and days.

Vanessa: Or you could put it in the freezer
and have the next week.

Dan: This is a very, I think, a male way to
think about it.

You’ve got to make a bulk and make it last.

Vanessa: Ah, utilitarian cooking.

Dan: Yes.

Although, you’re kind of similar, I think.

Vanessa: I don’t like making a new meal every
single day.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: If we have a soup that’s in the freezer
that we made the week before, that’s great,

save some time.

Dan: Sure, yeah.

The first thing I like to make, I think we
have the same one-

Vanessa: Oh, yeah?

Dan: … is chili.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

Dan: Yeah, we both like to make chili.

Vanessa: Yeah, some people call this chili
con carne in other countries, but in the U.S.

we just say, “Chili.”

Dan: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Usually I make the chili, so I mean, it’s
so easy to make, you just ground up some beef,

then you chop a bunch of vegetables, add a
ton of spices, throw it in a pot and make

it boil, and it’s done.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah, it’s great.

And it gets even better as it kind of melds
those flavors together over a couple days.

Dan: Yeah.

And you throw in some cheese, and sour cream,
and some kind of grain, some rice or something.

And yeah, it’s always very satisfying, it
reminds me of fall and winter.

It’s a very nice, cozy meal.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Hot tip, don’t leave it on your counter for
three days and then try to eat it.

It should always go in the fridge after you
eat it.

Dan: Who did that?

Vanessa: Dan did that in college-
Dan: Oh.

Vanessa: … and got sick.

Dan: I didn’t leave it on the counter, my
roommate left the chili out.

Vanessa: Oh, and you just ate it?

Dan: Yeah, he left the pot out.

It was already like, this is college life
here, it was already probably a week old and

he left it on the counter all day, and he
didn’t tell me-

Vanessa: Not a good idea.

Dan: … and then I went and ate it that night,
and then I got really sick.

Vanessa: But you still like chili, so it didn’t-
Dan: But I still like chili.

Vanessa: … taint your idea of chili.

Dan: It probably did for like a year.

Vanessa: Really?

Dan: Yeah.

Yeah.

Vanessa: I feel like we’re especially thinking-
Dan: TMI?

Vanessa: … thinking about those types of
foods because it’s getting colder here, so

making lots of warm, hearty foods, as opposed
to in July-

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: … we don’t make chili because it’s
so hot.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: You make other kinds of fresh things.

Dan: I have trouble making summer food, because
I like hot food.

Vanessa: Ah, like soups and that kind of stuff.

Dan: Although, when we lived in South Korea,
I think, didn’t they have something where

they eat something super hot in the summer?

Vanessa: I think hot or spicy, is that-
Dan: And it’s like I’m just eating, and you’re

sweating, and the water’s pouring off your
face.

And, “Yeah, this is healthy.”

It’s a very Korean thing.

They’ve got to be diligent.

Vanessa: Wow.

Well, what are some of your other favorite
foods?

You said chili.

We’re on the first one.

Dan: Number two would be tacos.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: I got a Mexican food thing, I think,
although I don’t consider chili a Mexican

food, but you said chili con carne, so-
Vanessa: Maybe.

Yeah.

Dan: … I don’t know.

Maybe it’s Mexican inspired.

Vanessa: Yeah.

What kind of tacos do you like to make, because
there’s so many different types-

Dan: Ground beef, again, just all the spices,
and it’s kind of one of those easy things

to make, and then you can pile all kinds of
toppings, you can put salsa on it.

Yeah, it’s just delicious.

Vanessa: I like when you make fish tacos.

Dan: Yeah, fish tacos are good too.

Vanessa: Sometimes when Dan makes fish tacos,
or sometimes I make them too, we get some

kind of white fish like cod or tilapia, and
bread it, and then bake it so it’s baked,

and then you have some kind of cabbage slaw
mixed up on top with some spices in it, and

you put that on the tortilla with the fish,
with the kind of spicy cabbage, maybe slices

of avocado.

Dan: Yeah, and the mayo.

Vanessa: Yeah, some mayo, maybe some-
Dan: Spicy mayo.

Vanessa: … pico de gallo, some salsa on
top, that’s also great.

We make that a lot in the summer, because
that is kind of a fresh type of thing.

Dan: Yeah, well speaking of fish-
Vanessa: Yes?

Dan: … my third would be salmon.

Vanessa: Oh, how do you like to make salmon?

Dan: Well, I think you can make it in a lot
of different ways, but just throw it in the

oven with some… like lately we’ve been adding
lemon slices and dill, and just keeping it

basic.

Vanessa: Sometimes we put-
Dan: Oh, and butter.

Vanessa: Oh, butter.

Of course, butter.

Dan: That’s important.

Vanessa: Sometimes we do it in the opposite
way with soy sauce, and sesame oil, kind of

more-
Dan: You do it that way.

Vanessa: … Asian style.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: And that’s also great with rice,
or some kind of veggie.

Dan: I do it more European style.

Vanessa: Yeah, well I think you can’t go wrong
with salmon.

Dan: Yeah, but it’s just a very healthy meal
that tastes very filling, and fulfilling.

Vanessa: Yeah, I think your answers have been
much more varied than mine.

Dan: Oh, yeah?

Vanessa: Because I was going to say soup,
soup, and soup.

Dan: Oh.

Vanessa: I think that, especially now because
it’s the begging of the winter, those are

the types of things that we like to eat.

But recently, I’ve been making a lot of butternut
squash soup, and it’s a type of squash, and

you just peel it, and then you chop it up,
and you steam it with some cumin, and paprika,

and coconut milk, and red peppers-
Dan: It’s a nice appetizer.

Vanessa: … and you can also maybe dip some
bread in it’s mixed together, because you

have to blend it.

It’s really great.

It feels kind of cleansing, especially if
you’ve eaten-

Dan: It’s not filling enough to me.

Vanessa: It’s nice to have with something
else sometimes.

Dan: I need some meat in my life.

Vanessa: Typical answer, right?

I think we also made a really great, it’s
called Italian vegetable soup, but I don’t

know if it’s actually Italian, I don’t know
why it’s considered Italian.

Dan: It’s probably Italian American.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Everything American’s say is Italian,
I bet you every Italian out there is like,

“That is not Italian.”

Vanessa: Yeah, that-
Dan: “What is this?”

Vanessa: That is not-
Dan: Is that Italian?

Vanessa: … an Italian accent, but that’s
okay.

Dan: Zut alors.

Vanessa: That is-
Dan: Oh, that’s French.

Vanessa: Yeah, certainly not Italian.

Though when we make the Italian vegetable
soup, it’s basically every vegetable you can

imagine mixed in a pot, even with some tomatoes,
and cabbage, and everything, peppers, and

everything mixed together, and some ground
beef.

So it kind of has a hearty, beefy flavor,
but it also has a lot of vegetables so it

feels healthy and filling with some nice bread
to dip it in.

Dan: It was very good.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Although, I will say that you can probably
tell from this conversation that we are not

chefs.

Vanessa: No.

Dan: We don’t prepare like really good meals
very often.

Vanessa: Or something that’s fancy.

Dan: They’re delicious, but they’re not…
they don’t have, you know, what’s a sous vide,

or something.

Vanessa: Oh, something that’s really exciting.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: Well-
Dan: Although I did make risotto, that was

really good.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

You’ve made risotto a lot.

Dan: I made some really good risotto, and
I felt like it took a lot of work, and that

was fun.

Vanessa: I think it took some particular attention
to detail and I won’t do that.

Dan: You know, you use lemon zest, any time
you use lemon zest, I feel like you’re probably

crossing over to chef territory.

Vanessa: Oh, okay.

Well, you have crossed over into chef territory
a few times.

I remain clearly on the other side, just happily
eating whatever you make.

But I’m curious for you, what are some of
your favorite foods to eat at home?

What are some of your favorite foods to make
at home?

Maybe it’s something that comes from your
country, or maybe it’s just something that

you like to make, like toast, something simple.

Let us know.

Dan: Toast.

Vanessa: Yes.

All right, let’s go to the next topic.

The next topic is housing.

I want you to dream big, if you could have
your dream home, what three features would

it have?

Let’s say this is a dream home, this is idealistic,
this is not realistic.

Dan: This is probably not going to happen
to us.

Vanessa: No, but it’s just a dream.

Everyone can dream, right?

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: What would you ideally love to have?

Dan: A palace.

A castle.

Vanessa: Hopefully you can hire some people
to clean it at that point.

Dan: Okay, not really.

So the features of the home?

Vanessa: Yes, what three features would you
love to have if you could dream and build

your own home?

Dan: Okay.

Well, first, I would want the living room,
and I don’t know is a living common in other

countries?

Vanessa: Yeah, a place where you have a couch,
and maybe a TV.

Dan: This is where you gather together, where
you have the couch, and where you visit with

friends.

I would like this room to be humongous, and
have a really large window.

Vanessa: Are we talking soccer field size
humongous, or are we talking like twice as

big as a normal one?

Dan: I’m talking football stadium big.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: No, not really.

Just large.

Large ceilings, vaulted ceilings as they say
in the industry.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: And a very large window.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: Or large windows.

Vanessa: I said the same thing.

I would like a main room with a big window.

Dan: Yes, but there’s more.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: And it needs a great view, an incredible
view.

Vanessa: Oh, what’s a good view for you?

What would be an ideal view?

Dan: I really love looking out at the ocean,
that would be great.

I’m not a big fan of where I live on the East
Coast of America, the beaches are all kind

of the same to me.

They’re not my favorite.

This would be in the Mediterranean, on a big
cliff.

Vanessa: Oh, so it wouldn’t be-
Dan: Yeah, a cliff side home.

Vanessa: … in the U.S., okay.

Dan: Yeah, it wouldn’t be in the U.S., sorry
U.S.

Well, maybe somewhere in the U.S. I don’t
know.

Vanessa: Could be Pacific Northwest, you’ve
never been there.

You don’t know.

Dan: It may be the Pacific Northwest, maybe
that’s my kind of ocean view.

Vanessa: Yeah, so you’d like an ocean view?

Dan: It’d be really high.

Looking down on my kingdom.

Vanessa: So you’d need to be a king too?

Dan: I have to be a king in this scenario.

Vanessa: This is getting a little excessive.

Dan: So yeah, a really big, open ocean view.

Remember, this is dreaming.

Vanessa: This is dreaming.

All right, keep dreaming.

What else would you like?

Dan: All right, so it’s very open, so close
by would be a very epic, open kitchen.

Vanessa: Oh, so open you mean it’s connected
to the living space?

Dan: Yeah, this is popular, I think, nowadays
in architecture.

Vanessa: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Dan: Yeah, so open to the living room.

Vanessa: So as you’re cooking-
Dan: At least-

Vanessa: … you can still talk to your guests.

Dan: Yeah, at least part of the kitchen would
be visible.

Vanessa: Yeah, so at the moment, our kitchen
is open to the living room.

Dan: Yes, we have this now.

Vanessa: We don’t have an epic, giant-
Dan: Except for the view.

Vanessa: … living room with a view of the
Mediterranean.

Dan: And the big kitchen.

Vanessa: Yes, but we have an open space, so
it’s kind of like one room.

Our kitchen is connected to our living space,
so when our guests, or our friends, or our

family, or our kids are in the living space,
the living room, we can see them and still

kind of interact.

So this type of layout is pretty popular,
at least in newer houses, or as people remodel

their houses, they’re kind of looking for
this open layout, is what it’s called.

Dan: Yeah, it’s called an open floor plan.

Vanessa: Open floor plan, that’s the word.

Yeah.

So anything else you would like in this amazing
house?

Dan: Yes, there’s one more thing in my palace.

Vanessa: Okay, in your kingdom.

Dan: In my kingdom.

So there would be a game room, because I love
games a lot.

Vanessa: Okay, what kind of games?

Dan: All kinds of games.

So we actually rented a place like this that
was very similar.

Vanessa: Oh, like your grandparents rented
that beach house.

Dan: Actually my grandma rented it.

It was a beach house, so it was like four
layers of house.

Vanessa: That’s crazy.

Dan: It was humongous.

It was called The Ritz-
Vanessa: Of course.

Dan: … which is like a fancy thing.

So the very top floor of this building was
just this giant game room.

They had a pool table, they had a-
Vanessa: A ping-pong.

Dan: Oh, that was… the ping-pong table was
somewhere else.

But in palace, the ping-pong table would be
in the same room.

Vanessa: So ping-pong, foosball, pool.

Dan: Other games too, chess, yeah.

Vanessa: Oh, board game cabinets.

Dan: There would be all kinds of games.

There’d be a TV with video games, it’d just
be fun everywhere.

Vanessa: Okay, so you want a whole big room?

Dan: And then I’d have to lock it up so I
didn’t go in, because I’d spend all my time

in there.

Vanessa: Okay, so you’d have to request the
key from one of the people?

Dan: You.

Vanessa: From me?

Okay.

Dan: “Gate keeper, let me in the game room.”

Vanessa: I’m sorry to say, but in my dream
home-

Dan: There’s no game room?

Vanessa: … there is not a game room, although
it’s a fun idea.

It’s a good idea.

Dan: Save that for the vacation home?

Vanessa: Yeah, that’s good if your grandparents
rent a house for a week and invite all the

family.

Dan: Yes, it was perfect for that.

Vanessa: That’s a good thing to have, but
maybe not in my forever house.

Dan: Okay, what’s your forever dream home
look like?

Vanessa: Well, I did say I’d like a main room
with a big window.

I think that would be really great.

So we have some-
Dan: But what’s your ideal view?

Vanessa: I didn’t really say.

I feel like it doesn’t have to be the beach,
maybe not someone else’s house right there,

but it could be the mountains, that would
be nice.

Dan: Sure.

Vanessa: But I also like-
Dan: Any kind of picturesque view.

Vanessa: … I don’t like to be isolated,
so if you have a beautiful mountain view,

that means you probably live in the middle
of the mountains away from everybody.

Dan: It’s true.

Vanessa: So I don’t mind if the view’s not
perfect, but I’d just like to have a big window

with lots of light, that’d be really great.

The other thing that I said is a little more
practical, and that is a huge studio room

with different walls that I can film on.

Dan: Very practical for the Fearless Fluency
Club.

Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: Oh, wait, and for YouTube.

Vanessa: Yes.

So for, of course, the fearless fluency club,
and also for YouTube, having different locations

where I can easily film.

And the room where we often film videos, in
here, it’s okay.

It’s not super small, but I have an image
of-

Dan: It’s pretty small.

Vanessa: … four different walls with different
backgrounds and different things that I can

move lights and easily have different locations
to film, I think that would be really cool.

So I’m starting out small, we have this room,
and then maybe someday in my dream home.

Dan: Yeah, this is way better than our other
house.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah, where we used to live in
the apartment.

Dan: She used to film in a closet.

Vanessa: It wasn’t a closet, but it was really
small.

Dan: Two closets combined.

Vanessa: Yeah, it was like a little triangle
room.

Dan: It was very small.

Vanessa: But-
Dan: Hey, we made it work.

Vanessa: Yeah, it worked.

We made it work.

And the other feature that I would like is,
in a dream home, is a roof deck.

Dan: That’s cool.

Vanessa: Yeah, so some stairs, and then a
little roof-

Dan: This is the adventurer in Vanessa speaking.

Vanessa: … on the top so you can look down
everywhere.

Dan: But that’s in my house, too.

Vanessa: Oh, it’s in your house?

Oh, good.

Maybe we can have a house together.

And also at night you could lay up there and
see the stars.

I think that would be really cool-
Dan: Yeah, that would be neat.

Vanessa: … so you could have a perfect place
to stargaze.

Dan: I don’t know why more houses don’t have
this.

Vanessa: Yeah, we should put a deck on top
of our house.

Dan: Yeah, why not?

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Maybe some architect out there has a
reason.

“Well, actually it’s bad for structural integrity.”

Vanessa: I think that people just don’t value
stargazing like we do.

Dan: Maybe.

Vanessa: It’s really cool to see the stars
at night, and especially if you’re… if you

just have a perfect view from a rooftop deck.

Dan: You’re perched in a high place.

Vanessa: Yeah, that’d be really cool.

Well, it was nice to dream.

Thanks for dreaming with me.

Dan: Yeah.

Oh, dream’s over.

Vanessa: Yeah.

I’m curious for you, if you could have your
dream home, what features would you like in

that home?

All right, let’s go to the next topic.

The next topic is nature.

Dan: Nature.

Vanessa: I want to know what are two cool
facts about animals or nature?

Dan: You want to know two facts?

Vanessa: Yeah, so we did a little bit of research
before this, because we love watching animal

documentaries.

Dan: Okay, well I have a story behind my first
factoid.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: One time I was talking to my mom, I don’t
remember how this came up, but we were talking

about turtles.

And I don’t know why we were talking about
turtles, but she said, “Did you know that

turtles breathe through their butts?”

My mom said this.

And we, for days, we were like, “Mom, turtles…
where did you hear that?

That is so-
Vanessa: Were you a kid?

Dan: That was like, no, I was older.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: Probably a teenager, I guess.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: But we, me and my siblings, we all just
made fun of her.

We were like, “Mom, you just made that up.

Where on Earth did you hear that?”

But really, it’s actually true.

A turtle can breathe through its butt.

Vanessa: What?

Dan: It’s true.

Vanessa: Wait, why do they do this?

Dan: Okay, so it’s when they’re hibernating.

I looked it up to verify because I remember
hearing that that actually was true.

So in the winter, it gets really cold, obviously,
and they live under water.

So it’s like really cold, it’s almost freezing,
and they can’t use their lungs.

So they basically suck water up their butts,
and the water gives them oxygen, therefore-

Vanessa: Oh, why?

Dan: … they breathe through their butts
in the winter when they’re hibernating.

Vanessa: Wow, and your mom was right.

Dan: So my mom was right, but we just… we
did not believe her when she said that.

Vanessa: I mean, it’s really bizarre, so why
would you believe her?

Dan: Yeah.

Also, it was very random of her.

She was like, “Don’t turtles breathe through
their butts?”

Vanessa: And we were like, “Mom, you just
made that up.

There’s no way.”

Dan: But it’s true.

Vanessa: But it’s true.

Dan: So this is turtles who specifically live
in the water?

Not box turtles, or those types of things.

Vanessa: No.

Yeah, turtles but not ocean turtles either.

Dan: Okay, so just ones that live in fresh
water-

Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: … and live in the water?

Vanessa: Oh, okay.

Dan: This is a very… yeah, tell your friends.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: Turtles breathe through their butts.

Vanessa: Before you get to your second fact,
I’m going to share one of mine-

Dan: Okay.

Vanessa: … which is amazing about butterflies
and caterpillars.

We recently-
Dan: We’re like a nature documentary now.

Vanessa: Well, I included this because-
Dan: Should we talk like David Attenborough?

Vanessa: I feel really nerdy about animals.

Dan: “The beautiful butterflies.”

Vanessa: Yeah, if you’ve ever seen nature
documentaries by BBC, David Attenborough is

one of the main commentators.

He’s been a staple of nature documentaries
for over a decade, two decades, three decades

maybe, the ’70s.

So we are big fans of him and his work, but
I included this topic because we’re nerdy

about animals and nature, and like that stuff,
and I thought it would be fun to talk about.

Dan: Sure.

Vanessa: Well, a couple months ago, we found
four monarch butterfly caterpillars in our

backyard.

And they didn’t look so good, they looked
like they needed a little bit of help, so

we gave them some milkweed leaves, which is
what monarch butterflies eat, or monarch caterpillars

eat, and we put them in this… we have a
butterfly net, it’s like a little container

where you can grow butterflies.

Dan: Grow and release.

Vanessa: Yes.

And so we put the caterpillars in there, gave
them a lot of leaves, and they turned into

cocoons.

Then two of them died, but two of them became
butterflies, it was really amazing, so that

kind of sparked my interest in learning more
about that.

We kind of all know caterpillars become butterflies,
but did you know that a caterpillar, when

it creates a cocoon, it will liquefy it’s
body.

It’s like a soup inside the cocoon, and it
is digesting, it’s eating itself inside the

cocoon, and its DNA just kind of mixes around
and becomes a butterfly.

Dan: Yeah, so it’s not like wrapping a blanket
around itself.

Vanessa: No.

Dan: Because-
Vanessa: It’s crazy.

Dan: … usually when I thought of a cocoon,
you would think that the caterpillar spins

something around itself, but no, it’s literally
liquefying its body on the inside, and then

turning into, I believe the technical term
is a pupa.

Vanessa: A pupa.

Yeah, so inside when it actually makes that
cocoon, so we saw this happen, where the cocoon

pops out of the caterpillars body, and the
skin and the head pop off, and they fall onto

the ground because-
Dan: It’s kind of like a Halloween story.

Vanessa: It is.

It’s pretty horrific, if you think about it.

Dan: It was almost Halloween.

Vanessa: And inside the cocoon is the liquefied
soup of the butterfly.

Dan: And it’s body liquefied and it turned
into a terrible creature.

Vanessa: How did nature-
Dan: A butterfly.

Vanessa: … think that this would work?

But it does, it’s amazing.

Wow.

So, that’s my first cool fact about nature.

Dan: Cool nature factoid.

Vanessa: Yes.

Caterpillar soup.

Dan: All right.

My second is about the noble albatross.

Vanessa: Albatross are so cool.

Dan: Although if you say something is an albatross,
that kind of means it’s a bad thing, or like

a burden.

It’s like a saying.

Vanessa: Ah, that’s kind of like an old fashioned
expression.

But-
Dan: Yeah.

But anyways, my factoid is-
Vanessa: … it is a bird.

Dan: … an albatross has the longest wingspan
of any bird.

Did you know that?

Almost 12 feet long, or 3.2 meters.

Vanessa: Three meters?

Dan: Something like that.

Vanessa: Three meters is so long, so that
means from the tip of one wing to the tip

of the other wing is three meters, 12 feet.

Dan: Yeah, it’s a really huge bird.

Vanessa: One bird.

Dan: And actually, if you’ve watched any David
Attenborough documentaries-

Vanessa: Or others.

Dan: … we watched one with the albatross,
it needs to take a really long run before

it flies, because its wings are so huge-
Vanessa: Like a huge airplane, it needs a

lot of runway to get off.

Dan: But there’s a lot of other animals.

What was it in the documentary that was trying
to get them?

Vanessa: It was the babies.

Dan: Oh, sharks.

Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: Because they would crash in the water
and the sharks would eat them.

Vanessa: When the babies were first learning
how to fly, a lot of them crash in the water,

and I think they do it the same time every
year, so sharks gather there-

Dan: They wait for the babies.

Vanessa: … and as the babies are learning
to fly, if they fail on their first try, that’s

it.

Dan: Yeah, they can’t make it.

Vanessa: Anyway, that was a really sad part
of the documentary.

Dan: But once they actually get in the air,
an albatross can stay in the air for up to

10,000 miles, which is a lot of kilometers.

Vanessa: 6,000, 7,000 kilometers?

Dan: Yeah, I’m not so good with those conversions
that everybody else uses.

Vanessa: Yeah, and I remember you also told
me that they could fly for-

Dan: A day.

Vanessa: … a whole day with just one [inaudible
00:47:30].

Dan: Just one flap of their wings.

Vanessa: If they have the right wind, because
they go off into the ocean.

Dan: Yeah, it requires good wind.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Because they just use the wind to bounce
up and down.

Vanessa: So they only need to flap their wings
one time per day, if there is good wind.

Dan: It’d be a very lonely existence, just
flying over the ocean.

Vanessa: But talking about lonely, they also
mate for life.

Dan: That’s lonely?

Vanessa: Well, no, that’s crazy because they…

most birds are not like that, so they go off
alone into the ocean to hunt, and then once

a year they come back to the same place and
they hope that their husband or wife, their

mate, has survived also.

Dan: And then they promptly cheat on them.

Vanessa: Well, they are not monogamous.

Dan: They have partners that they regularly
come back to, but then they also go and flirt

with other birds.

Vanessa: Other birds as well, but they have
the same main partner for their whole lives,

and they only see them once a year, but they
find each other at that same… on the same

rock, on the same land, every… albatross
are really cool.

Dan: [crosstalk 00:48:34] kisses.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah, you should look up some videos about
albatross, they’re really cool.

Well, one of my other cool facts-
Dan: What’s your last factoid?

Vanessa: … my last cool fact is about a
mantis shrimp.

Dan: The mantis shrimp.

Vanessa: We think about shrimp as the thing
that we eat, but the mantis shrimp is really

different.

I’ll show you a picture here.

The mantis shrimp is an insane animal.

It has the best visual senses of any animal,
including humans.

I looked this up to make sure I could explain
it correctly.

Humans have three photoreceptors in our eyes.

How many do you think the mantis shrimp have?

Dan: 10.

Vanessa: 12 to 16.

So this means they can see infrared, they
can see ultraviolet, they can see every possible

thing that’s coming through the light spectrum.

It is crazy.

Dan: Basically thank god it’s not huge and
lives on land, because it would kill us.

Vanessa: Yes, this and it can also punch through,
it has the-

Dan: Look how it’s hand’s like this.

Vanessa: Yes, they’re like this.

It can punch through bulletproof glass that
is 1 centimeter thick.

So it’s almost impossible to keep a mantis
shrimp in an aquarium because-

Dan: Because it will break the glass.

Vanessa: … they’re so strong… it’s just
a shrimp, they’re small, but it can punch

through bullet proof glass, and most aquariums
don’t have bullet proof glass, it’s less than

that.

Dan: Why not?

Vanessa: But it will punch through the glass
and get out, so they can see everything, and

they also can punch through the glass, which
is absolutely insane.

There’s a lot of really cool videos-
Dan: And they look cool too.

Vanessa: Yeah, colors, and their big eyes.

Dan: Yeah, beautiful.

You should share the comic about it too.

There’s a popular comic in America called
The Oatmeal.

Vanessa: It’s a website.

Dan: Yeah, it’s a website.

And they have a whole story about the mantis
shrimp.

Vanessa: Yeah, there’s a good YouTube video
too, about the mantis shrimp.

Dan: About it?

Oh.

Vanessa: I think it’s… who’s that guy who
does kind of funny stuff about animals who’s

like, “That’s how the mantis shrimp do.”

Dan: Oh, zefrank.

Vanessa: Zefrank, yes.

Dan: Look up zefrank for a good laugh.

Vanessa: Just look up mantis shrimp on YouTube,
you’ll find many great things because those

animals are cool.

All right, we had a chance to be nerdy, let’s
go on to the next topic, and I want to know

for you, do you know any cool animal facts?

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: All right, let’s go to the next topic.

The next topic is holidays.

And it is the end of November-ish, which is
Thanksgiving time in the U.S., so I want to

know, in your experience, what is Thanksgiving
like in the U.S.?

Dan: In the U.S., well it’s pretty much just
an American holiday, right?

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Or Canadian, I suppose.

Vanessa: Canada also has Thanksgiving.

Dan: So for Thanksgiving, the primary thing
that we do is eat food.

Vanessa: Okay, next topic.

Dan: The end.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah, it’s pretty much all about
food.

Dan: It’s really all about the food, especially
turkey.

Vanessa: So tell us about food on Thanksgiving.

Dan: Pretty much everybody gets a turkey.

Vanessa: A big, full turkey.

Dan: Yeah, there must be this huge spike in
turkey sales in November in the U.S.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

Dan: But everybody gets a turkey, you cook
the whole turkey, and you get gravy, and you

pour it on there, and there’s something called
stuffing as well, which is this bread pudding

kind of thing, I guess.

Vanessa: Yeah, well, you have it inside the
turkey, usually you cook some seasonings,

and lemons, and breads, and all different
types of things inside the turkey.

Dan: Some may argue that the stuffing is better
than the turkey.

Vanessa: Yeah, sometimes it is.

Dan: I’m one of those people-
Vanessa: Stuff is great.

Dan: … I just eat the stuffing.

Vanessa: It’s really full of turkey juices,
so it’s kind of like a breaded mixture, I’ll

try to share a picture, but stuffing, turkey.

Dan: So the holiday is really just centered
around the meal, and then you invite lots

of family over.

Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: And usually one family member will host
a lot of family, I find.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: And sometimes friends as well, but like
your dad has been doing friends for the last

few years.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: But traditionally, it’s only family.

Vanessa: Yeah, I think this is definitely
more a family holiday, that you say goodbye

to your friends, go back home wherever you
came from, if you live far away from your

parents, maybe you’ll go back home and have
Thanksgiving at their home, or maybe they’ll

come visit you.

It’s kind of a time for families to come back
together during Thanksgiving.

Dan: Yeah.

And if you are a very bonded family, then
you always say what you’re thankful for.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: So every year my family would always
say something they’re thankful for around

the table.

And usually when I was a kid I remember being
like-

Vanessa: “I don’t want to do this.”

Dan: “I don’t want…” but now I’m like, “I’m
thankful for everybody and everything in my

family.

It’s so beautiful.”

Get a little more sentimental when you get
older.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Well, back to the food, we’re kind of talking
about the traditions now, but back to the

food, the typical things are a big turkey
bird, a full bird, you don’t have just slices

of turkey, you have the full bird and then
you cut it up.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: And then stuffing, green beans is
common with gravy, mashed potatoes, sweet

potatoes, in the south of the U.S., sweet
potato casserole is really big.

This is insane-
Dan: With brown sugar on it.

Vanessa: … it’s insanely sweet because it’s
sweet potatoes, which are orange and already

pretty sweet naturally, then brown sugar,
and then-

Dan: Marshmallows, right?

Vanessa: … marshmallows, for dinner.

Dan: Oh, I forgot about that.

Vanessa: Crazy, but-
Dan: I always eat like this much of that because

it’s too sweet.

Vanessa: It’s really rich, but that’s kind
of a southern thing, and you also always have

cranberry sauce.

Dan: Right.

Vanessa: This is… a cranberry is a really
tart berry, it’s so tart, it’s really sour,

but when you mix it with a lot of sugar, it’s
great.

Dan: And you need mashed potatoes.

Vanessa: Yeah, so the cranberries, and the
mashed potatoes, and the turkey, it’s a perfect

combination.

That kind of tart flavors with the mashed
potatoes with the turkey, it kind of mixes

together really great.

Dan: Yeah, basically the point is to eat so
much you can barely move at the end of the

day.

Vanessa: Well, they do say that turkey, the
bird, the turkey meat, has some kind of-

Dan: Tryptophan.

Vanessa: Is that what it’s called?

Dan: I think so.

Vanessa: That kind of enzyme in it.

Isn’t it enzyme?

Hormone, or-
Dan: Chemical?

Vanessa: It has something in the meat naturally
that makes you feel sleepy, so at Thanksgiving

that’s really one of the only times when we
eat turkey, so because we eat so much turkey,

it’s kind of stereotypical to say after the
Thanksgiving meal everyone crashes on the

couch and watches football.

So it’s kind of a tradition.

Dan: Yeah, football is probably the most American
aspect of this.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: They don’t really play football in other
countries, do they?

Vanessa: Well, this is American football.

Dan: I mean, not… yeah, not-
Vanessa: American football.

Dan: … real football, like you know, not
kicking the ball.

Vanessa: Soccer.

Dan: Football like, we throw the ball, and
we tackle each other, and stuff.

Vanessa: Yeah, so there are… there’s always
a football, an American football game on Thanksgiving,

so that’s why some of the sayings abut Thanksgiving
is the three Fs, family, food, football.

When I was growing up, my family would eat
Thanksgiving, and then we often would go to

the living room and watch football together,
even though we weren’t big football fans.

It’s kind of just-
Dan: It’s just tradition.

Vanessa: … what you do.

So we would say what we were thankful for,
and then-

Dan: It’s the American religion.

Vanessa: … watch football, and that was
just kind of a family time together.

I don’t know.

Did you guys ever do anything?

Sometimes we threw a football in backyard.

Dan: Yeah, a few years we would throw the
football.

Our family didn’t watch that much football.

Vanessa: Yeah-
Dan: We would sometimes, just like the Superbowl,

that’s all.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Yeah, so I’m curious, for you, in your country,
do you have any fall meal holiday that’s really

centered around food?

Dan: Yeah, we should also say, I think it’s
supposed to also traditionally be you feast

on all the food that you grew.

Vanessa: Yeah, but most people are not farmers
nowadays.

Dan: Yeah, but I think traditionally it does
have that element of, “The harvest is in.

We come and eat all this delicious food.

It was a good year.”

Vanessa: “We’re thankful for the good harvest.”

Dan: “We’re thankful for the good harvest.”

So maybe a lot of countries have something
like that.

Vanessa: Yeah.

All right.

Let’s go to the next topic.

The next topic is relaxation.

I want to know, if I were feeling stressed,
what tips would you give me to help me feel

relaxed?

Dan: If you were feeling stressed?

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Well, I don’t know if this would work
for everyone, but I find that playing a sport,

or doing something active that requires some
concentration, really helps me not be stressed,

like if I’m concerned about something I like
to go and maybe play some basketball, where

your only goal is to put the ball in the hoop,
it’s just something very simple and you’re

using your body, which is different from how
a lot of people live today, which is very

stationary and thinking about all kinds of
problems and then looking at your phone and

reading about more problems.

Everything’s a big problem it seems like.

Vanessa: So if you get out and move your body-
Dan: So if you get out and you move your body-

Vanessa: … in the real world, yeah.

Dan: Yeah, and it could just be a hike, a
hike or something.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: But yeah, I like to go and play basketball,
or maybe play some hockey, I like to do that

too, just shoot the puck around, it’s a lot
of fun.

Vanessa: Some kind of organized activity.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: Like shooting hoops, playing hockey-
Dan: And it doesn’t even have to be with people,

just practicing, doing some kind of routine
like that.

Vanessa: I said something similar, which was
just to go for a walk, because that’s not

necessarily organized, but sometimes getting
out of the place where I’m at, getting out

of the house, getting out of wherever I’m
feeling stressed, just changing locations,

and having the open sky-
Dan: Just getting outside.

Vanessa: … breathing some cool air, or maybe
really hot air, depending on what time of

the year it is.

Dan: That’s true, it depends on where you
live.

Outside might be a little too hot, or too
cold.

Vanessa: But it’s just nice to kind of remove
yourself, and move, and take a walk.

Even say, “Okay, I’m going to walk for five
minutes, and I’m going to turn around and

walk five minutes back.”

Sometimes 10 minutes can make a big difference.

At least it can help me feel more relaxed,
or at least more realistic about my stress.

Dan: Definitely.

Vanessa: Like if something’s stressing me,
maybe I shouldn’t really be stressed about

it, so taking a walk helps me to kind of recenter
myself.

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: And think, “It’s not a big deal,
it’s fine.

I’ll just work it out.”

Dan: Okay.

And the next thing I would do, is take a shower.

Vanessa: Oh, okay.

Dan: Well, I take night time showers, so I
don’t know, I just find, for me, when I’m

getting clean, and not really… and like
it’s kind of that same thing, I’m just like

washing my arms, washing my hair, and I find
my mind kind of drifting, and it’s nice and

warm.

I don’t know, for me, maybe most people probably
would say taking a bath, but I don’t really

like to take a bath.

Vanessa: Taking a shower, I’ve heard too that
when you’re taking a shower, sometimes that’s

when your best ideas happen, because you have
no stimulation, there’s nothing around you,

you’re just in the shower, so your mind can
really be blank, or you can really kind of

decompress in a different way.

I feel like that too, taking a shower feels
good.

Dan: Yeah, a nice, warm shower.

And then finally, sleeping.

Vanessa: Yes.

Dan: Going to sleep, getting good enough sleep.

I mean, especially nowadays where everybody
has some kind of electronics device where

you’re staring at a screen, I think that doesn’t
really help your stress levels go down.

Vanessa: Don’t watch this video at 2:00 AM,
if it’s 2:00 AM in the morning-

Dan: Yeah, stop watching.

Vanessa: … turn it off.

Dan: Got to bed.

Vanessa: You can watch this in the morning.

Dan: So yeah, that would be the last thing
I would do, too.

Lower the stress in my life and relax.

Vanessa: Yeah, I think getting good sleep
is a really good tip, that was one of the

ones that I wrote down.

Is just-
Dan: So we share a few.

Vanessa: … yeah, to get better sleep because
sometimes I feel like we want to blame other

parts of our lives when we feel stressed,
but when you look at the basics, “Have I been

eating healthy?

Did I drink enough water today?”

And the main one, “Did I sleep enough?”

Probably not, at least in my case, if I feel
stressed or anxious, a lot of that’s because

my body can’t handle what’s happening in daily
life, because I haven’t been treating myself

well.

Dan: Yep.

Vanessa: So if I sleep better, whether that’s
consistent sleep, or a longer period of sleep,

just doing that will help me to feel less
stressed during the day.

Dan: It is situational though, some people
need more or less sleep than other people.

Vanessa: Yeah, so that’s why I said get better
sleep.

Dan: Better sleep, for you.

Vanessa: Whatever is better for you.

But one thing I mentioned that you didn’t
say, you kind of said, but is to take a tech

break.

And a tech break, we often use this term in
our relationship to say, “Today we are not

going to… we’re just going to put away our
phones, we’re not going to do anything with

any electronics today at all.”

And it seems like it’s a simple, easy thing
to do, but it feels good just to take a little

break, especially if that is stressing you
out, or if you’re kind of avoiding dealing

with problems by looking at your phone.

I think a lot of use social media, or reading
articles-

Dan: The phones and tablets are really bad,
I think, because they’re so easy-

Vanessa: Yeah, to get distracted.

Dan: … to pick up and just keep using.

There’s little games, and YouTube, which you
may be on right now.

Vanessa: Yes.

I find myself-
Dan: So keep watching.

Vanessa: … when I feel stressed, sometimes
I don’t don’t want to think about it, so I’ll

watch a YouTube vide, and then 30 minutes
later, I’ll realize I still feel stressed.

Dan: 10 YouTube videos later.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

Or maybe for this one it’s a couple hours
later.

Dan: Hey, I have a bonus tip.

Vanessa: Oh, bonus tip.

All right.

Dan: Yeah, a bonus tip.

Vanessa: What’s your bonus tip?

Dan: I don’t really meditate, but I’ve heard
mediation is very great for de-stressing.

Vanessa: I’m curious if any of you have tried
meditation.

Dan: So I would also recommend meditating,
but for me, I actually tried something that

was kind of similar, I counted my breaths.

So this was actually kind of to help me fall
asleep, but a lot of times I can’t fall asleep

because I’m thinking about the day and feeling
stressed.

Vanessa: You can’t turn your mind off.

Dan: So basically the idea that I heard was
to breathe in for 10 seconds.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: No, no, no, breathe in for five seconds,
then breathe out for 10 seconds.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: So you’re kind of counting one, two,
three, four, five.

And then, one, two, three, four, five, six,
seven, eight, nine, 10.

And just only thinking about your breaths.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: You know, it really kind of puts the
focus somewhere else, and you’re breathing

in deeply, which a lot of us do not breathe
in deeply, so it helps you to breathe in more

deeply and concentrate on your breathing.

Vanessa: Yeah, I heard that one of the side
effects of using a computer a lot, or a phone

a lot, is that when they study people who
are looking at a screen, we blink less-

Dan: What?

Vanessa: … so our eyes are open, they’re
getting kind of red and dry, and our breathing

increases.

So we’re kind of like-
Dan: They’re just like shallow?

Vanessa: Yeah, like… we’re just not focused,
like maybe feel a little bit of stress, or

we’re just not focused slow and-
Dan: On our bodies.

Vanessa: … relaxed.

Yeah.

So those long-term effects, if you’re doing
that for several hours a day, without thinking

about it, it can affect your body, so breathing,
yeah, slowly, can help to kind of help you

feel less stressed.

Dan: There you go.

Vanessa: Wow.

Dan: That’s my most practical tip.

Vanessa: Bonus tip.

So I’m curious for you, what are some tips
you would give to help someone feel less stress

in their life?

To feel more relaxed?

What would you say?

All right.

Let’s go to the next topic.

The next topic is sports and exercise, so
I want to know when you were a kid, what kind

of sports or activities did you participate
in?

Dan: Man, I played a lot of sports.

Vanessa: Yeah?

Dan: Yeah, I think it kind of shows the privilege
we grew up in, that we had so many opportunities

to try so many different things.

Vanessa: That was really lucky to be able
to do that kind of stuff.

Dan: So first I started out with baseball,
but it was called t-ball, so you actually

put the ball on a tee, and you put the ball
there, and you just hit it off of it.

Vanessa: So no one’s throwing the ball.

Dan: Yeah, I was really little.

Vanessa: It’s just stationary.

Dan: And I actually remember when the coaches
started pitching to me, I got kind of scared

of the ball and I didn’t want to play anymore.

Vanessa: It’s a big deal.

Dan: Yeah, I was really little, so I stopped
playing that and I started playing soccer.

Vanessa: Oh, okay.

Dan: And swimming as well.

So you call it, probably football in your
country, but it’s interesting, many, many

children, play soccer in America.

Vanessa: Yeah, I think it’s easy to get into
because you just are running and kicking a

ball.

Dan: Sure.

Vanessa: There’s no equipment or specialized
movements-

Dan: Right.

Vanessa: … at least for kids.

Dan: But for some reason, it’s not a popular
sport to watch.

Vanessa: Or for adults, a lot of adults don’t
play soccer.

Dan: Adults don’t play soccer that much, it’s
just children.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: But I played soccer for probably like
six year.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: And then I never played it again.

Yeah.

Vanessa: Just as a kid.

Dan: Yep.

So I did that, and I did swimming, and gymnastics
for a while.

I had a phase where I used to like to do a
lot of flips-

Vanessa: Oh, cool.

Dan: … so I would jump on the trampoline
and do back flips and front flips.

Vanessa: In a gymnasium that’s like a gymnastics
center.

Dan: Yeah, but also in my backyard.

We had a trampoline.

Vanessa: Ah, cool.

Dan: So I would do that, and then I did figure
skating where we were doing spinning and stuff.

Vanessa: I did figure skating too.

Dan: Yes.

And then my brother convinced me to take up
a more manly sport, hockey.

Vanessa: Oh, it’s a shame, you probably would
have been really good at figure skating.

Dan: Yeah, I was all right, but-
Vanessa: Yeah.

I think that’s the kind of thing that-
Dan: … it wasn’t my true love-

Vanessa: Like hockey?

Dan: … that would be hockey.

Vanessa: Well, I’m glad that you found your
true love, hockey.

Dan: I do love hockey, but I don’t really
have the build for it, I’m a little too small,

but I still had a lot of fun playing hockey.

Vanessa: Yeah, and you still play hockey.

Dan: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Vanessa: You play on a team here in our city.

Dan: That’s not all of my sports-
Vanessa: I feel like as a… you had a lot

of organized sports as a kid-
Dan: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Vanessa: … and maybe that’s just because
you have a older brother, or just something

that you wanted to do, but I feel like for
me-

Dan: I think my dad thought it was good for
me too.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: Which I think is true, it’s good for
kids to get into organized sports.

Vanessa: Sure.

Sure.

I feel like for me as a kid I didn’t do team
sports as much, like we just played in the

backyard a lot.

Dan: Weren’t you kind of a timid child, too?

Vanessa: I wouldn’t say I was timid, but I
didn’t like physical contact with other kids,

so basketball for me was really physically
aggressive.

Dan: Too rough.

Vanessa: Yeah, a little too rough, I didn’t
really like that.

Dan: You should try hockey.

Vanessa: That’s very rough.

But I loved swimming, so I think that swimming
was probably the main sport of my childhood,

and through high school every summer my sister
and I were on a swim team, and that meant

that every day, twice a day, we would go to
swim practice, and I-

Dan: Vanessa’s a really good swimmer, she
can kick my butt.

Vanessa: Not literally, that is a figurative
expression.

That means I can swim better than Dan, which
is true.

Dan: It’s true.

Vanessa: But it just means that I know the
technique, and if Dan or you-

Dan: I’m out there like struggling.

Vanessa: … if you know the right technique,
you can have a lot of endurance because you’re

not wasting your energy, so I feel like I
learned the right technique, so I can swim

longer because I know the right technique
because I practiced it a lot.

So we would always swim, and then we’d have
swim competitions, which are called swim meets,

and that was a fun part of my childhood growing,
was swimming, kind of this… it’s kind of

a team thing, but not really.

You have a team, but you’re still individual.

Dan: So like combined scores, is that how
it works?

Vanessa: Well, you would be… you’re part
of the community team, like your community,

your neighborhood is the team, but then each
person has an individual score.

Dan: Score.

Vanessa: So it’s kid of a team, kid of individual,
and I liked that.

And it was not physically aggressive.

Dan: That would make me so nervous.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: These individual sports, I feel the pressure
way too much.

If I were swimming and racing, I’d be so scared.

But when I play a sport like basketball, you’re
on a team, and so you’re kind of depending

on each other more, it’s not all up to you.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: Although, if you make a big mistake,
then everybody’s looking at you.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Dan: That’s no fun.

Vanessa: Yeah, I feel like I like having a
team, but at the same time, I like having

kind of your own thing going on, you can kind
of be more individualistic.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: So I’m curious for you, growing up
did you play organized sports like Dan?

I also did some volleyball in high school,
those types of things, kind of organized sports.

But did you play organized sports like that,
or did you just play with your friends in

the neighborhood, like I did growing up with
my friends in the neighborhood?

What kind of activities, or exercise type
things did you do when you were a child?

All right, let’s go to the next topic.

The next topic is electronics, this is another
hypothetical, maybe a dream type question,

but I want to know if you could upgrade any
electronics in your life for no price, it’s

free, what would you like to upgrade in your
life?

Dan: Interesting.

Yeah, I feel like I’m pretty satisfied with
our electronic status.

Vanessa: Oh, okay.

Dan: Electronics status.

Yeah, because you know me.

I already upgrade my electronics quite freely.

Vanessa: Dan likes electronics.

Dan: I do, especially like speakers and music.

I love music, so I buy a lot of headphones,
and a lot speakers, and stuff like this.

And every time I’m about to buy something
like that she looks at me like, “Why are you

buying another thing like this?”

I haven’t bought too much-
Vanessa: Yeah, it’s not too much.

Dan: … but I just tend to browse, and sometimes
I look at these humongous speakers that would

fill an opera room, or something, and I’m
like, “These would be awesome to have.”

Vanessa: And then I need to remind Dan that
we don’t live in a house the size of a football

field, like his dream.

Dan: But in my dream house-
Vanessa: Someday when we have that dream house,

right?

Dan: … it will have those speakers, yes.

Vanessa: What would you like to upgrade if
you could do it for no price?

Dan: Yeah, so right now it would be a laptop.

Vanessa: Oh, yeah, your laptop just broke.

Dan: Yeah, so our son, Theo, decided to step
on my laptop.

And it still actually works pretty well, but
it snapped in half, so somehow it’s still

working, but it’s old anyways.

Vanessa: Yeah, it’s his fault, but you know,
you shouldn’t have left it on the floor.

Dan: Yeah, so I’ll probably update my laptop
soon, which is a very doable thing nowadays.

Vanessa: Okay.

Yeah, you could get a laptop that isn’t broken
in half.

Dan: Yeah, and the second thing is actually
something we’ve never had before, which would

be a security system.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: It sounds like you would only want this
in a neighborhood where you would-

Vanessa: You feel kind of dangerous.

Yeah.

Dan: … you feel like you’re in danger.

But I still feel like it would just kind of
add comfort to me.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: We’ve always lived in apartments where
they had a gate, or a front door, where-

Vanessa: You have other people around you.

Dan: … and you have other people around
you, you’re not like just such a solo target.

Because in America, you’re just living in
a house in neighborhood, and it’s like standalone,

so I’d like to get some cameras, and something
I could check on the house and make sure everything’s

okay.

And just for peace of mind mostly.

Vanessa: Okay.

Yeah, I feel like our neighborhood’s not dangerous
at all.

Dan: It’s very safe, yeah.

Vanessa: But even if you leave to go away
for a week, and you want to be able to see

outside the house, that could be helpful,
yeah.

Dan: Yeah, and in modern times there’s a lot
of really good security systems out there.

Vanessa: Yeah, that could be helpful.

I feel like, for me, my answer to this is-
Dan: This shows how much Vanessa cares about

electronics.

Vanessa: I had to think about this for a long
time, because I don’t really care about electronics

that much-
Dan: I always choose the electronics, I bought

her computer.

I actually built her computer.

Vanessa: Yeah, Dan built the computer that
we use for editing and for doing work, but

I feel like for me something electronic that
I would like to upgrade is kind of practical,

our car that we have, you use a key to open
it, and that’s fine.

Dan: What?

You use a key?

Vanessa: But it would be really great to have
a beeper button, so this is pretty typical-

Dan: This is funny because everybody in America
has this, except for us.

Vanessa: Yeah, I think if your car is newer
than 2000, so if it’s within the last 20 years,

you probably have a beeper that opens the
car door.

Some really new cars have a beeper that turns
on the car, I don’t need that, I just would

like a beeper that can open the door, because
we have a two year old and soon we will have

another child, and opening the car on one
side, going to the other, putting him in the

car, coming back, unlocking it, it seems so-
Dan: Yeah, we never realized how much we’d

appreciate this.

Vanessa: Yeah, I would really appreciate this
small convenience.

Dan: I mean, our car should have this, but
we bought it used, and the person who sold

us the car lost those keys.

Vanessa: Yeah, they only had the regular key.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: So do you think that it’s possible,
because that existed before, could we do this?

Dan: Yes, it’s very easy.

Vanessa: Oh, really?

Dan: Yeah, we have to go to the dealership
and ask them, and they have to calibrate it.

Vanessa: And we have to just buy more keys?

My dream is going to come true.

Dan: We could make this happen.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: But I think at the time when I asked
the dealership about that, we had just bought

the car, and it was pretty expensive, and
we didn’t really have that much money, and

I was like, “We can’t afford to get the keys
too.”

Vanessa: Sure, because we decided to pay for
the car outright.

Dan: Right.

But it’s definitely doable, this very simple
fix in your life.

Vanessa: Wow, dreams come true right here
on YouTube, thank you.

Well, I’m curious for you, if you could upgrade,
or if you could have some electronics completely

for free with no price added, what would you
like to upgrade in your life?

I’m curious.

Let us know.

All right.

Let’s go to the last topic.

Our final topic is money.

I want to know, what are three purchases that
you regret?

Three things that were not worth it.

Dan: That I regret.

Not three things I love?

Vanessa: No, what were three purchases that
after you bought it you said, “Ah, I shouldn’t

have bought this.”

Dan: Oh, okay, so regretful purchases.

Vanessa: Mm-hmm (affirmative).

Dan: Well, the first one I can think of kind
of checks all of the boxes as something you

regret.

Because in the first place, you didn’t want
me to buy this.

Vanessa: Because it was-
Dan: Expensive.

Vanessa: … headphones.

We were talking about music devices.

Dan: We were talking about it.

Yes.

I already had headphones that I listen to
all the time-

Vanessa: That he loves.

Dan: … so I was already getting the judgment
feelings from Vanessa, but I thought maybe

I wanted something with even better sound,
maybe a different kind of sound.

I was looking for the new sound.

Vanessa: But what happened?

Dan: We didn’t have very much money at this
time either, so-

Vanessa: Ah, that was another layer.

Dan: … I bought these over $100 headphones,
and we took them home, and they started hurting

my ears-
Vanessa: Because they were kind of-

Dan: … they were just painful.

Vanessa: … they were like noise canceling
headphones?

Dan: No, it’s like they’re on ear, they just,
they weren’t really build to listen to as

long as I do.

Vanessa: Okay.

Dan: So they hurt my ears, and I was like,
“Oh, no.

They’re hurting my ears, this is really bad.”

Vanessa: “I can’t tell Vanessa.”

Dan: “I can’t.”

Yeah.

But then also, we bought them in South Korea,
and the place that I bought them had a no

return policy, so I couldn’t return them.

Vanessa: And then what happened?

Dan: And then I brought them home, and I sat
them down, and our cat walked up to them and

bit the cord and just broke them.

Vanessa: Yes, within five minutes.

Dan: Within five minutes.

No, like five seconds.

The second I sat the headphones down, the
cat bit them.

Vanessa: And it was the kind of cord that
you can’t just take out and replace it, you

have to do some… you have to send it into
the company and pay a lot to get it fixed.

Dan: Well, I didn’t know how to fix it.

I think my dad actually fixed it later and
he used them.

Vanessa: Oh, that’s good.

Dan: So there you go, it actually worked out
in the end.

Vanessa: Wow.

But yeah, there was a couple layers of regret.

Dan: Yeah, there was a lot of layers of regret,
and then the cat bit the cord anyway.

Vanessa: Ah, and that’s something that we
should have known.

We should have put them up somewhere, you
could have put them somewhere else, but it

just kind of was icing on the cake.

Dan: Yeah.

Vanessa: Which means, it was one more thing.

Dan: Now I can’t even use them.

Because I was like hoping, “Oh, some day maybe
they’ll be more comfortable.

Maybe they’ll just feel better, I’ll get used
to them.”

Vanessa: But then you can’t even use them
because our cat bit the cord.

Dan: Yep.

Vanessa: Well, that’s a regretful purchase.

Dan: There you go, there’s a whole story behind
that.

Vanessa: Yeah, can I say one of mine first?

Dan: Go ahead.

Yes.

Vanessa: Okay.

One of mine is much smaller, but it is anytime
that I buy tea at Starbucks, always a bad

decision.

Dan: Sorry, Starbucks.

Vanessa: Yeah, but I don’t like coffee, and
if I go to Starbucks that’s the only drink

that I can drink, because they have a lot
of coffee stuff, a lot of sweet stuff, but

one tea bag at Starbucks, you’re just buying
a tea bag with hot water, they’re not making

anything-
Dan: Fancy.

Vanessa: … it’s not a specialized drink.

It’s just hot water and a tea bag, and it’s
like $2.50, or something.

Like $2.50 just for a bag of tea.

And you can buy a whole box of tea for the
same price.

Dan: By the way, this is the difference between
Vanessa and I, is that I would never sweat

a purchase like that.

Vanessa: Well for me it’s the taste.

It’s not necessarily the price, the price
is high for tea, but the taste is never worth

it.

It’s just mediocre tea, it’s not even that
great.

Dan: I’d still never regret it.

Vanessa: Yeah, well-
Dan: I don’t regret cheap purchases, I never

think about it.

Vanessa: I feel like for me it’s just annoying
because I want to have a cool drink if I’m

going to a coffee shop, but then it’s just
a tea bag in water.

It’s not even loose leaf tea.

Anyway, I’m a tea snob, so let’s go to yours.

Dan: That’s true.

All right, the next in my list could be actually
a category in and of itself, but the most

recent occurrence was when we went to a place
on our beach vacation called The Turtle Museum.

Vanessa: Oh.

Dan: And it sounded all fancy, but it was
probably $15 bucks a person to get in.

Vanessa: Yeah, it was like a turtle rehabilitation
center.

Dan: Yeah, but there was just one room with
some pictures on the wall, and then we thought

we were going to see turtles up close and
personal, but they were just in big swimming

pools and you could barely see them.

Vanessa: Were they breathing out of their
butts?

Dan: They probably were at the time.

Vanessa: No, they’re sea turtles.

Dan: You’re right, they weren’t breathing
out of their butts.

And so I was just disappointed with the whole
experience and didn’t think it was worth it.

Although, that was a little different because
I felt like I was donating because they rescue

turtles, but there are a lot of places that
are like this, like a museum, or some kind

of show that maybe you pay a up front cost,
and then the show or the museum is just not

very good, or boring.

Vanessa: Yeah, like have you ever traveled
somewhere and you paid to enter a museum,

or you paid to enter some building and it
just wasn’t worth it.

I feel like that’s happened a lot, and that’s
just the most recent for us, is that, “Okay,

I feel okay because I donated some money to
that turtle rehabilitation center.”

But we didn’t really get to see turtles in
the way that we wanted to.

Dan: I wanted to touch a turtle.

Vanessa: Oh, but they are in a hospital, they’re
being rehabilitated.

Dan: That’s true, it was a turtle hospital.

Vanessa: Yeah.

Do you have any other-
Dan: But it sounded way cooler-

Vanessa: Oh, yeah.

Yeah, it did sound cool.

“Go to the turtle center and see the turtles.”

Dan: Yeah, my last thing is just a small thing.

I bought some t-shirts online, and it’s kind
of iffy to buy clothes online, but I always

felt like I like the picture that was on them,
but then the quality of the shirt wasn’t very

good or-
Vanessa: Especially when it’s online, you

can’t feel it.

Dan: … it didn’t fit that well.

Yeah, not a great idea.

I’ve regretted some of those purchases.

Vanessa: Another thing that I feel like I’ve
bought that wasn’t worth it, this is a general

category, but it’s some toys for our, now
he’s two year old, but throughout his short

life, some toys that I bought for him that
I thought he’d like, because he played with

at a friend’s house, or I just thought it
would be cool, but he didn’t really like it.

For example, there’s this thing that was…
it’s like a bead maze, and I remember liking

this as a kid, which is why I got it-
Dan: I thought he played with that.

Vanessa: Not really, he kind of wanted to
just pull the beads off, but he couldn’t play

with.

But I remember I played with it as a kid,
and I found it at a second hand store.

It was like $10, it wasn’t that much, but
I thought he’d play with it.

I was like, “This is it.

He’s going to play with this for so long,
it’s going to be great.”

And he just never really played with it.

So I feel like-
Dan: This will probably be an ongoing problem.

Vanessa: Yeah.

So now I-
Dan: Now that we have kids.

Vanessa: I’ve tried to kind of back up and
think, “Okay, he likes to play with these

three things.

If other people want to give him presents,
and give him other toys, that’s fine, but

I’m not really going to invest in more toys
because he kind of likes the same things all

the time.”

Dan: Legos, legos, legos.

Vanessa: Legos, legos, legos.

Sometimes Play-Doh, sometimes the sandbox.

Dan: But mostly legos.

Vanessa: But generally the same couple toys
again, and again, and again.

So I’m curious for you, what are some purchases
that you’ve made that weren’t worth it, that

you regretted?

This video is free on YouTube, so this is
not a purchase.

I hope that you have not regretted spending
your time, though, with us.

Dan: Yeah, I know what you wouldn’t regret,
purchasing the Fearless Fluency Club.

Vanessa: Oh.

Well-
Dan: There’s a pitch for you.

Vanessa: This is our monthly English course
where we teach about a different topic every

month, and you learn the vocabulary, phrasal
verbs, pronunciation.

We have a private Facebook group where a lot
of members meet together and talk together

to practice speaking English.

And once a month I have a group Google hangout
and we talk together.

Just a great way to expand your English and
be able to learn more.

So if you enjoyed our conversation today-
Dan: Yeah, and one might say, “Become fluent.”

Vanessa: Yes, I hope so, become more confident.

Well, thank you so much for joining me today.

Dan: You’re welcome.

We’re done?

Vanessa: Wow, this was a lot.

Dan: Can you believe it?

Did you make it all the way though?

Vanessa: If you made it this far, congratulations.

Pat yourself on the back.

We asked a lot of questions today, so I’m
going to put those in the description below,

so that you can go to each topic if you want
to go back and watch a certain topic, or if

you saw some vocabulary appear that you’d
like to review and practice, you can always

go back and review what we talked about.

If you have any questions, feel free to ask,
and make sure that you write a comment and

answer some of these questions yourself, use
English.

Dan: Yes.

Vanessa: Thank you so much for joining me,
Dan.

Dan: You’re welcome.

It was very enjoyable.

Vanessa: Yes, I appreciate your time.

Dan: It was a journey.

Vanessa: Your energy.

Oh, it was a journey.

Yes, we went through a lot of different topics
today.

Thank you so much as well for learning English
with me and with Dan today, I’ll see you next

Friday for a new lesson here on my YouTube
channel.

Bye.

Dan: Bye.

Vanessa: The next step is to download my free
ebook, Five Steps to Becoming A Confident

English Speaker.

You’ll learn what you need to do to speak
confidently and fluently.

Don’t forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel
for more free lessons.

Thanks so much.

Bye.

Vanessa:嗨,我是来自 SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com 的 Vanessa。

丹:我是丹。

Vanessa:我的丈夫,他也
将在今天的谈话中给出另一个观点。

今天我们为您带来了一场精彩的、冗长的
英语对话,所以请准备好你的耳朵,

准备好你的思想。

我们将讨论 12 个不同的
主题,并希望提供一些新的表达

方式和思考生活的新方式。

我不知道,但至少
对你有一些英语帮助。

丹:是的,今天会变得很私人,
所以做好准备。

瓦内萨:是的。

好的,你准备好开始了吗?

丹:我准备好了。

瓦内萨:我们走吧。

我们的第一个话题是家庭,我的问题
是,你觉得你最像谁?

丹:外表上我最像谁?

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:外貌和性格?

瓦内萨:是的,两者都有。

丹:好吧,所以我觉得我看起来更像
我妈妈。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:我有更多她的肤色,我有
她的眼睛。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:在她这一边,
大多数人都很瘦,而我是个很

瘦的人。

我父亲的一方是德国人,而且他们
往往更大一点。

所以,是的,我绝对支持我妈妈。

但就性格而言,我觉得我
更像我爸爸。

你会同意吗?

瓦内萨:是的,我会说你有
你父亲的影子。

丹:你太了解我了,所以你也可以回答
这个问题。

瓦内萨:是的。

是的,我认为你有你父亲的影子。

是的。

丹:阴影,是的。

我觉得我比我爸还傻,这
不是很难,因为我爸是很认真的。

Vanessa:啊,不过他也有傻的一面。

丹:他有,是的。

但在大多数情况下,我觉得我更像
我爸爸,因为他的举止非常平静,

非常有耐心,而且他不会因为任何事情而感到压力

实际上,我父亲对所有事情都非常放松
,我什至无法理解。

我想,“你现在怎么这么冷静?”

我认识的每个人都认为我是他们认识的最没有
压力的人。

瓦内萨:但你爸爸更没有
压力。

丹:是的,但我们是相似的,就像
在我父母要去某个地方

并且需要离开家的时候长大一样,我和
我父亲每次都是最后一个离开家的人

然后我们会说,“什么?

我们会成功的。

我们会没事的。

没问题。”

凡妮莎:你妈妈、哥哥和姐姐
都在说,“快点,快点。”

丹:我妈妈就像,“啊,我们走吧。”

我妈妈是压力大得多,性格焦虑的
那种。

Vanessa:我认为这是一种典型的家庭情况

丹:是的,你呢?

瓦内萨:我想我的父母也在
我身边。

我觉得我长得很像我妈妈。

丹:是的,不过,她看起来和她妈妈一模一样
,就像 T.

Vanessa:有时当我看到
自己的照片,然后我再看她同龄的照片

时,我想,“哇哦。

我们看起来 真的很像。”

而且她看起来很像她妈妈,
所以我可以想象我

长大后会是什么样子。

丹:是的。

我的意思是,你的头发更黑,五官也更黑。

你从你爸爸那里得到的。

瓦内萨:是的,有点。

但我认为我的很多特征
与我妈妈相似。

但我想我的面部表情也是从妈妈那里得到的

丹:是的。

Vanessa:很多评论说,“哇,Vanessa,
你有很多表情。”

丹:你妈妈很有表现力,就像
你一样。

Vanessa:我认为我确实使用
了很多表达方式,但这

对我来说很自然。

当我谈论事情时,我在日常生活中这样做

我想我是从妈妈那里得到的,有时
我看到她的一些表情,我意识到,

“哦,我也这样做。”

Dan:是的,我记得我们住在
韩国的时候,每个韩国人都在

评论 Vanessa 的表情。

他们就像,“你的脸,太令人兴奋了。

你怎么做这么多脸?”

所有人都很惊讶。

瓦内萨:我不知道。

丹:我猜在韩国他们没有那么多
面孔。

瓦内萨:我不知道,也许不是。

也许这只是一个不寻常的特征。

我很感激,尤其是作为一名老师,
我希望我也能用我的脸来帮助解释一些不同的

概念。

但我觉得我也有我父亲的一部分。

我爸是个很理性的人。

丹:你和你爸爸一样理性。

瓦内萨:是的,但我想我也有他
的幽默感,有时有点奇怪

的幽默感,但我们笑同样的事情,
我们喜欢玩游戏,有竞争力,

所以我认为我的那一面,也许
我有些性格的一面,和他很相似

但我觉得我也有我奶奶的一部分。

我的奶奶是一个走,走,走,走的人。

丹:哦,那是真的。

是的。

Vanessa:她从不停止,我认为我最大的
缺点是我很难放慢速度

和放松,我只是继续前进,我认为

Dan:这就是她和我在一起的原因。

Vanessa:……我需要帮助来放松。

丹:我帮她放松。

瓦内萨:是的,所以我觉得我奶奶也是
这样,她总是在走,

总是在做事,时不时地放慢脚步是健康
的。

所以,我需要这样做,她
有时可能也需要这样做。

但我不知道我是不是从她那里学来的,
但也许这只是我的一部分——

丹:我认为这是你的个性。

Vanessa:……DNA,我的性格。

丹:是的,我记得当我第一次
见到瓦内萨时,她比现在更走,走,走

瓦内萨:哦,你这么认为?

丹:是的。

更喜欢这件事,然后下一个,
而且热情始终如一,她就像是

到处蹦蹦跳跳。

Vanessa:我总是充满热情,
这是真的。

丹:是的,它超出了图表。

瓦内萨:是的,所以我想为你知道
,你最喜欢你家里的谁?

可能是你的身体特征还是你的
性格?

好吧,让我们继续我们的第二个问题。

下一个话题是童年。

我想知道你认为童年什么时候
结束,你什么时候成年?

丹:童年什么时候结束?

瓦内萨:这是一个很深的问题。

丹:嗯,我不认为它可以是一个特定的
年龄,我认为每个人都不同。

我认为在任何时候你都可以离开
你父母的房子,独自生活,

照顾好自己,你不
依赖别人。

就像如果你和你的朋友一起生活并与
他们相处,那么你可能还不是成年人

所以如果我必须选择一个年龄,我可能会说
16 岁。

Vanessa:哦。

丹:是的,我是说有点年轻。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:在一个理想的世界里,我认为一个 16 岁的
孩子应该做好准备。

瓦内萨:好的。

好的。

我知道了。

16岁你准备好了吗?

丹:不,当然不是。

瓦内萨:理想情况下。

丹:理想情况下,是的。

我不认为我们的社会让我们
在 16 岁时

做好准备。它让你在 18 岁时做好准备。

Vanessa:或者更晚。

丹:对,或者以后。

但是你知道,在一个理想的世界里,我认为你
可以在 16 岁时做好准备,但现在这是一个复杂的

世界,所以也许 18 岁是一个可以接受的年龄。

Vanessa:我觉得,对我来说,我
对童年结束和成年

开始的想法较少,这些都是身体上的。

我觉得这更多地与
你自己的决定有关。


必须住在家里,或者你必须

依赖别人可能有很多原因,但如果你
自己做决定,你就不是孩子了,你

是成年人了。

而且我敢肯定,随着我们的孩子长大并
成为青少年,

我们要为其他人制作这条线会有点困难
,但我自己知道-

Dan:嗯,这是-
Vanessa:… 做出更多的决定。

丹:……当然,假设你有能力独立
生活。

瓦内萨:是的。

是的,我认为你仍然可以成为一个成年人,只是
做出自己的决定,但

作为成年人,我们仍然需要其他人的帮助,所以有
一个……这是一个灰色地带。

丹:当然。

是的。

我会-
Vanessa: 是的,不是很清楚。

丹:……另外补充一下,我不知道,就我
个人而言,生孩子真的会让

你长大成人。

不一定对每个人都是如此,但
我认为有些人更容易

有点自私,做自己的
事,像孩子一样生活,尤其是

现在,因为我们有这么多的娱乐,
你可以每天看电视。

我认识的很多人都经常玩电子游戏,
而且我不会敲打电子游戏,但

每天玩电子游戏是保持孩子心态的好方法
,无论如何。

瓦内萨:当然。

Dan:这是我的意见,有点主观,但是-

Vanessa:是的,我认为如果你是一个好人,
并且你有一个孩子,那么你会感到

被迫成为一个成年人。

丹:是的。

Vanessa:仍然有坏人有
孩子,他们自己仍然是孩子——

Dan:那是真的。

瓦内萨:……然后他们是坏父母。

但我认为,如果你通常是一个好人,
当你有孩子的时候,这有点令人震惊。

丹:是的,嗯-
瓦内萨:就像,“哇,这个孩子太

依赖我了。

我需要负责。

我必须以某种方式组织自己。”

你必须改变。

丹:……我认为作为一个成年人,其中一部分
是承担某种责任的负担

,无论是工作,还是你的房子付款,
或者其他什么。 无论如何,

有些人在
没有孩子的情况下增加了这些责任负担,但我不知道,

对我来说,这只是不同。

比如,“这是我一生中要照顾的人
。”

人们现在-
Vanessa:是的。

丹:……因为我们有两个。

瓦内萨:嗯,很快就会有两个。

所以我有一个问题要问你,你
认为童年什么时候结束?

成年什么时候开始?

每种文化都会有所不同
,因为这是一个非常具体的文化

问题。

也许在美国 -
Dan:是的,也许你有一个 -

Vanessa:……它与你的国家不同。

丹:……也许你
在你的国家有一个成人仪式。

Vanessa:哦,你能解释一下什么是成人礼
吗?

因为那是一件微妙的事情。

丹:是的,成人仪式
是每个男孩或每个女孩为了

成为成年人而要做的事情。

瓦内萨:哦,像一些仪式或活动。

丹:是的,就像一个仪式。

是的,我的意思是,我们在美国真的没有这个
,有人说大学是一种

成年礼,但不是……

我的意思是,现在越来越多的人都
上大学了。

Vanessa:很多人都这样做,但是-
Dan:是的,有点像,但这真的很

糟糕,因为通常人们只是去,
他们有聚会,他们的生活真的很不负责任。

Vanessa:这不是成为一个负责任的
成年人的方法。

丹:是的,然后你上学更多。

瓦内萨:啊,是的。

丹:这并没有真正成为一个男人。

瓦内萨:彻底改变你的生活。

是的。

所以我很好奇,在你们的国家里有没有什么东西
可以表示“现在你已经成年了。”这种成人

仪式,或者庆祝活动,
或者你举办的派对。

在美国,我们真的没有这个,但
我认为你正在庆祝这是一个很酷的想法——

丹:我希望我们做到了。

瓦内萨:……这个巨大的变化,从童年
到成年,这是一个灰色地带,至少

在美国,这是一个真正的灰色地带,
所以作为父母,很高兴庆祝你的

孩子长大成人,希望如此。

小时候,“哦,太好了,现在我是
成年人了。

社会将我视为成年人。”

所以我认为这是一个很酷的想法,但也许
这是我们可以对我们未来的孩子做的事情。

好了,我们进入下一个话题。

下一个主题是工作。

我想知道你最糟糕的工作是什么。

丹:最糟糕的工作?

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:嗯,我有两个相互竞争的工作。

Vanessa:希望你现在的工作不是
教英语。

丹:这是视频编辑和制作这些视频。

瓦内萨:哦,不。

丹:我无法忍受和我妻子一起工作。

只是在开玩笑。

这是最好的。

是的。

所以,是的,真的是我最糟糕的工作,如果我只能
选择一个,那就是洗碗机。

瓦内萨:哦,好吧。

丹:现在请注意,
机器、洗碗机和

洗碗机人之间没有区别,是同一个
词。

瓦内萨:所以你就像机器一样,你
在洗碗。

丹:是的。

我的意思是,你确实有一台机器,所以
你会在一边有东西可以把盘子滑

进去等等,但这只是,我也
想,我想我当时只有 16 岁,一个

成年人 我在餐厅里没有朋友。

他们都年纪大了,而且都很
坚强。

我不知道,在美国,

当你… 有很多人生经历。

丹:……我就像一个
16 岁的基督徒小孩,在角落里洗碗,

努力让自己看起来比较正常。

但我没有和任何人交谈——
Vanessa:而且你是在家上学的。

是的,没有经验。

丹:是的,那个时候我还在上
高中。

瓦内萨:哦,是的,是的。

丹:但那是一所小型私立学校。

不管怎样——
Vanessa:你和其他人很不一样

丹:……这不仅很尴尬,
而且很糟糕,因为洗碗

有点臭。

你只是拿了所有的菜,有些
人过去常常取笑我走得

不够快。

一个人说:“丹,你有两种速度,慢
和停。”

瓦内萨:你像乌龟?

丹:是的,我就像一只乌龟。

Vanessa:嗯,有时我还是会这么说。

丹:我的速度不够快,还有一次
我把手伸进了脏兮兮的脏水里,

我的手指被一个碎玻璃割伤了,我
在水里流血。

瓦内萨:哦。

当您访问餐厅时,您不想知道的事情

丹:我在桌子底下得到了报酬。

瓦内萨:哦,真的吗?

丹:嗯-嗯(肯定)。

Vanessa:他们为什么要私下付钱给
你?

丹:我不知道,因为这是一家意大利
餐厅——

瓦内萨:因为你太年轻了?

丹:……在宾夕法尼亚州的农村。

Vanessa:他们不想为员工缴税之类的

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:另外,谁愿意为洗碗机纳税?

Vanessa:我想知道是不是因为你才
16 岁,所以有年龄限制吗?

丹:那时我什至可能只有 15 岁。

Vanessa:好吧,也许你
还不到他们可以雇用某人的法定年龄——

Dan:可能是。

Vanessa:……所以他们只是在桌子底下付钱给你

丹:是的,那很糟糕。

瓦内萨:这听起来很糟糕。

丹:是的,这是一份尴尬的工作。

Vanessa:尤其是作为第一份工作,这
似乎很不舒服。

丹:那是我的第二份工作。

是的。

瓦内萨:是的。

嗯——
丹:你呢?

Vanessa:……我觉得——
Dan:能打败那个吗?

Vanessa:嗯,我觉得我最糟糕的工作还
不错,因为像你这样的社交环境,

很糟糕,因为它太无聊了。

我在这个办公室工作了一个夏天,我
就像一个暑假的临时雇员,

工作有点像呼叫中心的工作。

但是他们每天都给我们这些脚本,
我们不得不打电话给可能这家公司

在过去几个月内购买了打印机的公司。

丹:光是听我就觉得无聊。

Vanessa:是的,我打电话给公司,
说公司说,“哦,我看到你

最近买了惠普喷墨打印机,
我们今天有一个培训

课程。

你想参加关于这个的培训课程
吗? 打印机?”

丹:不过,她的通话声音确实很好

瓦内萨:我一次又一次地给这么多公司打电话
,和秘书交谈,

和其他人交谈,只是说,“你
想去参加这个关于……的研讨会吗?”

他们最近买的一些电子设备。

丹:如果你打电话给我,我会说,“是的,
我愿意。

我可以买更多吗?”

Vanessa:嗯,人们普遍
对我很好,只是……这不是

我感兴趣的主题,不是
我受过训练的事情,所以我不觉得

这是我的 专业,只是
为了赚钱的临时工作。

丹:你整天坐在办公室
里,对吧?

Vanessa:是的,这是我的第一份办公室工作。

丹:凡妮莎不喜欢坐太久。

瓦内萨:不,我必须走,走,走,就像我们
谈到的那样。

所以坐在那张办公桌上,这
不是我的事。

但另一方面,办公室确实
试图让员工感兴趣,

因为他们知道与我一起工作的大多数人都和
我处于相似的位置

,工作并不是他们毕生的梦想 在
那份工作中。

所以大约每周一次,我们有这些游戏节目
比赛-

丹:听起来很有趣。

Vanessa:……在午餐时间,
午休时间,每个人都会去餐厅,

如果你愿意的话,当然,他们有这些
比赛,有点像财富之轮,

或者危险,公司只是
为了 员工。

有时我们有打扮的日子,我们
打扮得像牛仔,或者打扮得像……

他们试图让它变得有趣。

丹:来吧,这比做
洗碗机好。

Vanessa:这可能比
洗碗工要好,但我只是觉得他们在

努力留住员工-
Dan:让它变得有趣。

Vanessa: … 让它变得有趣-
Dan: 好吧。

Vanessa:……因为他们知道这
不是一份有趣的工作。

丹:是的,我能说我第二差的工作吗?

瓦内萨:哦,是的。

当然。

丹:你能猜出它是什么吗?

瓦内萨:我知道你在很多咖啡店工作过
,但还不错。

丹:在咖啡店工作很好。

很有趣。

瓦内萨:好的,那是什么?

丹:是神枪手。

瓦内萨:哦,你能解释一下那份工作吗?

丹:是的,所以我不知道你是否
在你的国家见过这种情况,但你有没有

去过有人给你拍照的地方
,然后他们试图把

那张照片卖给你?

我就是那个人。

所以我们拍了同样的照片,它
正在匹兹堡一条河流上的一艘船上。

瓦内萨:所以它有点像游船,
但是是游船。

丹:是的,有点。

不过这很俗气,一点也不
高级。

所以人们,在他们上船之前,我们
强迫他们停下来过线

,我们会给他们拍照。

这是必需的,但人们就像,
“我不想拍照。”

Vanessa:每个人都有自己的相机
和手机。

丹:这是……

是的。

请注意,这就像 2010 年,人们
已经在他们的相机和其他东西上安装了手机。

我的意思是,这至少越来越受欢迎。

Vanessa:是的,他们不需要你的照片。

丹:没有。

所以我必须给每个人拍张照片,
然后当他们下船时,我

站在一边说:“嘿,过来,买
这张照片。”

一张照片要 20 美元。

瓦内萨:疯了。

丹: 一次糟糕的抄袭,甚至我都知道这是
一次糟糕的抄袭,只是不值得做的

生意,至少在 2010 年我做
那份工作的时候是这样。

Vanessa:是的,也许 10
年前会很酷。

丹:是的,就像 30 年前一样,这是一个可行的业务

瓦内萨:但不是现在。

丹:是的,但现在没有了。

那真的很糟糕,有一次有人
偷了我的一张照片,我实际上被

那份工作解雇了。

瓦内萨:因为他们偷了一张照片。

丹:因为他们偷了一张照片,而我没能……

我没有按时抓到他们,我当时就想,
“别闹了。”

瓦内萨:是的,“再见这份工作。

永远再见。”

丹:是的。

这个工作比其他
工作好,比洗碗好,唯一的原因是我

和一些很有趣的人一起工作,我们
相处得很好。

瓦内萨:你在外面,你
在河边。

丹:没关系。

Vanessa:除了你必须开车一个小时
才能到那里,那太疯狂了。

丹:我确实开车一个小时去上班。

瓦内萨:你永远不应该开车一个小时
去兼职。

丹:但那是我的错,我想
在匹兹堡工作,但我还活着……

我和父母住在一起吗?

瓦内萨:是的,我想是的。

丹:我想我做到了。

我还没有成年。

瓦内萨:哦。

哦。

好的。

好吧,我很好奇你,你做过的最糟糕的
工作是什么?

让我们知道。

让我们进入下一个话题。

下一个话题是旅行。

我想知道
您想在美国访问或重访的三个地点是什么


丹:在美国?

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:为什么只有美国?
Vanessa:嗯,世界很大,所以

我不得不以某种方式缩小问题的范围。

丹:好的。

好的。

我要说的第一个地方是大峡谷。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:因为你当然要去看
大峡谷,对吧?

我从来没有去过那里。

我以前住在科罗拉多州,但我的家人
从未去过大峡谷

,我敢肯定,那一定会是一个惊人的景象

瓦内萨:是的。

是的。

丹:其次是太平洋西北部
,一般来说。

瓦内萨:好的。

Dan:因为我听说过-
Vanessa:不像波特兰,西雅图,具体的?

Just-
Dan:我想我想去西雅图,

因为它是一个大城市,而且听起来
很酷。

美国没有多少城市
让我感兴趣,因为我去过

欧洲和亚洲的其他地方。

除了纽约市之外,这些城市更加充满活力
,这是一个了不起的

城市。

Vanessa:是的,我相信很多学生-
Dan:对不起,美国

Vanessa:……想访问美国,他们
想看看这些地方。

Dan:但我也来自美国,所以这
不像-

Vanessa:总是没那么有趣,是的。

丹:是的,这对我来说没那么有趣。

但西雅图似乎是一个非常酷的小镇
,在我的名单上它比洛杉矶更高,

洛杉矶看起来有点像一个大的、
蔓延的、臭气熏天的地方。

Vanessa:看起来要多得多-
Dan:没有冒犯,L.A.

Vanessa:至少看起来要吓人得多

丹:好的,这是一个很好的表达方式。

Vanessa:好像那里发生了很多事情,
但西雅图感觉更舒服。

丹:是的,它看起来也很时髦。

瓦内萨:西北。

丹:是的,西北也是因为那里有
大山,然后那里真的是

茂密的绿色森林。

瓦内萨:哦。

好的,酷。

丹:而且我喜欢远足,如果你
在一年中的合适时间去,因为我

听说太平洋西北部下雨很大,
我想去远足到

一座大山上——
瓦内萨:是的。

丹:……也许跳到加拿大
,去温哥华岛的温哥华。

瓦内萨:那会很酷。

丹:对我来说,所有这些领域听起来都非常非常
酷。

瓦内萨:是的,我愿意。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:让我们做吧。

丹:让我们做吧。

瓦内萨:明天。

丹:好的。

Vanessa:也许不是明天-
Dan:好的。

Vanessa:……但我认为那会
很酷。

丹:第三个是科罗拉多。

瓦内萨:所以重游科罗拉多?

丹:这是一次重温。

我以前住在科罗拉多州。

我在那里长大了五年,
当我还是个孩子的时候,我曾经

真的把它当作我的家。

但现在我大概有 15 年左右没有回来了

瓦内萨:哦,那是很长一段时间。

丹:我已经很久
没有回来了,我想去,也许

去我小时候去过的地方旅行。

它比
我小时候大得多,所以我敢肯定那里有很多

人。

而且,这里的大自然真的很棒,
科罗拉多有很多非常大的山脉,

还有众神花园,那里有
非常有趣的岩层。

如您所知,我们非常注重自然,
我们想去看看自然的地方。

瓦内萨:是的,是的。

嗯,我的很多地方也与自然有关

丹:是的,让我们听听。

Vanessa:我差点说大峡谷,但是——
Dan:你知道我会这么说。

Vanessa:……我想你会说
,我认为

在大峡谷露营,或者去
大峡谷远足会很酷,因为你不能只是 -

丹:有两个 孩子们?

瓦内萨:嗯,也许等他们长大一些,
或者我们就把他们留在家里。

丹:他们可以接受。

Vanessa:因为当你只是……当
你俯视大峡谷时,那是

不可思议的,但我想
进入大峡谷,那也只是其中

的一部分-
Dan:哦,是的。

我们不得不——
Vanessa:……那太棒了。

丹:……在大峡谷徒步。

瓦内萨:是的,那真的很酷。

丹:我肯定应该提到这一点。

瓦内萨:也许和一头驴在一起。

丹:因为我们是大徒步旅行者,所以我们喜欢
到处徒步。

瓦内萨:是的。

是的。

嗯,我的一个地方
和你的正好相反。

这不是一个大城市,但你说太平洋
西北,我说东北。

我从来没有去过缅因州,新罕布什尔州,佛蒙特州,
这个地区。

我觉得最好的公路旅行之一
就是一路开车沿着美国东

海岸,绕过缅因州,然后
穿过佛蒙特州。

我认为所有这些地理位置
都与

我在美国访问过的其他
任何地方

都非常不同 很高兴看到。

还有森林,我听说
佛蒙特州的森林很棒,只是一种不同

的感觉。

我们住在北卡罗来纳州的山区,
这也是一个游览的好地方——

丹:是的。

Vanessa:……但我们已经到了。

丹:我们住在这里。

瓦内萨:但我觉得山脉
、森林、海岸和其他地方

非常不同。

丹:是的,它也靠近加拿大。

瓦内萨:是的,那会很酷。

丹:必须跳到魁北克 -
瓦内萨:是的,也许会那样做。

丹:……因为那听起来是个
很酷的地方。

瓦内萨:是的。

Dan:Vanessa 会说法语,所以-
Vanessa:那太好了。

丹:……她想和
一些魁北克人说些法语。

瓦内萨:那会很有趣。

嗯,我的另一个人有点
像你在科罗拉多和

那个地区所说的,要去优胜美地国家公园。

我觉得它只是一个在美国参观的经典地方,
因为西海岸有很多国家

公园,有点
难以选择。

所以我觉得-
丹:是的,那是必须的,我想。

Vanessa:是的,它是前三名之一

丹:虽然我听说它变得非常
流行。

瓦内萨:哦,是的。

Dan:你必须在名单上才能进入。

Vanessa:哇,真的吗?

丹:也许只是露营,我不知道。

瓦内萨:哦,是的。

丹:你爸爸经历了很多事情,
不是吗?

Vanessa:是的,当他们露营时,他们
必须……

我认为露营地已经开放,
比如说 5 月 3 日,露营地开放了

,你必须上网注册,然后
网站打开……或者 露营登记

在早上 6:00 开始,他在 6:05 左右预订,
还有两个位置。

每个人都争先恐后地在那个地方扎营。

丹:露营季节。

Vanessa:是的,我想它真的很受欢迎。

那是全年的,
不仅仅是那一天。

那是为那一整年预订一个露营的地方

无论如何,这太疯狂了。

所以也许我们会这样做。

也许我们需要提前五年预订,
但我认为参观西部的国家公园会很酷,

因为大多数旅游,
美国有很多城市旅游,

但我觉得很多旅游是 自然
旅游。

丹:是的,我们旅游业的核心是自然。

瓦内萨:是的。

是的,因为我觉得美国是
一个如此年轻的国家,我们没有罗马,我们

没有这些古老的城市,而
这种你可以在城市中参观的东西,更多的是

自然,也很古老。

丹:除了纽约市。

Vanessa:是的,除了纽约有
很多很酷的东西。

丹:如你所知,我是纽约的忠实粉丝

这只是-
Vanessa:这是一个很酷的地方。

丹:……这是一种野生动物。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:有一些关于纽约市的名言,
就像,“住在这里会

很疯狂,离开会很疯狂。”

这是完美的。

瓦内萨:哦,我听到另一句话
说:“纽约的乐趣是两倍,但它

的价格是它的三倍。”

所以它真的很有趣,但它更贵。

丹:这也是真的。

瓦内萨:特别是如果你住在那里。

好吧,我的第三个也是最后一个位置是,你能
猜到吗?

丹:我不记得了。

瓦内萨:夏威夷。

丹:哦,我以前看过你的名单,但我不
记得了。

瓦内萨:嗯,我感觉就像夏威夷,它
在美国,但它不是。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:它很远,但
它仍然是美国的一部分,

去夏威夷旅行真是不可思议。

丹:这有点像作弊,就像
“我在美国”。

凡妮莎:而且它离美国太远了。
丹:但就像,“这不是美国,

来吧。”

瓦内萨:是的,那会很酷。

我很好奇,如果你曾经去过夏威夷
,你会推荐它。

我知道你父母计划
明年五月去那里。

丹:是的,得到这个,我妈妈就像,
“我预订了这些额外的房间,以防

有人想加入。”

她冲我们使眼色。

Vanessa:他们走的时候我们会有一个两个月大的婴儿

也许我们会去夏威夷,我不知道。

有点快了,我想。

丹:我是说,“是的——
瓦内萨:我们会通知你的。

丹:……我们走吧。”

你会发现的。

Vanessa:我认为去夏威夷真的很酷
,只是为了看火山、徒步旅行、

四处走动和水肺潜水,它是
如此不同。

丹:这就是问题所在。

努力做我们想做的一切。

但如果我的父母在那里,他们可以
看孩子。

Vanessa:他们可以照看我们的孩子,所以我们
要打发他们的假期,让他们

照看我们的孩子——
Dan:是的。

是的。

Vanessa:……我们去玩的时候?

丹:假期的破坏者。

Vanessa:听起来不错,所以我很好奇
你,你

想去美国哪些地方? 或者也许
你已经去过你想

回到的地方。

让我们知道。

让我们继续下一个话题。

下一个话题是食物。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:我想知道,
你最喜欢的食物是什么,特别是在家做饭

丹:在家做饭?

好吧-
Vanessa:嗯-嗯(肯定)。

不是吃的,不是别人做的,
而是我们自己在家做饭的。

丹:是的,通常我会选择大宗商品。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:不是散装物品,散装饭菜。

我可以得到几天,几天
,几天的东西。

瓦内萨:或者你可以把它放在冰箱里,
然后再吃下一周。

丹:我认为这是一种非常男性化的
思考方式。

你必须制造大量并使其持久。

Vanessa:啊,实用的烹饪。

丹:是的。

虽然,我觉得你有点像。

瓦内萨:我不喜欢每天都做新的饭菜

丹:是的。

Vanessa:如果我们在冰箱
里放了前一周做的汤,那就太好了,

节省一些时间。

丹:当然,是的。

我喜欢做的第一件事,我想我们
有同一个-

Vanessa:哦,是吗?

丹:……是辣椒。

瓦内萨:哦,是的。

丹:是的,我们都喜欢做辣椒。

瓦内萨:是的,在其他国家有人称这种辣椒
酱,但在美国,

我们只说“辣椒”。

丹:嗯-嗯(肯定)。

通常我做辣椒,所以我的意思是,它
很容易做,你只需将一些牛肉磨碎,

然后你切碎一堆蔬菜,加入一
吨香料,把它扔进锅里

煮沸,就完成了 .

瓦内萨:是的。

是的,这很棒。

它变得更好,因为它
在几天内将这些味道融合在一起。

丹:是的。

然后你扔一些奶酪,酸奶油
,一些谷物,一些大米什么的。

是的,它总是很令人满意,它
让我想起了秋天和冬天。

这是一顿非常美味、舒适的饭菜。

瓦内萨:是的。

热点提示,不要将它放在柜台上
三天,然后再尝试食用。

吃完后,它应该总是放在冰箱里

丹:谁干的?

凡妮莎:丹在大学里就是这么做的——
丹:哦。

瓦内萨:……然后生病了。

丹:我没有把它放在柜台上,我
室友把辣椒放在外面了。

瓦内萨:哦,你刚刚吃了吗?

丹:是的,他把锅放在外面了。

就像
,这就是这里的大学生活,大概已经一周了,

他整天把它放在柜台上,他
没有告诉我——

Vanessa:不是个好主意。

丹:……然后那天晚上我去吃了它,
然后我真的病了。

Vanessa:但你还是喜欢辣椒,所以它没有——
Dan:但我还是喜欢辣椒。

Vanessa:……玷污了你对辣椒的看法。

丹:大概有一年吧。

瓦内萨:真的吗?

丹:是的。

是的。

Vanessa:我觉得我们特别想——
Dan:TMI?

Vanessa:……考虑这些类型的
食物,因为这里越来越冷了,所以

做很多温暖、丰盛的食物,而
不是在七月——

Dan:是的。

Vanessa:……我们不做辣椒,因为
它太辣了。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:你做其他新鲜的东西。

丹:我很难做夏天的食物,因为
我喜欢热食。

瓦内萨:啊,像汤之类的。

丹:虽然,当我们住在韩国的时候,
我想,他们没有

在夏天吃超级热的东西吗?

Vanessa:我觉得辣或辣,是

吗?

而且,“是的,这很健康。”

这是一个非常韩国的事情。

他们必须勤奋。

瓦内萨:哇。

那么,你最喜欢的其他
食物是什么?

你说的是辣椒。

我们在第一个。

丹:第二个是炸玉米饼。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:我想我有墨西哥菜,
虽然我不认为辣椒是墨西哥

菜,但你说辣椒肉酱,所以-
瓦内萨:也许吧。

是的。

丹:……我不知道。

也许是墨西哥的灵感。

瓦内萨:是的。

你喜欢做什么样的炸玉米饼,因为
有很多不同的类型-

丹:碎牛肉,再一次,只是所有的香料
,这是一种很容易做的东西

,然后你可以堆各种各样的
配料 ,你可以在上面放上莎莎酱。

是的,只是很好吃。

瓦内萨:我喜欢你做鱼卷。

丹:是的,鱼炸玉米饼也很好吃。

瓦内萨:有时丹做鱼卷饼,
或者有时我也做,我们会买一些

像鳕鱼或罗非鱼这样的白鱼
,然后把它烤成面包,然后烤好,

然后你会混合一些卷心菜沙拉
在上面放一些香料,

然后把它和鱼一起放在玉米饼上,
还有那种辣卷心菜,也许

是鳄梨片。

丹:是的,还有蛋黄酱。

瓦内萨:是的,一些蛋黄酱,也许是一些-
丹:辣蛋黄酱。

Vanessa:… pico de gallo,上面放一些莎莎酱
,这也很棒。

我们在夏天做了很多,因为
那是一种新鲜的东西。

Dan:是的,说到鱼——
Vanessa:是吗?

丹:……我的第三个是鲑鱼。

瓦内萨:哦,你喜欢怎么做鲑鱼?

丹:嗯,我认为你可以用
很多不同的方法来制作它,但只要把它

和一些东西一起扔进烤箱……就像最近我们一直在添加
柠檬片和莳萝,并保持

基本状态。

Vanessa:有时我们放-
Dan:哦,还有黄油。

瓦内萨:哦,黄油。

当然,黄油。

丹:这很重要。

凡妮莎:有时我们
用酱油和芝麻油做相反的事情,有点更多-

丹:你那样做。

Vanessa:……亚洲风格。

丹:是的。

凡妮莎:这也很适合搭配米饭
或某种蔬菜。

丹:我做的比较欧式。

Vanessa:是的,我认为
鲑鱼不会出错。

丹:是的,但这只是一顿非常健康的饭菜,吃起来很饱
,很充实。

Vanessa:是的,我认为你的答案
比我的要多样化得多。

丹:哦,是吗?

瓦内萨:因为我要说汤,
汤,汤。

丹:哦。

Vanessa:我认为,尤其是现在,因为
这是冬天的乞讨,那些

是我们喜欢吃的东西。

但最近,我做了很多
南瓜汤,它是一种南瓜,

你只需把它去皮,然后把它切碎,
然后用小茴香、辣椒粉

和椰奶蒸一下, 和红辣椒-
丹:开胃菜不错。

Vanessa:……你也可以蘸一些
面包混合在一起,因为你

必须混合它。

这真的很棒。

感觉有点清洁,特别是如果
你吃过 -

丹:对我来说还不够饱。

瓦内萨:有时候和别的东西在一起很不错

丹:我的生活中需要一些肉。

瓦内萨:典型的答案,对吧?

我认为我们还做了一个非常棒的,它
叫意大利蔬菜汤,但我不

知道它是否真的是意大利的,我不知道
为什么它被认为是意大利的。

丹:可能是意大利裔美国人。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:美国人所说的一切都是意大利人,
我敢打赌,每个意大利人都会说,

“那不是意大利人。”

Vanessa:是的,那个-
Dan:“这是什么?”

Vanessa:那不是—— Dan:那是
意大利人吗?

Vanessa:……意大利口音,不过
没关系。

丹:Zut alors。

Vanessa: 那是-
Dan: 哦,那是法语。

瓦内萨:是的,当然不是意大利人。

虽然当我们做意大利蔬菜
汤的时候,基本上你能想象到的每一种蔬菜都

混合在一个锅里,甚至还有一些西红柿
、卷心菜,以及所有的东西,辣椒,

所有的东西混合在一起,还有一些碎
牛肉。

所以它有一种丰盛的牛肉味,
但它也有很多蔬菜,所以

感觉很健康,而且里面有一些很好的面包
可以蘸进去。

丹:非常好。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:虽然,我会说你可能
从这次谈话中看出我们不是

厨师。

Vanessa:不。

Dan:我们不会经常准备好饭菜

瓦内萨:或者是一些花哨的东西。

丹:它们很好吃,但它们不是……
它们没有,你知道的,什么是真空低温烹调法

,什么的。

瓦内萨:哦,这真的很令人兴奋。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:嗯-
丹:虽然我确实做过意大利调味饭,但那

真的很棒。

瓦内萨:哦,是的。

你做了很多意大利饭。

丹:我做了一些非常好的意大利烩饭,
我觉得这需要很多工作,这

很有趣。

Vanessa:我认为它需要特别
注意细节,我不会那样做。

丹:你知道,你用柠檬皮,任何时候
你用柠檬皮,我觉得你可能会

越界到厨师领域。

瓦内萨:哦,好吧。

好吧,你已经进入厨师
领域几次了。

我显然站在另一边,只是高兴地
吃你做的任何东西。

但我很好奇你,
你最喜欢在家吃的食物是什么?

你最喜欢在家做哪些食物

也许它来自你的
国家,或者它只是

你喜欢做的东西,比如吐司,简单的东西。

让我们知道。

丹:吐司。

瓦内萨:是的。

好了,我们进入下一个话题。

下一个话题是住房。

我希望你有远大的梦想,如果你能拥有
你梦想中的家,它会有哪三个特点

假设这是一个梦想的家,这是理想主义的,
这是不现实的。

丹:这可能不会发生
在我们身上。

瓦内萨:不,但这只是一个梦。

每个人都可以梦想,对吧?

丹:是的。

Vanessa:你最想拥有什么?

丹:宫殿。

一座城堡。

Vanessa:希望你能雇一些人
来清理它。

丹:好吧,不是真的。

那么家的特点呢?

Vanessa:是的,
如果您可以梦想并建造

自己的家,您希望拥有哪三个功能?

丹:好的。

好吧,首先,我想要
客厅,我不知道在其他国家是不是很普遍

Vanessa:是的,一个你有沙发
,也许还有电视的地方。

丹:这是你们聚会的地方
,有沙发的地方,还有和朋友一起拜访的地方

我希望这个房间很大,并且
有一个非常大的窗户。

瓦内萨:我们是在谈论足球场的大小
,还是说

是普通足球场的两倍?

丹:我说的是足球场很大。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:不,不是。

只是大。

正如他们在行业中所说的那样,大型天花板,拱形天花板

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:还有一个很大的窗户。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:或者大窗户。

瓦内萨:我也说过同样的话。

我想要一间带大窗户的主房间。

丹:是的,但还有更多。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:它需要一个很棒的视野,一个令人难以置信的
视野。

瓦内萨:哦,你觉得什么风景好?

理想的观点是什么?

丹:我真的很喜欢看海,
那太好了。

我不太喜欢我住在美国东
海岸的地方,海滩

对我来说都是一样的。

他们不是我最喜欢的。

这将是在地中海,在一个大
悬崖上。

Vanessa:哦,所以不会是-
Dan:是的,悬崖边的家。

Vanessa:……在美国,好吧。

丹:是的,它不会在美国,对不起
美国。

好吧,也许在美国的某个地方。我不
知道。

Vanessa:可能是太平洋西北地区,你
从来没有去过那里。

你不知道。

丹:可能是太平洋西北部,也许
这就是我的海景。

瓦内萨:是的,所以你想要海景?

丹:真的很高。

俯视我的王国。

瓦内萨:所以你也需要成为国王?

丹:在这种情况下,我必须成为国王。

Vanessa:这有点过分了。

丹:是的,一个非常大的、开阔的海景。

记住,这是在做梦。

瓦内萨:这是在做梦。

好吧,继续做梦。

你还想要什么?

丹:好的,所以它非常开放,如此
靠近将是一个非常史诗般的开放式厨房。

瓦内萨:哦,这么开放你的意思是它
与生活空间相连?

丹:是的,我认为这在
当今建筑界很流行。

瓦内萨:嗯-嗯(肯定)。

丹:是的,对客厅很开放。

Vanessa:所以当你做饭的时候-
Dan:至少-

Vanessa:……你仍然可以和你的客人说话。

丹:是的,至少厨房的一部分
是可见的。

Vanessa:是的,所以目前,我们的
厨房对客厅开放。

丹:是的,我们现在有了。

Vanessa:我们没有史诗般的巨人——
Dan:除了风景。

Vanessa:……客厅可以看到
地中海。

丹:还有大厨房。

Vanessa:是的,但我们有一个开放空间,
所以有点像一个房间。

我们的厨房与我们的起居空间相连,
所以当我们的客人、朋友、

家人或孩子在起居空间
、起居室中时,我们可以看到他们

并进行互动。

所以这种布局很流行,
至少在较新的房子里,或者当人们在改造

他们的房子时,他们有点在寻找
这种开放式布局,就是所谓的。

丹:是的,这叫做开放式平面图。

Vanessa:开放式平面图,就是这个词。

是的。

那么在这个神奇的房子里还有什么你想要的
吗?

丹:是的,我的宫殿里还有一件事。

瓦内萨:好的,在你的王国。

丹:在我的王国。

所以会有一个游戏室,因为我非常喜欢
游戏。

Vanessa:好的,什么样的游戏?

丹:各种游戏。

所以我们实际上租了一个
非常相似的地方。

瓦内萨:哦,就像你的祖父母租
了那栋海滨别墅一样。

丹:其实是我奶奶租的。

那是一座海滨别墅,所以它就像
四层房子。

瓦内萨:这太疯狂了。

丹:太棒了。

它被称为The Ritz-
Vanessa:当然。

丹:……这就像一个花哨的东西。

所以这栋楼的最顶层
就是这个巨大的游戏室。

他们有一张台球桌,他们有一个-
Vanessa:一个乒乓球。

丹:哦,那是……乒乓球台在
别的地方。

但在皇宫里,乒乓球台会
在同一个房间里。

瓦内萨:所以乒乓球、桌上足球、台球。

丹:其他游戏也是如此,国际象棋,是的。

瓦内萨:哦,棋盘游戏柜。

丹:会有各种各样的游戏。

会有一台带视频游戏的电视,
到处都很有趣。

Vanessa:好的,所以你想要一个大房间?

丹:然后我不得不把它锁起来,所以我
没有进去,因为我会把所有的时间都

花在里面。

Vanessa:好的,所以你必须
向其中一个人索取钥匙?

丹:你。

瓦内萨:从我这里?

好的。

丹:“看门人,让我进游戏室。”

Vanessa:很抱歉,但在我梦想中的家中——

Dan:没有游戏室?

Vanessa:……没有游戏室,虽然
这是个有趣的主意。

这是个好主意。

丹:把它留给度假屋?

瓦内萨:是的,如果你的祖父母
租了一个星期的房子并邀请

全家人一起去就好了。

丹:是的,它非常适合。

瓦内萨:这是一件好事,但
也许不在我永远的房子里。

丹:好的,你永远梦想的家是
什么样的?

瓦内萨:嗯,我确实说过我想要一个
有大窗户的主房间。

我认为那真的很棒。

所以我们有一些-
丹:但你的理想观点是什么?

瓦内萨:我真的没说。

我觉得它不一定是海滩,
也许不是别人的房子,

但它可能是山,那
会很好。

丹:当然。

Vanessa:但我也喜欢-
Dan:任何风景如画的风景。

Vanessa:……我不喜欢被孤立,
所以如果你有美丽的山景,

那意味着你可能住在
远离所有人的山中间。

丹:是真的。

凡妮莎:所以我不介意景色不
完美,但我只想有一个

有很多光线的大窗户,那真的很棒。

我说的另一件事更
实用一些,那就是一个巨大的工作室,

有不同的墙壁,我可以在上面拍摄。

Dan:对于 Fearless Fluency
Club 来说非常实用。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:哦,等等,还有 YouTube。

瓦内萨:是的。

所以,当然,对于无畏的流利俱乐部,
还有 YouTube,有不同的地点

可以让我轻松拍摄。

还有我们经常拍视频的房间,在
这里,还可以。

它不是特别小,但我有一个图像

丹:它非常小。

Vanessa:… 四个不同的墙,有不同的
背景和不同的东西,我可以

移动灯光,轻松地有不同的拍摄地点
,我认为那真的很酷。

所以我从小开始,我们有这个房间,
然后也许有一天会在我梦想中的家中。

丹:是的,这比我们的其他房子好多了

瓦内萨:哦,是的,我们以前住
在公寓里。

丹:她过去常常在壁橱里拍摄。

Vanessa:它不是壁橱,但它真的
很小。

丹:两个壁橱合在一起。

瓦内萨:是的,就像一个三角形的小
房间。

丹:很小。

Vanessa:但是-
Dan:嘿,我们成功了。

瓦内萨:是的,它奏效了。

我们让它工作。

我想要的另一个功能是,
在梦想中的家中,是屋顶平台。

丹:那很酷。

Vanessa:是的,有一些楼梯,然后是一个
小屋顶-

Dan:这是 Vanessa 的冒险家。

Vanessa:……在上面,这样你就可以到处往下看

丹:但那也在我家。

瓦内萨:哦,在你家吗?

哦,很好。

也许我们可以一起拥有一所房子。

晚上你也可以躺在那里
看星星。

我认为那会
很酷- 丹:是的,那会很整洁。

Vanessa:……这样你就有了一个完美的
观星地点。

丹:我不知道为什么更多的房子没有
这个。

瓦内萨:是的,我们应该在
我们的房子顶部放一个甲板。

丹:是的,为什么不呢?

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:也许外面的一些建筑师是有
原因的。

“嗯,实际上这对结构完整性不利。”

Vanessa:我认为人们
不像我们那样重视观星。

丹:也许吧。

Vanessa:在晚上看星星真的很酷
,尤其是如果你……如果你

只是从屋顶甲板上看到完美的景色。

丹:你栖息在高处。

瓦内萨:是的,那真的很酷。

嗯,做梦真好。

谢谢你陪我做梦。

丹:是的。

哦,梦想结束了。

瓦内萨:是的。

我很好奇你,如果你能拥有你
梦想中的家,你希望

那个家有什么特点?

好了,我们进入下一个话题。

下一个主题是自然。

丹:自然。

Vanessa:我想知道
关于动物或自然的两个很酷的事实是什么?

丹:你想知道两个事实?

Vanessa:是的,所以在此之前我们做了一些研究
,因为我们喜欢看动物

纪录片。

丹:好的,我的第一个事实背后有一个
故事。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:有一次我和妈妈说话,我不
记得这是怎么发生的,但我们在

谈论海龟。

我不知道我们为什么要谈论
乌龟,但她说,“你知道

乌龟用屁股呼吸吗?”

我妈是这么说的。

而我们,几天来,我们就像,“妈妈,乌龟……
你从哪里听到的?

那是这样 -
Vanessa:你还是个孩子吗?

Dan:就像,不,我年纪大了

。Vanessa:好的。

丹:我猜可能是个十几岁的孩子。

瓦妮莎:好吧。

丹:但是我们,我和我的兄弟姐妹,我们都
只是取笑她。

我们就像,“妈妈,你只是编造的。

你到底是从

哪里听到的 它们正在冬眠。

我查了一下以验证,因为我记得
听说那是真的。

所以在冬天,很明显,它们真的很冷
,它们生活在水下。

所以就像真的很冷,几乎快结冰了,
而且 他们不能用肺。

所以他们基本上把水吸到屁股上
,水给他们氧气,因此——

Vanessa:哦,为什么?

丹:……
冬天冬眠的时候,他们用屁股呼吸 .

Vanessa: 哇,你妈妈是对的。

Dan: 所以我妈妈是对的,但我们只是……
当她说这话时我们不相信她。

Vanessa: 我的意思是,这真的很奇怪,所以
你为什么要相信她 ?

丹:是的。

而且,这对她来说很随意。

她说,“乌龟不是
用屁股呼吸吗?”

瓦内萨:我们说,“妈妈,你只是
编造的。

不可能。”

Dan:但这是真的。

Vanessa:但这是真的。

Dan:所以这是专门生活
在水中的

海龟?不是箱龟,或者那些类型的东西。

Vanessa:不。

是的,是海龟,但不是海洋 乌龟也是。

丹:好的,所以只是生活在淡水中的海龟-

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:……并且生活在水中?

瓦内萨:哦,好吧。

丹:这是一个非常……是的,告诉你的 朋友

。Vanessa:哦

。Dan:乌龟通过屁股呼吸

。Vanessa:在你了解第二个事实之前,
我要分享一个我的

-Dan:好的

。Vanessa:……蝴蝶
和毛毛虫真是太神奇了 .

我们最近-
Dan:我们现在就像一部自然纪录片

。Vanessa:嗯,我加入这个是因为-
Dan:我们应该像 David Attenborough 那样说话吗?

Vanessa:我对动物感到非常书呆子

。Dan:“美丽的蝴蝶。”

瓦内萨:是的,如果你看过
BBC 的自然纪录片,大卫·阿滕伯勒

是主要评论员之一。十多年来,

他一直是自然纪录片的主角。
,也许三个十年

,七十年代。

所以我们是他和他的作品的忠实粉丝,但
我把这个话题包括在内是因为我们

对动物和自然很感兴趣,喜欢那些东西
,我认为谈论起来会很有趣。

丹:当然。

Vanessa:嗯,几个月前,我们在后院发现了
四只帝王蝶毛毛虫

而且它们看起来不太好,
它们看起来需要一点帮助,所以

我们给了它们一些乳草叶,这
是帝王蝶吃的,或者帝王毛虫

吃的,我们把它们放在这个……我们 有一个
蝴蝶网,它就像一个

可以种植蝴蝶的小容器。

丹:成长和释放。

瓦内萨:是的。

所以我们把毛毛虫放进去,给了
它们很多叶子,它们就变成了

茧。

然后他们中的两个死了,但是他们中的两个变成了
蝴蝶,这真的很神奇,所以

这激发了我更多地
了解它的兴趣。

我们都知道毛毛虫会变成蝴蝶,
但是你知道毛毛虫在

结茧时会液化它的
身体。

就像茧里的汤,它
在消化,在茧里吃自己

,它的DNA只是混合在一起
,变成了一只蝴蝶。

丹:是的,所以这不像是给
自己裹上毯子。

Vanessa:不。

Dan:因为-
Vanessa:这太疯狂了。

丹:……通常当我想到茧的时候,
你会认为毛毛虫

会在自己周围旋转一些东西,但不,它实际上是
在内部液化它的身体,然后

变成,我相信专业术语
是蛹。

凡妮莎:一只蛹。

是的,所以当它真正
结茧时,我们看到了这种情况,茧

从毛毛虫的身体中弹出,
皮肤和头部弹出,它们

掉到地上,因为-
Dan:有点像 一个万圣节的故事。

瓦内萨:是的。

如果你仔细想想,这太可怕了。

丹:快到万圣节了。

凡妮莎:茧里面是蝴蝶的液化
汤。

丹:它的身体液化了,
变成了一个可怕的生物。

凡妮莎:大自然是怎样的——
丹:一只蝴蝶。

瓦内萨:……你觉得这行得通吗?

但确实如此,太神奇了。

哇。

所以,这是我关于自然的第一个很酷的事实。

丹:很酷的自然类。

瓦内萨:是的。

毛毛虫汤。

丹:好的。

我的第二个是关于高贵的信天翁。

凡妮莎:信天翁太酷了。

丹:虽然如果你说某物是信天翁,
那意味着它是一件坏事,或者像

一个负担。

这就像一句谚语。

Vanessa:啊,这有点像老式的
表达方式。

但是-
丹:是的。

但无论如何,我的
事实是—— Vanessa:……它是一只鸟。

丹:……信天翁的翼展
是所有鸟类中最长的。

你知道吗?

几乎 12 英尺长,或 3.2 米。

瓦内萨:三米?

丹:类似的东西。

瓦内萨:三米这么长,也就是说,
从一个机翼的

尖端到另一个机翼的尖端是三米,十二英尺。

丹:是的,它是一只非常大的鸟。

瓦内萨:一只鸟。

丹:实际上,如果你看过任何大卫·
阿滕伯勒的纪录片——

Vanessa:或者其他人。

丹:……我们看过信天翁,
它需要跑很长时间

才能飞,因为它的翅膀太大了-
瓦内萨:就像一架巨大的飞机,它需要

很多跑道才能起飞。

丹:但是还有很多其他的动物。

试图抓住他们的纪录片是
什么?

瓦内萨:是婴儿。

丹:哦,鲨鱼。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:因为它们会坠入水中
,被鲨鱼吃掉。

Vanessa:当婴儿刚开始
学习飞行时,他们中的很多人都会坠入水中

,我认为他们每年都在同一时间飞行
,所以鲨鱼聚集在那里-

Dan:他们在等待婴儿。

凡妮莎:……当婴儿们
学习飞行时,如果他们第一次尝试失败,就是

这样。

丹:是的,他们做不到。

Vanessa:无论如何,那是纪录片中非常悲伤的
部分。

丹:但是一旦它们真正
飞到空中,信天翁可以在空中停留长达

10,000 英里,这是很多公里。

瓦内萨:6000、7000 公里?

丹:是的,我不太擅长
其他人都使用的那些转换。

Vanessa:是的,我记得你还告诉
我他们可以飞——

Dan:一天。

Vanessa:……一整天只有一个 [听不清
00:47:30]。

丹:只是拍打翅膀。

凡妮莎:如果他们有合适的风,因为
他们会进入大海。

丹:是的,它需要良好的风。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:因为他们只是利用风来
上下反弹。

瓦内萨:所以他们每天只需要扇动一次翅膀
,如果风很大的话。

丹:那将是一个非常孤独的存在,只是
飞过海洋。

凡妮莎:但说到孤独,他们也
终生相伴。

丹:那很寂寞吗?

瓦内萨:嗯,不,这太疯狂了,因为它们……

大多数鸟都不是那样的,所以它们
独自到海里去捕猎,然后

每年一次他们回到同一个地方,
他们希望他们的丈夫或 妻子,他们的

伴侣,也幸存了下来。

丹:然后他们很快就欺骗了他们。

瓦内萨:嗯,他们不是一夫一妻制的。

丹:他们有经常
回来的伴侣,但他们也会去和

其他鸟调情。

凡妮莎:其他鸟也一样,但
它们一生都有同一个主要伴侣,

一年只见一次,但它们
在同一地点找到彼此……在同

一块岩石上,在同一块土地上,每 …
信天翁真的很酷。

丹: [串音 00:48:34] 亲吻。

瓦内萨:是的。

是的,你应该看看一些关于
信天翁的视频,它们真的很酷。

好吧,我的另一个很酷的事实 -
丹:你最后的事实是什么?

Vanessa:……我最后一个很酷的事实是关于一只
螳螂虾。

丹:螳螂虾。

Vanessa:我们认为虾
是我们吃的东西,但螳螂虾真的

不一样。

我在这里给你看一张照片。

螳螂虾是一种疯狂的动物。

它具有包括人类在内的任何动物的最佳视觉感官

我查了一下,以确保我能
正确解释它。

人类的眼睛里有三个光感受器。

你觉得螳螂虾有几只?

Dan:

10。Vanessa:12 到 16。

所以这意味着他们可以看到红外线,他们
可以看到紫外线,他们可以看到

通过光谱发出的所有可能的东西。

这太疯狂了。

丹:基本上感谢上帝,它并不大,而且
生活在陆地上,因为它会杀死我们。

Vanessa:是的,这个而且它也可以穿透,
它有——

Dan:看看它的手是这样的。

瓦内萨:是的,他们就是这样的。

它可以穿透
1厘米厚的防弹玻璃。

所以在水族箱里养一只螳螂虾几乎是不可能的,
因为——

丹:因为它会打破玻璃。

Vanessa:……它们好强……只是
一只虾,它们很小,但它可以

穿透防弹玻璃,而且大多数水族箱
都没有防弹玻璃,比这还少

丹:为什么不呢?

Vanessa:但是它会穿透玻璃
然后出去,所以他们可以看到一切,

他们也可以穿透玻璃,这
绝对是疯狂的。

有很多非常酷的视频——
Dan:它们看起来也很酷。

Vanessa:是的,颜色,还有他们的大眼睛。

丹:是的,很漂亮。

你也应该分享关于它的漫画。

在美国有一部流行的漫画
叫做燕麦片。

Vanessa:这是一个网站。

丹:是的,它是一个网站。

他们有一个关于螳螂虾的完整故事

Vanessa:是的,YouTube 上也有一段很棒的
视频,关于螳螂虾。

丹:关于它?

哦。

凡妮莎:我想是……那个
对动物做了一些有趣的事情的人,

就像,“螳螂虾就是这样做的。”

丹:哦,泽弗兰克。

瓦内萨:泽弗兰克,是的。

丹:查查 zefrank 会笑得很开心。

Vanessa:只要在 YouTube 上查找螳螂虾,
你会发现很多很棒的东西,因为这些

动物很酷。

好吧,我们有机会成为书呆子,让我们
继续下一个话题,我想

为你知道,你知道任何很酷的动物事实吗?

丹:是的。

Vanessa:好吧,我们进入下一个话题。

下一个话题是假期。

现在是 11 月底,这
是美国的感恩节时间,所以我想

知道,根据你的经验,美国的感恩节
是什么样的?

丹:在美国,这几乎
就是美国的假期,对吧?

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:或者加拿大人,我想。

Vanessa:加拿大也有感恩节。

丹:所以感恩节,我们做的首要事情
就是吃东西。

瓦内萨:好的,下一个话题。

丹:结束。

瓦内萨:哦,是的,这几乎都是关于
食物的。

丹:这真的都是关于食物的,尤其是
火鸡。

瓦内萨:那跟我们说说感恩节的食物吧。

丹:几乎每个人都会得到一只火鸡。

Vanessa:一只大而完整的火鸡。

丹:是的,11 月份美国的火鸡销量一定会出现大幅飙升。

凡妮莎:哦,是的。

丹:但是每个人都会得到一只火鸡,你
把整只火鸡都煮熟,然后你得到肉汁,然后

把它倒在上面,还有一种叫做
馅料的东西,我猜是这种面包布丁之

类的东西。

瓦内萨:是的,嗯,你把它放在
火鸡里,通常你在火鸡里煮一些调味料

,柠檬,面包,以及所有不同
类型的东西。

丹:有些人可能会说馅料
比火鸡好。

瓦内萨:是的,有时是这样。

丹:我就是那些人中的一员-
瓦内萨:东西很棒。

丹:……我只是吃馅。

Vanessa:里面真的充满了火鸡汁,
所以有点像裹了面包屑的混合物,我会

试着分享一张照片,但是馅料,火鸡。

丹:所以假期真的只是
围绕着吃饭,然后你邀请

很多家人过来。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:我发现,通常一个家庭成员会
接待很多家庭。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:有时也是朋友,但就像
你父亲在过去几年里一直在做朋友

一样。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:但传统上,这只是家庭。

Vanessa:是的,我觉得这绝对是
一个家庭假期,

你和朋友道别,无论你
从哪里来,回家,如果你离父母很远

,也许你会回家过
感恩节。 他们的家,或者他们会

来拜访你。

这是
感恩节期间家人团聚的时候。

丹:是的。

如果你是一个非常亲密的家庭,那么
你总是会说出你所感激的。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:所以每年我的家人都会
围着桌子说一些他们感谢

的话。

通常当我还是个孩子的时候,我记得
就像 -

Vanessa:“我不想这样做。”

丹:“我不想要……”但现在我想,“我要
感谢我家的每一个人和一切

。太美了。”

年纪大了,多一点感伤

瓦内萨:是的。

好吧,回到食物,我们现在有点在
谈论传统,但是回到

食物,典型的东西是一只大火鸡
鸟,一只完整的鸟,你不只是

火鸡片,你有 完整的鸟,然后
你把它切碎。

丹:是的。

Vanessa:然后是馅,绿豆
常见的有肉汁、土豆泥、

红薯,在美国南部,
红薯砂锅真的很大。

这太疯狂了——
丹:上面放着红糖。

Vanessa:……
甜得离谱,因为它是红薯,它是橙色的,

自然就已经很甜了,然后是红糖,
然后——

Dan:棉花糖,对吧?

Vanessa:……棉花糖,晚餐。

丹:哦,我忘了。

Vanessa:疯了,但是——
Dan:我总是吃这么多,因为

它太甜了。

瓦内萨:真的很丰富,但那
是南方的东西,而且你也总是有

蔓越莓酱。

丹:对。

瓦内萨:这是……蔓越莓是一种非常
酸的浆果,它很酸,很酸,

但是当你把它和很多糖混合在一起时,它就
很棒了。

丹:你需要土豆泥。

瓦内萨:是的,蔓越莓、
土豆泥和火鸡,它们是完美的

组合。

那种带有火鸡土豆泥的酸味
,混合

在一起真的很棒。

丹:是的,关键是要吃得
太多,到最后几乎不能

动弹。

Vanessa:嗯,他们确实说火鸡,
鸟,火鸡肉,有某种-

Dan:色氨酸。

瓦内萨:就是这么叫的吗?

丹:我想是的。

Vanessa:里面有那种酶。

不是酵素吗?

荷尔蒙,或者——
丹:化学?

凡妮莎:肉里有一些天然的
东西让你感到困倦,所以在感恩节

那真的是我们吃火鸡的唯一时间之一
,所以因为我们吃了这么多火鸡,

所以在
感恩节大餐后说每个人都崩溃是一种刻板印象 在

沙发上看足球。

所以这是一种传统。

丹:是的,足球可能是其中最美国化的
方面。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:他们在其他国家并不真正踢足球
,是吗?

瓦内萨:嗯,这是美式足球。

丹:我的意思是,不是……是的,不是——
瓦内萨:美式足球。

丹:……真正的足球,就像你知道的那样,不是
踢球。

瓦内萨:足球。

丹:就像足球一样,我们扔球,
我们互相铲球,等等。

瓦内萨:是的,所以有……
感恩节总会有一场足球比赛,一场美式橄榄球比赛,

所以这就是为什么一些与感恩节相关的说法
是三个 F,家庭,食物,足球。

当我长大的时候,我的家人会吃
感恩节,然后我们经常

一起去客厅看足球,
尽管我们不是足球迷。

这有点——
丹:这只是传统。

瓦内萨:……你做什么。

所以我们会说我们所感谢的,
然后——

丹:这是美国的宗教。

瓦内萨:……看足球,那
只是一种家庭时光。

我不知道。

你们有没有做过什么?

有时我们在后院扔足球。

丹:是的,几年后我们会扔
足球。

我们家没看那么多足球。

Vanessa:是的-
Dan:我们有时会,就像超级碗一样,仅此而已

瓦内萨:是的。

是的,所以我很好奇,对你来说,在你的国家,
你有没有真正

以食物为中心的秋季用餐假期?

丹:是的,我们还应该说,我认为
传统上也应该让你吃掉

你种植的所有食物。

Vanessa:是的,但现在大多数人都不是农民

丹:是的,但我认为传统上它确实
有这样的元素,“收获到了。

我们来吃这些美味的食物。

这是一个美好的一年。”

Vanessa:“我们感谢丰收。”

丹:“我们感谢丰收。”

所以也许很多国家都有类似的
东西。

瓦内萨:是的。

好的。

我们进入下一个话题。

下一个主题是放松。

我想知道,如果我感到压力,
你会给我什么建议来帮助我

放松?

丹:如果你感到压力?

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:嗯,我不知道这是否
对每个人都有效,但我发现参加一项运动,

或者做一些需要
集中注意力的活动,真的可以帮助我减轻压力,

比如如果我担心我喜欢的事情
去打篮球,

你唯一的目标就是把球放在篮筐里,
这只是一件非常简单的事情,你正在

使用你的身体,这与
今天很多人的生活方式不同,这是非常

静止的 思考各种各样的
问题,然后看着你的手机,

阅读更多的问题。

一切看起来都是个大问题。

Vanessa:所以如果你出去移动你的身体-
Dan:所以如果你出去移动你的身体-

Vanessa:……在现实世界中,是的。

丹:是的,可能只是一次远足,一次
远足之类的。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:但是,是的,我喜欢去打篮球,
或者打曲棍球,我也喜欢这样

做,只是打冰球,这
很有趣。

Vanessa:某种有组织的活动。

丹:是的。

Vanessa:比如投篮、打曲棍球——
Dan:甚至不需要和人在一起,

只要练习,做一些这样的例行公事

Vanessa:我说过类似的话,
只是去散步,因为那

不一定是有组织的,但有时会
离开我所在的地方,

离开房子,离开我
感到压力的地方 ,只是改变位置,

并拥有开阔的天空 -
丹:刚到外面。

Vanessa:……呼吸一些凉爽的空气,或者可能
是真正的热空气,这

取决于一年中的什么时候。

丹:是的,这取决于你
住在哪里。

外面可能有点太热或
太冷。

瓦内萨:但是,
让自己离开,移动,散散步真是太好了。

甚至说:“好吧,我要走五
分钟,我要转身

走五分钟回来。”

有时10分钟可以产生很大的不同。

至少它可以帮助我感到更放松,
或者至少对我的压力更现实。

丹:当然。

Vanessa:如果某事让我感到压力,
也许我真的不应该

为此感到压力,所以散步可以帮助我重新定位
自己。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:想想,“这没什么大不了的,
没关系。

我会解决的。”

丹:好的。

接下来我要做的就是洗个澡。

瓦内萨:哦,好吧。

丹:嗯,我晚上洗个澡,所以我
不知道,我只是发现,对我来说,当我

变得干净时,并不是真的……
就像

洗我的胳膊,洗我的头发,我发现
我的思绪有点飘忽不定,而且温暖而美好

我不知道,对我来说,也许大多数人可能
会说洗澡,但我不是很

喜欢洗澡。

瓦内萨:洗澡,我也听说
当你洗澡的时候,有时候

你最好的想法就会出现,因为你
没有刺激,你周围什么都没有,

你只是在洗澡,所以你的头脑 可以
真的是空白,或者你真的可以

用不同的方式解压。

我也有这种感觉,洗澡的感觉
很好。

丹:是的,洗个热水澡。

最后,睡觉。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:去睡觉,睡得够好。

我的意思是,尤其是现在每个人
都有某种电子设备,

你盯着屏幕看,我认为这并不能
真正帮助你降低压力水平。

Vanessa:不要在凌晨 2:00 观看此视频,
如果是凌晨 2:00 -

Dan:是的,停止观看。

瓦内萨:……关掉它。

丹:去睡觉了。

瓦内萨:你可以在早上看这个。

丹:所以是的,那也是
我最不想做的事情。

减轻生活中的压力,放松身心。

Vanessa:是的,我认为获得良好的睡眠
是一个非常好的秘诀,那是

我写下的秘诀之一。

只是-
丹:所以我们分享一些。

Vanessa:……是的,为了获得更好的睡眠,因为
有时

当我们感到压力时,我觉得我们想责怪我们生活的其他部分,
但是当你看到基本情况时,“我

吃得健康吗

?我喝了足够的水吗? 今天?”

而主要的,“我睡够了吗?”

可能不会,至少在我的情况下,如果我感到
压力或焦虑,很大程度上是因为

我的身体无法处理日常生活中发生的事情
,因为我没有好好对待

自己。

丹:是的。

Vanessa:所以,如果我睡得更好,无论是
持续的睡眠,还是更长的睡眠时间,

这样做都会帮助我减少
白天的压力。

丹:不过是有条件的,有些人
比其他人需要更多或更少的睡眠。

Vanessa:是的,所以我说要
睡得更好。

丹:为了你,睡得更好。

凡妮莎:无论什么对你更好。

但是我提到的一件事,你没有
说,你有点说,但是要

休息一下。

技术突破,我们经常在
我们的关系中使用这个词来表示,“今天我们

不会……我们只是要收起我们的
手机,我们今天不会对

任何电子产品做任何事情 全部。”

这似乎是一件简单易行的
事情,但稍微休息一下感觉很好

,特别是如果这让你感到压力
,或者如果你想

通过看手机来避免处理问题。

我认为很多人使用社交媒体或阅读
文章-

Dan:我认为手机和平板电脑真的很糟糕
,因为它们很容易-

Vanessa:是的,会分心。

丹:……拿起并继续使用。

有一些小游戏和 YouTube,您
现在可能正在使用它们。

瓦内萨:是的。

我发现自己-
丹:所以继续看。

Vanessa:……当我感到压力时,有时
我不想去想它,所以我会

看一段 YouTube 视频,然后 30 分钟
后,我会意识到我仍然感到压力。

丹:10 个 YouTube 视频之后。

瓦内萨:哦,是的。

或者对于这个来说,可能是几个小时
后。

丹:嘿,我有一个额外的小费。

瓦内萨:哦,奖金小费。

好的。

丹:是的,一个额外的小费。

瓦内萨:你的小费是什么?

丹:我并不真正冥想,但我听说
冥想非常适合减压。

Vanessa:我很好奇你们中是否有人尝试过
冥想。

丹:所以我也建议冥想,
但对我来说,我实际上尝试了

一些类似的东西,我数了数我的呼吸。

所以这实际上有助于我
入睡,但很多时候我无法入睡,

因为我在思考这一天并感到
压力。

瓦内萨:你不能关掉你的思想。

丹:所以基本上我听到的想法
是吸气 10 秒钟。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:不不不,吸气五秒钟,
然后呼气十秒钟。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:所以你在数一、二、
三、四、五。

然后,一、二、三、四、五、六、
七、八、九、

10。只考虑你的呼吸。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:你知道,这真的有点把
注意力放在了别的地方,你

在深呼吸,而我们很多人都没有
深呼吸,所以它可以帮助你

更深地吸气并专注于你的呼吸。

瓦内萨:是的,我听说经常
使用电脑或手机的副作用之一

是,当他们研究
正在看屏幕的人时,我们会少眨眼——

丹:什么?

Vanessa:……所以我们的眼睛是睁着的,眼睛
变得有点发红和干燥,我们的呼吸也

加快了。

所以我们有点像-
丹:他们只是很肤浅?

Vanessa:是的,就像……我们只是没有专注,
就像可能会感到有点压力,或者

我们只是没有专注于缓慢和-
Dan:在我们的身体上。

瓦内萨:……放松。

是的。

所以那些长期影响,如果你
每天这样做几个小时,而不

去想它,它会影响你的身体,所以呼吸,
是的,慢慢地,可以帮助你

减轻压力。

丹:给你。

瓦内萨:哇。

丹:这是我最实用的建议。

瓦内萨:额外小费。

所以我很好奇你,你会给出什么建议
来帮助人们减轻

生活中的压力?

感觉更放松?

你打算说什么?

好的。

我们进入下一个话题。

下一个话题是运动和锻炼,所以
我想知道你小时候,

你参加过什么样的运动或活动

丹:伙计,我参加了很多运动。

瓦内萨:是吗?

丹:是的,我认为这显示了
我们成长的特权,我们有这么多机会

尝试这么多不同的事情。

Vanessa:能做那种事真是太幸运了

丹:所以一开始我是从棒球开始的,
但它被称为 t-ball,所以你实际上

把球放在一个发球台上,然后你把球放在
那里,然后你就把它打掉了。

瓦内萨:所以没有人扔球。

丹:是的,我真的很小。

Vanessa:它只是静止的。

丹:我真的记得当教练
开始向我投球时,我有点

害怕球,我不想再打球了。

瓦内萨:这很重要。

丹:是的,我真的很小,所以我停止
踢球,开始踢足球。

瓦内萨:哦,好吧。

丹:还有游泳。

所以你称之为,可能在你的国家踢足球
,但有趣的是,很多很多

孩子在美国踢足球。

Vanessa:是的,我认为这很容易进入,
因为你只是在跑步和

踢球。

丹:当然。

Vanessa:没有设备或专门的
动作——

Dan:是的。

Vanessa:……至少对孩子来说。

丹:但出于某种原因,这不是一项受欢迎的
运动。

Vanessa:或者对于成年人来说,很多成年人不
踢足球。

丹:大人不怎么踢足球,
只有孩子。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:但我踢了大概
六年的足球。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:然后我再也没有玩过它。

是的。

瓦内萨:就像小时候一样。

丹:是的。

所以我这样做了,我做
了一段时间的游泳和体操。

我曾经有一个阶段喜欢做
很多翻转 -

Vanessa:哦,很酷。

丹:……所以我会跳上蹦床
,做后空翻和前空翻。

Vanessa:在一个像体操中心一样的体育馆里

丹:是的,但也在我的后院。

我们有一个蹦床。

瓦内萨:啊,酷。

丹:所以我会那样做,
然后我在我们做旋转之类的地方做花样滑冰。

瓦内萨:我也玩过花样滑冰。

丹:是的。

然后我哥哥说服我参加
一项更有男子气概的运动,曲棍球。

瓦内萨:哦,真可惜,你
可能真的很擅长花样滑冰。

Dan:是的,我没事,但是-
Vanessa:是的。

我认为那是-
丹:…这不是我的真爱-

瓦内萨:像曲棍球?

丹:……那是曲棍球。

瓦内萨:嗯,我很高兴你找到了你的
真爱,曲棍球。

丹:我确实喜欢曲棍球,但我并没有
真正的体型,我有点太小了,

但我仍然很享受打曲棍球的乐趣。

Vanessa:是的,而且你还在打曲棍球。

丹:嗯-嗯(肯定)。

Vanessa:你在我们城市的一支球队中踢球。

丹:这不是我所有的运动-
瓦内萨:我觉得作为一个……你小时候有

很多有组织的运动-
丹:嗯-嗯(肯定的)。

Vanessa:……也许这只是因为
你有一个哥哥,或者只是

因为你想做一些事情,但我觉得对
我来说-

Dan:我认为我父亲也认为这对
我有好处。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:我认为这是对的,
孩子们参加有组织的运动是有好处的。

瓦内萨:当然。

当然。

我觉得我小时候没有那么多团队
运动,就像我们经常在后院玩耍一样

丹:你不也是个胆小的孩子吗?

瓦内萨:我不会说我胆小,但我
不喜欢和其他孩子有身体接触,

所以篮球对我来说真的是身体上的
攻击性。

丹:太粗糙了。

Vanessa:是的,有点太粗鲁了,我
不太喜欢那样。

丹:你应该试试曲棍球。

瓦内萨:这很粗糙。

但是我喜欢游泳,所以我想
游泳可能是我童年的主要运动,

每年夏天我和姐姐
都在游泳队,这

意味着每天,每天两次,我们会去
游泳练习,而我-

丹:瓦内萨是个非常优秀的游泳运动员,她
可以踢我的屁股。

Vanessa:不是字面意思,这是一个比喻性的
表达。

这意味着我比丹会游泳,这
是真的。

丹:是真的。

Vanessa:但这只是意味着我知道这项
技术,如果是 Dan 还是你——

Dan:我就像在挣扎一样。

Vanessa: …如果你知道正确的技术,
你可以有很多耐力,因为你

不会浪费你的能量,所以我觉得我
学会了正确的技术,所以我可以游

得更久,因为我知道正确的技术,
因为 我练习了很多。

所以我们总是会游泳,然后我们会进行
游泳比赛,这被称为游泳比赛

,那是我童年成长过程中有趣的一部分,
是游泳,有点像……这是

一种团队活动,但不是 真的。

你有一个团队,但你仍然是个人。

丹:所以就像综合分数一样,
它是这样运作的吗?

Vanessa:嗯,你会……你
是社区团队的一员,就像你的社区一样,

你的社区就是团队,但是每个
人都有自己的分数。

丹:得分。

Vanessa:所以这是团队的孩子,个人的孩子
,我喜欢这样。

而且它没有身体攻击性。

丹:那会让我很紧张。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:这些个人运动,我感觉
压力太大了。

如果我游泳和比赛,我会很害怕。

但是当我打篮球这样的运动时,你
在一个团队中,所以你们之间的相互依赖程度

更高,这并不完全取决于你。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:虽然,如果你犯了一个大错,
那么每个人都在看着你。

瓦内萨:是的。

丹:这不好玩。

Vanessa:是的,我觉得我喜欢有一个
团队,但同时,我喜欢

有你自己的事情,你
可以更加个人主义。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:所以我对你很好奇,你在成长过程
中是否像丹一样参加有组织的运动?

我在高中时也做过一些排球,
那些类型的事情,一种有组织的运动。

但是你是这样参加有组织的运动吗,
还是只是和邻居的朋友一起玩

,就像我和
邻居的朋友一起长大一样?

你小时候做过什么样的活动或运动类型的
事情?

好了,我们进入下一个话题。

下一个话题是电子产品,这是另一个
假设性的问题,也许是一个梦想类型的问题,

但我想知道你是否可以免费升级
你生活中的任何电子产品,它是

免费的,你想在你的
生活中升级什么?

丹:有趣。

是的,我觉得我对
我们的电子状态非常满意。

瓦内萨:哦,好吧。

丹:电子状态。

是的,因为你认识我。

我已经很自由地升级了我的电子设备。

Vanessa:Dan 喜欢电子产品。

丹:我喜欢,尤其喜欢扬声器和音乐。

我喜欢音乐,所以我买了很多耳机,
还有很多扬声器,诸如此类。

每次我要买这样的东西时
,她都会看着我,“你为什么还要

买这样的东西?”

我没买太多——
Vanessa:是的,不算太多。

丹:……但我只是倾向于浏览,有时
我会看着这些巨大的扬声器,它们会

填满一个歌剧院之类的东西,我
想,“如果有这些,那就太棒了。”

瓦内萨:然后我需要提醒丹,
我们不像他的梦想那样住在足球场那么大的房子里

丹:但在我的梦想之家——
凡妮莎:有一天我们拥有梦想之家,

对吧?

丹:……它会有那些扬声器,是的。

Vanessa:如果你可以免费升级,你想升级
什么?

丹:是的,所以现在它应该是一台笔记本电脑。

Vanessa:哦,是的,你的笔记本电脑刚刚坏了。

丹:是的,所以我们的儿子西奥决定
踩我的笔记本电脑。

它实际上仍然工作得很好,但
它折断了一半,所以不知何故它仍在

工作,但无论如何它已经旧了。

Vanessa:是的,这是他的错,但你知道,
你不应该把它留在地板上。

丹:是的,所以我可能很快就会更新我的笔记本电脑
,这是现在非常可行的事情。

瓦内萨:好的。

是的,你可以得到一台没有坏成两半的笔记本电脑

丹:是的,第二件事实际上
是我们以前从未有过的,那

就是安全系统。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:听起来你只想
在一个你愿意的社区里做这个——

凡妮莎:你觉得有点危险。

是的。

丹:……你觉得自己处于危险之中。

但我仍然觉得它只会给
我增添些安慰。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:我们一直住在
他们有大门或前门的公寓里,

凡妮莎:你周围还有其他人。

丹:……而且你周围还有其他人
,你不只是这样一个单独的目标。

因为在美国,你只是住
在附近的一所房子里,它就像是独立的,

所以我想要一些相机,
我可以检查房子并确保一切

正常。

主要是为了安心。

瓦内萨:好的。

是的,我觉得我们的社区一点也不
危险。

丹:很安全,是的。

瓦内萨:但即使你
离开一个星期,你希望能够看到

房子外面,这可能会有所帮助,
是的。

丹:是的,在现代有
很多非常好的安全系统。

瓦内萨:是的,这可能会有所帮助。

我觉得,对我来说,我对此的回答是——
Dan:这表明 Vanessa 对

电子产品的关心程度。

Vanessa:我不得不考虑
很久,因为我不太关心电子产品

她的电脑。

我实际上为她建造了电脑。

Vanessa:是的,Dan 制造了
我们用于编辑和工作的计算机,但

我觉得
我想升级的电子设备有点实用,

我们拥有的汽车,你用钥匙打开
它 ,这很好。

丹:什么?

你用钥匙?

Vanessa:但如果有
一个蜂鸣器按钮真的很棒,所以这很典型-

Dan:这很有趣,因为美国每个人
都有这个,除了我们。

Vanessa:是的,我想如果你的车是
2000 年以后的,那么如果是最近 20 年内,

你可能有一个蜂鸣器可以打开
车门。

一些真正的新车有一个可以打开汽车的蜂鸣器
,我不需要那个,我只

想要一个可以打开车门的蜂鸣器,因为
我们有一个两岁的孩子,很快我们就会有

另一个孩子,然后打开车门 车在
一边,走到另一边,把他

放进车里,回来,打开它,似乎
是这样- 丹:是的,我们从来没有意识到我们会多么

感激这个。

Vanessa:是的,我真的很感谢这个
小小的便利。

丹:我的意思是,我们的车应该有这个,但
我们买的是二手的,卖给

我们车的人丢失了那些钥匙。

Vanessa:是的,他们只有普通的钥匙。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:所以你认为这是可能的,
因为以前存在过,我们可以这样做吗?

丹:是的,这很容易。

瓦内萨:哦,真的吗?

丹:是的,我们必须去经销商
那里询问他们,他们必须进行校准。

瓦内萨:我们必须买更多的钥匙?

我的梦想即将实现。

丹:我们可以做到这一点。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:但我想当我
问经销商的时候,我们刚买

了这辆车,很贵,而且
我们真的没有那么多钱,

我想,“我们不能 也买得起
钥匙。”

Vanessa:当然,因为我们决定
直接为这辆车付钱。

丹:对。

但这绝对是可行的,这
是您生活中非常简单的解决方法。

Vanessa:哇,梦想就
在 YouTube 上实现,谢谢。

好吧,我很好奇你,如果你可以升级,
或者如果你可以完全免费地拥有一些电子产品

而不增加任何价格,你
想在你的生活中升级什么?

我很好奇。

让我们知道。

好的。

让我们进入最后一个话题。

我们的最后一个主题是金钱。

我想知道,你后悔的三件事是什么

三件事不值得。

丹:那我很遗憾。

不是我喜欢的三件事吗?

瓦内萨:不,是哪三样东西,
你买了之后说,“啊,我不

应该买这个。”

丹:哦,好吧,很遗憾的购买。

瓦内萨:嗯-嗯(肯定)。

丹:嗯,第一个我能想到的
那种检查所有的盒子是你

后悔的事情。

因为首先,你不想让
我买这个。

Vanessa:因为它是——
Dan:贵。

瓦内萨:……耳机。

我们谈论的是音乐设备。

丹:我们正在谈论它。

是的。

我已经有了一直在听的耳机

——Vanessa:他喜欢的。

Dan:……所以我已经从 Vanessa 那里得到了
判断力,但我想也许

我想要一些声音更好的东西,
也许是一种不同的声音。

我一直在寻找新的声音。

瓦内萨:但是发生了什么?

Dan:我们当时也没有很多钱,所以-

Vanessa:啊,那是另一层。

丹:…我买了这些超过 100 美元的耳机
,我们把它们带回家,它们开始

弄疼我的耳朵-
凡妮莎:因为它们有点-

丹:…它们只是很痛苦。

Vanessa:……它们就像降噪
耳机?

丹:不,就像他们在耳朵里一样,他们只是,
他们不是真的

像我一样听。

瓦内萨:好的。

丹:所以他们伤了我的耳朵,我想,
“哦,不。

他们伤了我的耳朵,这真的很糟糕。”

凡妮莎:“我不能告诉凡妮莎。”

丹:“我不能。”

是的。

但同样,我们在韩国
买的,我买的地方有不

退货政策,所以我不能退货。

瓦内萨:然后发生了什么?

丹:然后我把它们带回家,让
它们坐下,我们的猫走到它们面前

咬了绳子,把它们弄断了。

瓦内萨:是的,五分钟内。

丹:五分钟之内。

不,像五秒钟。

我一放下耳机,
猫就咬了它们。

Vanessa:这种线
不能随便取出来更换,你

必须做一些……你必须把它
送到公司并付出很多才能修好。

丹:嗯,我不知道如何解决它。

我想我爸爸后来真的修好了,
他用了。

瓦内萨:哦,那很好。

丹:所以你去吧,它
实际上最终成功了。

瓦内萨:哇。

但是,是的,有几层遗憾。

丹:是的,有很多层的遗憾,
然后猫还是咬了绳子。

Vanessa:啊,那是我们
应该知道的。

我们应该把它们放在某个地方,你
也可以把它们放在其他地方,但这

只是锦上添花。

丹:是的。

Vanessa:也就是说,这是另一回事。

丹:现在我什至不能使用它们。

因为我希望,“哦,也许有一天
他们会更舒服。

也许他们会感觉更好,我会
习惯他们。”

Vanessa:但是你甚至不能使用它们,
因为我们的猫咬了绳子。

丹:是的。

瓦内萨:嗯,这是一个遗憾的购买。

丹:你去吧,这背后有一个完整的故事

瓦内萨:是的,我可以先说我的一个吗?

丹:去吧。

是的。

瓦内萨:好的。

我的一个要小得多,但
我在星巴克买茶的任何时候,总是一个糟糕的

决定。

丹:对不起,星巴克。

瓦内萨:是的,但我不喜欢咖啡,
如果我去星巴克,那是我唯一能喝的

饮料,因为他们有
很多咖啡,很多甜食,但

星巴克只有一个茶包,你 ‘只是买
了一个装有热水的茶包,他们什么都没做-

丹:太棒了。

Vanessa:……这不是一种特殊的饮料。

它只是热水和一个茶包,大概是
2.50 美元,或者什么的。

就像一袋茶只需 2.50 美元。

而且你可以用同样的价格买一整盒茶叶

丹:顺便说一句,这就是瓦内萨和我的不同之处
,就是我永远不会

为这样的购买而烦恼。

瓦内萨:对我来说就是味道。

不一定是价格,
茶的价格高,但味道永远不

值得。

这只是平庸的茶,甚至没有那么
好。

丹:我仍然永远不会后悔。

瓦内萨:是的,嗯-
丹:我不后悔买便宜货,我从没

想过。

Vanessa:我觉得这很烦人,
因为如果我要去咖啡店,我想喝一杯冷饮

,但那只是
一个泡在水里的茶包。

它甚至不是散叶茶。

无论如何,我是一个茶势利小人,所以让我们去你的吧。

丹:那是真的。

好吧,我列表中的下一个实际上可能
本身就是一个类别,但

最近发生的是我们去
海滩度假的一个地方,叫做海龟博物馆。

瓦内萨:哦。

丹:听起来很花哨,但
一个人可能要花 15 美元才能进去。

瓦内萨:是的,就像一个海龟康复
中心。

丹:是的,但只有一间房间
的墙上挂着一些照片,然后我们以为

我们会近距离地看到海龟
,但它们只是在大

游泳池里,你几乎看不到它们。

瓦内萨:他们是从
屁股上呼吸的吗?

丹:他们可能在那个时候。

瓦内萨:不,它们是海龟。

丹:你说得对,他们没有
从屁股上呼吸。

所以我只是对整个体验感到失望,
并且认为这不值得。

虽然,这有点不同,因为
我觉得我在捐赠,因为他们拯救了

海龟,但是有很多这样的地方
,比如博物馆,或者

某种展览,也许你需要支付前期费用,
并且 那么展览或博物馆就不是

很好,或者很无聊。

瓦内萨:是的,就像你曾经到过
某个地方旅行并花钱进入博物馆,

或者你花钱进入某座
建筑物却不值得。

我觉得这种情况发生了很多,这
对我们来说只是最近的一次,就是,“好吧,

我感觉很好,因为我向
那个海龟康复中心捐了一些钱。”

但我们并没有真正以
我们想要的方式看到海龟。

丹:我想摸一只乌龟。

Vanessa:哦,但他们在医院里,正在
接受康复治疗。

丹:没错,那是一家海龟医院。

瓦内萨:是的。

你还有其他吗-
丹:但听起来更酷-

瓦内萨:哦,是的。

是的,听起来确实很酷。

“去海龟中心看看海龟吧。”

丹:是的,我的最后一件事只是一件小事。

我在网上买了一些T恤,在
网上买衣服有点麻烦,但我总

觉得我喜欢上面的图片,
但是衬衫的质量不是

很好或者-
Vanessa:尤其是当 在线的,

感觉不到。

丹:……不太合适。

是的,这不是一个好主意。

我对其中一些购买感到后悔。

Vanessa:我觉得我
买的另一件不值得的东西,这是一个一般

类别,但它是我们的一些玩具,现在
他两岁了,但在他短暂的

生命中,我买了一些玩具
我认为他会喜欢的他,因为他

在朋友家和他一起玩,或者我只是认为
这很酷,但他并不真正喜欢。

例如,有一个东西……
它就像一个珠子迷宫,我记得

小时候喜欢这个,这就是我得到它的原因 -
丹:我以为他玩过那个。

瓦内萨:不是真的,他有点
想把珠子扯下来,但他不能

玩。

但我记得我小时候玩过它
,我在二手店找到了它。

好像是 10 美元,不算多,但
我认为他会玩。

我当时想,“就是这样。

他会玩这个很长时间,
它会很棒。”

他只是从来没有真正玩过它。

所以我觉得-
Dan:这可能是一个持续存在的问题。

瓦内萨:是的。

所以现在我-
Dan:现在我们有了孩子。

Vanessa:我试着退后一步
想,“好吧,他喜欢玩这

三样东西。

如果其他人想给他礼物
,给他其他玩具,那很好,但

我不是真的 会投资更多的玩具,
因为他总是喜欢同样的

东西。”

丹:乐高,乐高,乐高。

瓦妮莎:乐高,乐高,乐高。

有时是 Play-Doh,有时是沙盒。

丹:但主要是乐高积木。

凡妮莎:但一般来说,同样的情侣玩具
一次又一次,一次又一次。

所以我很好奇你,
你做了哪些不值得的购买,

你后悔了?

这个视频在 YouTube 上是免费的,所以这
不是购买。

不过,我希望您没有后悔
与我们共度时光。

丹:是的,我知道你不会后悔
购买 Fearless Fluency Club。

瓦内萨:哦。

嗯-
丹:有一个适合你的音调。

Vanessa:这是我们每月一次的英语课程
,我们每个月都会教授不同的主题

,你会学习词汇、
动词短语和发音。

我们有一个私人 Facebook 小组,许多成员在这里
聚会并一起交谈

以练习说英语。

每月一次,我有一次 Google 群
聊,我们一起聊天。

只是扩展英语
和学习更多知识的好方法。

所以如果你喜欢我们今天的谈话——
Dan:是的,有人可能会说,“变得流利。”

Vanessa:是的,我希望如此,变得更加自信。

嗯,非常感谢你今天加入我。

丹:不客气。

我们完了?

瓦内萨:哇,这太多了。

丹:你能相信吗?

不过,你做到了吗?

Vanessa:如果你做到了这一步,恭喜你。

拍拍自己的背。

我们今天问了很多问题,所以我
将把这些问题放在下面的描述中,

这样如果你
想回去看某个话题,或者如果

你看到一些词汇出现你可以去每个话题
想复习和练习,你可以随时

回去复习我们谈过的。

如果您有任何问题,请随时提问,
并确保您自己撰写评论并

回答其中一些问题,请使用
英语。

丹:是的。

凡妮莎:非常感谢你加入我,
丹。

丹:不客气。

这是非常愉快的。

瓦内萨:是的,我很感谢你的时间。

丹:那是一段旅程。

瓦内萨:你的能量。

哦,那是一次旅行。

是的,我们今天讨论了很多不同的话题

非常感谢你
今天和我和丹一起学习英语,下周五我会

在我的 YouTube 频道上看到你的新课程

再见。

丹:再见。

Vanessa:下一步是下载我的免费
电子书,成为自信的

英语演讲者的五个步骤。

您将了解如何
自信而流利地说话。

不要忘记订阅我的 YouTube 频道
以获得更多免费课程。

非常感谢。

再见。