This week's episode of The Wild Card Podcast is brought to you by all the things that have taken place since last week's episode of The Wild Card Podcast. Guys, I'm so pleased that our president has finally secured our truce with Botswana. Oh, thank God for that. Unfortunately, the earthquake in California has splitred it into three independent countries floating out of the Pacific.
It's really unfortunate. No, what gets me the most is I'm so excited about the sequel to Stop or My Mom Will Shoot, which was the movie that made Stallone's 90 Meters career. I saw the new friend, Comic Conocontological.com. Did you guys hear about this new Amazon product?
It's called Outhouse Go. True portable bodies. A drone delivers a toilet anywhere you need it. You get the app and you ship where you sit.
Well, I'm kind of wanting that right this minute. Have you guys heard about the recent Silver Boom and Creed Colorado making it no longer a backwater? But there's almost a million people living there. They're building skyscrapers.
Good for you, Creed. 50 stories high, rivaling the height of the mountains. Call me gluttonous. I'm most excited about Taco Bell's new dripping pork impenata with the nacho cheese filling and Doritos crust.
Oh, run me outside. It's so good. It just came out today. Good stuff.
Guys, I think we nailed these predictions. There's no way they'll know we've recorded this in a day. I think you're right. I'm on vacation, so I don't give a damn what they think anyway.
Guys, the mic is still running. Oh, quickly. Quickly, turn it off, Jeff, please. Welcome to the Wild Card Podcast.
I'm your host, Jerry Deaton, and my co-pilots on this journey to wherever are my good friends, Jeff Curtis. Hello. And it is a dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It's the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition.
And it lies between the pit of man's fears and the summit of his knowledge. This is the dimension of imagination. It's an area which we call Rondler. Oh my god, that's spectacular.
Thank you. What are Twilight Zonni? Exactly. Uh, introduction.
What an evening. I feel like it's, I mean, even though it was completely Twilight Zone introduction, yeah, it didn't, it still kind of fit you, I thought. No, I think it totally fit. Totally.
It's a bad dimension, especially. Right. My favorite was lies between the pit of man's fears and the summit is not. That was my favorite.
You're halfway between fear and knowledge. Yeah, that's why I live. People are afraid of knowing you. I'm the ogre that lives there.
Yes. All right, ogre, will you tell the sweet, sweet decades what this podcast is all about? This podcast is all about haunting your dreams with our relentless education and the unblinking terror of bad jokes and endless yammering and jack rolling. It's about torturing your ear holes and brain mush with our Tom Fulloree, shenanigans, whatnots and going on.
I think we should use that every week. Because that's actually a little bit accurate. It's the same. It's the same.
I like that a lot. Well done. So that's your favorite. That's your favorite.
That's your favorite. Facebook show description. Yeah, I think I remember you exactly that a lot. Yeah, let's see yammering on.
All right, guys. I'm like brain mush and ear holes. Yeah, we use ear holes a lot. Yeah, I like ear holes.
I like ear holes. That's because we're talking to our listeners, ear holes. That's right. I do not know.
That's all we need. This is an unfortunate Jared episode. And I don't know what it's going to take because my report is 22 pages long. Hold on.
That's almost a Jeff's episode. Yeah, that's the only plan. I'm listening to three pages. That's why when I came in.
I'm almost sure it's like 12 to 14 pages. Right. Oh my god. So I'm a lot here.
A short Jeff's episode is 22 pages. Exactly. And he realized that Ronald and I were talking too much. And he skipped four of them.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. So I hope you guys have a lot of say in this episode today. I'm hoping it's not just me, yammering.
Because that'll be horribly boring. Yeah, I mean, but I make Jack Roll. I'm going to Jack Roll and move. I'm glad to hear that.
I want to be Jack Roll at least thrice during the rest. You want to get thrice Jack rolls in? But because I know I'm not quite Jack Roll. I picked a shorter favorite section.
A favorite question. And it's probably the favorite question that is the most common favorite question of all time. What's your guys favorite color? And why?
OK. Maybe as a kid, has it changed since you were in the? Yes. When I was a kid it was blue because it's a nice cool color and it's relaxing.
And it, uh, blue is not very color. I always like the chill colors rather than the warm colors, the red and the yellows. And the ones that say attention, attention, look at me as I wear this red shirt, which was clean. You're welcome.
Yeah. They can smell. First time ever. Right.
Right. Exactly. By the time this podcast cannot smell a vision has been mastered. I'm going to be short again because I had worn it to work yesterday and then immediately started doing the 48-hour film festival.
No, of course. Slept in those clothes for two hours between Friday and Saturday and then worked all day in it. And I'm on set Saturday and I smell myself. And it's like nine o'clock.
We've been going at it for two hours. And I thought this is unacceptable. This is an unacceptable odor for these people. Sometimes I'll go out and I'll be like shopping or something.
And the day when I'm not doing much, I'll be wearing a shirt for an hour at most. It's not going to take a shirt off because I'm holding myself and I'll be wearing a shirt. And then I'll be like, ah, someone saw me in that shirt. I can't.
I can't wear it again. But I was getting blues whenever. It comes up again. I was a big UK fan so we had a blue one.
I'm either blue so blue was kind of not here as a kid. Do you ever hear of what you're going to get for? Blue was my favorite then is my blue favorite now. But it's not every blue.
There's blues that I can't say. I'm like, don't give me royal blue. I don't like, I like pastel blue. No, I like complex blues.
Yeah. I like them. I like Blake, Grace. They like a great blue.
I like a great blue. I like blue. I like blue blue too. I like a blue blue.
Backoff. Backoff, blue blue. So I was the kind of kid who didn't want my favorite be the same as everyone else's favorites. And I realized that blue was the boy color.
And I don't know exactly what it was about middle school, like the age angst that brought this about, but blue stopped being my favorite color. And with the color I'm currently wearing became my favorite color. Great. Great.
Great. And it's been my favorite color since junior high. And junior high, I pretty much only wore like gray black and white. I wanted to be as nondescript as possible.
I just forget what I wore. Because I wanted to be like where I shirt that I love. And so I'm like, can you just wear that the other day? So I got picked on like super neutral.
And so that was why I was my favorite color then. But then as I grow older, I'm like, man, that's a sharp color. Like a dark gray. This is my favorite shirt I own right now.
I like this dark gray. My dad had a dark gray car that I really like. I just like a slate or a gun that I'll sometimes think of that. Black is why I wore it all black suit yesterday.
I like black. I like black clothing. It's not necessarily my favorite color or lack of color. Purple is my favorite to look at now.
It's a lovely royal color. And I like purple and black together. It's strictly with aesthetics. I like the color purple.
The actual color. I'm attracted to it because when I was in college, that was our color. Yeah, it was purple aces. And I thought it was super weird then.
Our colors were purple and white and orange. Oh. And it was weird. And now that I'm older, like the last two years ago, two years ago, I bought Evansville, Poland because I didn't know anything from my college.
I don't know why I was trying to distance myself from it. I don't know if it feels like something. It's just something I'm not really. I don't really advertise.
And then I'm like, you know what? Evansville shirts. I bought Evansville purple and white. And I love that thing.
It's so comfortable. And I love wearing it. And I never had more purple than that really. I don't look good.
I like the color purple, but I can't wear purple. I watch as me out on my face gets all white. And most people don't actually look good in purple. It's really good on certain people.
Like the Joker. But on most people, it's not a color that goes well with human knowledge. You know, wearing it right now, dark green. It's a good Jeff color.
And I like wearing that color as well. I like green, dark green, green, light greens. It's just comfortable. I've got a white green polo, which I like a lot of.
I think wids. I've got colors always in the blues. People like that wear blue because my eyes come out. The electric blue.
They take it home. They take it home. They look at them. They polish them.
Your eyes. They keep, yeah. I'm a man. I don't know why they keep comfortable when people say something about that.
They're like, oh, your eyes really pop today. I'm like, that's not painful. Put them back in real fast. That's good.
I could go so far with eyes and just girls be blown out. I'm not going to. Yeah, that's good. I almost want you to.
Yeah. It'll just lead to what happened to my eye when I was 12. And the end of the vlog story. Yeah.
We'll do that. The vlog story. The vlog. Oh, video.
I've never got to be drinking. I've been drinking vlog. I've been drinking vlog. I learned when I got out of class that I've pictured it and it's it horrifies me because the eyes are so sensitive.
Well, and that's the pain that you must have felt at that point. I've never imagined. It was really, really loud. I've been getting below it for a decade, a loner than decades, politically.
But I could never wear contacts. I wouldn't know. I had trouble with that, too. I can't, I had drops in.
I had to go sideways and blink it down. I could put it in eyelashes and blink it up. I can't everywhere. It's too, but you have to put in more drops.
Oh, I was going to watch it. I don't like glasses. I think I'll probably wear glasses a couple of years again. I'm going to wear glasses the next couple of years because I've been starting to deal worse.
I'm just so sensitive and I'm kind of the same way about like, I don't feel good. Yeah, I can do contacts and I don't like my ears being this with you. I've got a real issue with my ears. You don't want me to be getting this wet way.
I'm getting ready to get this. No! No! I don't want my ears touched or even looked at really.
I'm looking at your ears. I'm looking at your ear right now. I'm looking at your ears. Are your ears absolutely good.
So you're wanting our podcast to stop looking at your ears? Please, please, please, please, please, please, please stop looking at my ear holes. I think of the ears, my weirdest of the three. Okay, I think they're not as huge.
They're not even here compared to your ears compared to your ears. My ears are bigger than my ears. My ears are bigger than my ears. Yeah, your ears make me give the illusion of that your head smaller.
I was always surprised that you and I were the same head size because I were. I had so big that I can't buy a head. Yeah, our sizes are not the same except for the head size. But when I look at your ears, I think your head smaller.
I think it's like a medium. I think it's not. If they came to a point, they would be very healthy ears. You can have elven ears.
You can be an elven ranger. And the thing is, my ear's smaller hearing is great. Yeah. So that's because your size of your ear actually has nothing to do.
Well, it does help capture sound, but my sense smells worthless. Right. So your other sense? My eyes are feeling so loud that my ear is better.
I feel like I would have good hearing if not for tinnitus. A hundred percent of the time. Is it tinnitus? I was the tinnitus.
I said, oh, I've been pronouncing it wrong all the time. Well, that's what I thought and I pronounced it that way for years. But yeah, I do. I said, this sounds good.
We're going to place a tinnitus after this on the course. Right. As a child, I remember having this. I'm not a doctor saying that's not true.
I just don't know. I just don't know. Yeah. I don't know.
In all the YouTube videos, I was like, oh, I've been wrong all the time because you two versus know what they're talking about. No, it's not the YouTube. No, it's not the YouTube. We are on YouTube.
It's the matter. We're on YouTube. Obviously. That's true.
All right, guys. Question for you. Yeah. What was my last episode about?
Scary stuff. No, no, I left. Oh, the stand. The stand.
Okay. What are you genix? That's where I keep thinking. No, but we were talking Holocaust.
Yeah. What scary stuff. I said my last episode. I love you.
I love you. As far as viruses going in general, when you're over a certain age, everything is cancer, every stomachache, every headache, it's all cancer. I'm not worried about cancer. Well, I keep thinking, I'm going to be blind by the time I'm 60, so I will be able to say.
That's so legit. To be honest, my left eye is at the same prescription for the last 15 or 20 years. 20 years since I started wearing contacts. When I wore glasses, my eyesight got worse every single year.
And when I don't wear glasses in my contact, I can't see it's worth crap. So I guess that's a concern. My biggest health concern is my bowels. They don't work the way I would like them to work.
Sometimes they're fine. Usually there's either too much movement or not enough movement. And I would like to have control of that. But I don't see it getting any better as I'm getting older.
Is there any feet? Is there any correlation that's been drawn between processed foods, the advent of processed foods and dietary issues having escalated due to that? I mean, I would say there's very little causative evidence of much of anything. Now, I'm sure there have been some specific preservatives that were like, oh crap, that was a bad idea.
I'm having it in my head right now. But what I want to impress is we're going to talk about disease a lot today. That can be a very scary type of lot of people. If you look at the last 100 years, 100, 250 years ago, that range life expectancy has a shot up.
So while we're going to talk about things that can kill you, I want to remind you, people are living longer. Right. So keep that in mind through all of this today. But next question for you guys, what diseases do you believe are the most frightening?
No cancer, of course. So I've got a top 10 list according to the World Health Organizations of diseases that kill. This is by the number of desperate year cancer is not the top 10. Real now, cancer as a whole would be.
OK, I'll take it. It's so different. Right. And what I would say is if I was to ask my students, or if I'd asked you three or four years ago, what is the first thing to talk about?
It's a Ebola. Because it was scary. Well, there's not always the diseases. I wasn't afraid of Ebola because I knew I wasn't going to be right with it.
I got asked about it three times a day. Kids were terrified. Because there's sensationalism now, obviously, diseases. They didn't use to do the AIDS was really, they started sensationalizing it.
And it was some horrifying that you would want to be careful how to watch out for them. And they learned how to transmit it. But the sensationalism of that disease. And they haven't, but it was partly because, well, they had no care.
Right. There still isn't. Yeah, there's no more man. What's more man?
But B, it was connected with the homosexual community so much that, you know, that just freaked people out as well, because it was taboo, exactly. Right. All right. So number one on the World Health Organization list of diseases is coronary artery.
The heart disease, right? Essentially. You can also call this key by heart disease. 8.8 million deaths in 2015.
Yeah. It is the deadliest disease in the world. It counts for just under 16% of all deaths worldwide. Yeah.
It occurs when blood vessels that supply blood to the heart become narrow. And this can be because of blockage due to diet, cholesterol, lack of exercise. I'm going to go. I'm not afraid of it.
Yeah. No. It may take me, but I'm expecting to live a long life. I'm not afraid of any of these diseases.
Well, that's a good way to be here. I expect all of them last week. Yeah. So it's a double-edged fight.
You're not munchausons. You're not like, I want to be treated for this. It feels special. You're just like, worry about it.
No, that's it. That's it. I've seen so much disease. And I'm like, ah, I'm going to get that.
I'm going to get that. Of course I'm going to get that. It makes sense. Untreated.
Why are disease going to be chest pain, heart failure, and arrhythmias? Right. Which I'm having all of right now at this moment. Although it's still the leading cause of death, where tolerates have declined in the European countries and the United States.
This may be due to better public health education, access to health care, and forms of prevention. However, in the developing nations, or tolerates of CD are on their rise. And increase lifespan, socioeconomic changes, and lifestyle risk factors play a role in its rise. So in some places going down because of awareness, and there are prevention steps, you can do that.
We'll nestling it, stop, but can help delay it. At least stop. But other countries, where there are new things that are coming out, it's more common there. I want to stop here.
OK. All right. I had, yeah. I want to stop.
Because I found a moment. I did my yearly health assessment through work earlier this week. Yeah, you were not talking about that. Yeah.
And I may have mentioned this, where the nurse was sitting there, and she was going to your track. Let's rise her high. Your cholesterol is good, but you need more good cholesterol. And I'm not.
Low-geat, low-geat. High-risk, high-risk, high-risk. My blood pressure for years and whatnot. And that was no surprise.
But then she's going, you need to eat more avocado, more oatmeal, more fibers. And I'm going, oh, I eat is fiber. Like I'm eating avocado almost daily. And she's going, you need to eat this kind of stuff daily.
I eat oatmeal every single day. And I'm going, what more do you want from me that I'm not eating? I'm eating everything you're telling me. From a diet perspective, I'm not my teacher who's like, don't eat this, don't eat this, don't eat this.
I don't care about different types of bad diets. The good thing about a diet is it makes you focus on what you're eating, not so much about what it is. Like there are diets that go on with carb diets. There's a high fat diet right now.
Right. I've heard about this. And I've heard good things about it. But again, it's just focusing on what you're not eating.
Fiber is one of the things that I usually recommend most highly, because few people get enough of it. You should have a bowel movement every day for each meal you have. That's three for most people. It seems like a lot.
I don't have three of it. And because every, so many hours after you eat, you should be getting rid of that if your bowels are working the way they're supposed to. Sometimes I don't have a bowel movement for three days. That's terrifying.
That's awful. That's like if you're. I've had a bowel movement all day long. Oh, no.
I've had a single toilet in brain for three days. That's what's interesting. I'm sorry. I hate it for you.
No thanks. I don't go through it. But my day's coming. I'm sure.
I don't wish I'd done it. No, no, it sounds horrible. I do eat a great meal fiber. And that's one thing that's ever been.
All right. Number two is stroke. Six point two million deaths in 2015. So two million fewer, but still.
A stroke occurs when an artery in your brain is blocked. So it's same type of artery. It's an artery with a brain. It's the oxygen-ified brain cells to begin dying within minutes.
During a stroke, you feel sudden numbness and confusion or have trouble walking and seeing if left untreated of stroke and cause long-term disability. In addition to causing approximately 11% of all deaths worldwide, strokes are the leading cause of long-term disability. Yeah, but when we're talking something like stroke, is it something that you can actually prevent by worrying about it? If you are, you can't prevent it from dying.
It's very stress if anything is worse. But again, if what is causing your arteries to become narrow is due to diet or lifestyle. Then yes, there's. The thing is smoking and high cholesterol.
High cholesterol. The same thing as a heart attack. The exact thing. There are a lot of those things that can lead to your arthurus.
That's actually heart attack. That's actually a heart attack. It's been like a typing of the arteries. People who receive treatments within three hours of having a stroke are less likely to have disabilities.
And I've heard the same about heart attacks. If you get care within the first five minutes of heart attack, you just go up and get to the same. It all is how quick. My grandmother had a stroke at one point and she got help right away and it helped but she was never the same after the stroke.
Well, that happens with a lot of folks. I've seen a lot of stroke. Anything that occurs in my family is not the right. Yeah.
It's nature because that's where our memory is. That's where our emotional centers are. That's essentially what we are. We are a brain in a shell that keeps the brain alive.
Every other body of body's job is to keep the brain alive because that's us who we are. Now, I will say I'm afraid of Alzheimer's. Well, we'll get to that one. It's legitimate.
I'm more afraid of losing my mind than dying. I would rather keep my mind and my body in my mind die at the same time than lose my mind into my body's background for another 10 years. Yeah, I get that. Right.
Number three, lower respiratory infection. 3.2 million deaths on 2015. And these are things like the flu, pneumonia, bronchitis, tuberculosis. Well, they suck.
When we got the flu, very incompetent. When we got Captain Trips, that was pretty horrible. I've never been so sick in all my life. And there were times during it when I wish I was dead.
But I wasn't afraid of dying. Around the world, the last thing about the flu is you don't often think of it being deadly because we have antivirals. Right. But there are a lot of countries that don't.
Around the world, I feel like over the years ago, all of those diseases were completely dead. Around my third day of feeling like I did on the first day, I started getting scared. I started getting worried because I had never not healed almost immediately after I realized that I'm sick. And that thing lasted for at least a week with effects going on after that.
Yeah, that was a bad bad. The worst of it was last for a week. But then to get past all of the symptoms and all of it took like a month or longer, six weeks off, it was just the worst. It was horrible.
A whole week of just being in a day's and not being there. I could I stay awake for maybe 20 minutes at a shot. Although it was 20 minutes several times a day. That's the most I could do.
I would sleep for maybe an hour and then be awake for 20 minutes, sleep for another hour and for five days that lasted. Viruses usually cause lower risk protections. They can also be caused by bacteria. Coughing is the main symptom of these infections.
You also feel breathlessness, wheezing and a tight feeling of your chest. And these can lead to breathing failures on treatment. Yeah. Number four, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
3.1 million deaths in 2015. COPD is a long term progressive lung disease that makes breathing difficult. This is a pizema and grandpa and chydus. In 2004, 64 million people were living with COPD.
How much of that is caused by smoking? I think it's a lot of it. I think it's a lot of it. Yeah, great.
My grandfather smoked three packs a day until he got to a point where the doctor said if you don't stop smoking, you'll be dead in a week. And he stopped smoking cold turkey. But he had infasema for the rest of the slide. The damage is not usually reasonable.
That's the crazy thing is when I've smoked a pack a day for 20 years, over 20 years now. And I hear these stories about people that smoke three packs a day and I'm going, when did you have the time and how could you, after a pack, I feel shitty. Like at the end of the day. It's just shinswoken.
Well, you also used to go to smoke indoors. You also used to be so successful. Well, that's true. You are blind if you often not smoke.
Oh, yeah. I don't want to bother. But you look like years ago. Right.
Everybody smoked anywhere in the hospital. Yeah. Well, that's true. Over 30 years and 40 years you could definitely.
Yeah. 40 years ago. I remember that's true. I remember that's true.
You still have ashtrays in waiting rooms and stuff like that. But there is no single thing you can do to improve your health order. Right. Now this doesn't mean trying to like.
No, no, no. You say nothing to me that I haven't heard about. It doesn't change the fact that I have an horrible addiction. Cigarettes, the first one you pick up, it's the best thing ever.
It tastes so good. It feels so good. And you never want to not do it. It gets in your head.
And also, you know, when you're trying to give up something like smoking, especially you've got all these physical habits that are connected with it. If you're trying to stop smoking, you're hands are free. It's like. If you don't have something to replace it with.
And, you know, I used to, you know, I used to, when I was teaching people how to work with people who have developmental disabilities. I would do this training on, you know, they're trying to stop certain kind of behaviors. I said, we can't just tell them to stop. You've got to replace it with someone.
No, that's it. It's a very funny example of, remembers Dennis Weaver, the actor, Dennis Weaver, he was in duel. He drove the car in duel. Oh, I know you're talking about it.
He was on gun. I don't think it wasn't gun smoke, but it was on. He did Western. No, but, and he was detected McCloud in the McMillen wife McCloud.
That's serious stuff. But anyway, I saw him on Johnny Carson when I was in my early teens. And he was talking about how he stopped smoking. And he was only able to do it because every time he sat down and he wanted to pick up a cigarette, he gave his hand something else to do.
And his, what he did was, he taught himself how to tie a knot in a rope by tossing the end of the rope around bouncing it and figure out how to turn that inch, make tie a knot with just the one hand bouncing the rope around. And by the time he learned how to tie the knot, he had gotten past the cravings of wanting to have a cigarette and to say it's not occupied. So you don't have to bounce a rope around and tell it. You can figure out how to tie it.
You have to plan what you're going to do so that you can't pick up a cigarette at the same time, so that your body's occupied. Well, I hear about people quitting cold turkey. And I can't imagine putting cold turkey in the sit in front of a TV and not going on a cigarette. Exactly.
So I'm just giving up something. You have to change your lifestyle. Absolutely. So that's the lesser extent.
I think this is almost silly to mention, but I buy my finger notes. And it's something that usually I notice sometimes I don't. I've found one way for me not to do it. And it's to have a toothpick with it.
Or something. A replacement? Yeah. From my from my no.
Or a fixation. Or a fixation. And if I do that, then I will buy my fingers. But then I'm the dude who walked another toothpick with me.
Right. You don't want to be Cobra from 1985. Oh, I do. Yeah, you probably do.
You want to be the sole best. Number five. That was a match. I made him a mistake earlier when I was a guy with this one.
Number five. Got you. I'm not afraid of any of these yet. In developing countries, research, sorry, respiratory cancer accounts, roughly in death annually.
In developing countries, researchers predicted 81 to 100% increase in respiratory cancer due to pollution and smoking. So developing countries. Well, many Asian countries. Industrialism doesn't necessarily think about health.
Still is whole for cooking. It's a whole for cooking. Solid fuel emissions account for 17% of long history deaths in men and 22% in women. So that's pollution.
Our reliance on coal is completely unnecessary. 100% unnecessary. It's not required. It's not needed.
And but the coal industry is so large that they'll continue polluting the earth for unnecessarily. And the adjustment to an alternate fuel source is going to be expensive. It is the right decision, but it's going to cost. What's the right decision 30 years ago?
It should have happened 30, 40 years ago. It started to and every time a Republican gets into the White House, it stopped. Because who are their main donors? Who do they take money from?
The people who fuck the problem. Well, and here's the problem is people are thinking you're going to lose jobs, but they're just going to be different. You're just going to be fighting the jobs with different jobs. And what are you learning?
So it's not like it's going to be bad thing. But number six. Diabetes, illness. 1.6 million deaths in 2015.
Diabetes is root diseases that affect insulin production and use from a pancreas. In type 1, the pancreas cannot produce insulin. And the cause is unknown. It's probably a genetics of some sort, but not necessarily.
Sure. In type 2, diabetes, the pancreas doesn't produce enough insulin, or the insulin is unable to produce it used effectively by the body. Like it's malfunctioning. Well, sugar intake has something to do with that.
It's going to vary. It's going to vary. It's going to vary. It's going to cause many factors, including poor diet, like exercise, and being overweight.
Well, I've got a little bit of that. I'm not afraid of it. I'm not afraid of it. My blood sugar is not an alcohol.
I have an alcohol. I have an alcohol. I have an alcohol. Just a couple months ago.
Because it's just... Now, he is a very good spirit about it, but about it is a reality. Right. The word necrosis is horrifying.
It's awful, yeah. And you hear so many people. You're getting necrosis in certain parts of their body. Tissue damage from the nerves.
Yeah, it's awful. Oh, it's awful. Number seven, Alzheimer's disease and other... One point five million, that's in 2015.
Alzheimer's disease is a progressive disease that destroys memory and interrupts normal mental functions. It is the most common type of disease. 60 to 80% of the other dementia. It starts off by causing mild memory problems, difficulty recalling information, and slips in recollection.
Over time, the disease progresses, and may have memory for large periods of time. rey Heart sterilization, all kinds of puzzle analytics, Over time, the disease progresses and you may not have memory for large periods of time. A 2014 study found that a number of deaths in the United States do all-siders may be higher than reported because the elderly... Well, it's the same as the other...
Yeah, there's several other factors that go into it, right? Do you do your daily crossword? I don't know. I've heard that that or so nobody helps keep it.
But I write a heck of a lot of lyrics, so you know... Well, that's the thing I always thought about. I hate my brain is pretty good. I've heard people say that the...
Well, okay, it's okay. You're probably correct. It may be true that these mental stimulations are beneficial in helping keep the brain functioning for elderly and... It's exercise.
Exercise for your brain muscles. There is no evidence that doing these things will increase your brain function or make a better memory. The studies show that doing crossword muscles every day, doing silicaes every day, doing these brain games every day only makes you better at those games. Well, I mean it maintains the status quo, though.
It makes you better. You want better memory? Write down notes about what you need to do. Oh, for God's sake, yeah.
Number eight. The hydration due to diarrheal diseases. One point four million, definitely 15. Oh, yeah.
I was still like, I could take care of that, though, if I had collars... Because we are in a country that care. Well, yeah, third world country with water issues. And that's why I'm in Michigan.
It's not gonna be able to handle it. The diarrhea is really past three or more lusus stools in a day. If you die, realize one of the few days you might lose too much water in salt, this causes dehydration, which can lead to death. Usually caused by intestinal virus or bacteria transmitted through contaminated water or foods, particularly widespread developing nations with poor sanitary conditions.
More Americans died in the Civil War from dysentery. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know. The reason is because of death and people who have HIV, because like 35% of HIV related deaths are due to TB. Did you find out how many case of tuberculosis there are now? I do not have that.