What's Good with John & Joyce: Ep. 36 - Relax – It’s Only an Accident? What you need to know with Joe Perrone!
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What's Good with John & Joyce: Ep. 36 - Relax – It’s Only an Accident? What you need to know with Joe Perrone!

All right.

Hey, welcome to another edition
of What's Good with John and Joyce.

You can find us on all the streaming
platforms. And

I'm John Cadillac Seville from iHeartRadio
and John Seville Entertainment.

And you are Joyce Logan, his pal.

My pal, my buddy. We met over copilot.

We met over three years ago
and we did a long friendship.

We said yes a long time ago
when they used to have hamsters

go around the wheel for power right.

What's that? Far back?

Oh, maybe not quite.
Maybe I'm exaggerating.

What's Good with Johnny Joyce is sponsored
by woodwinds Wedding and Special Events

Venue in Branford, Connecticut
and Silvio's award winning Italian sauces,

which you can buy anytime online
at silvio's.

Sauces.com that's silvio's sauces.com.

We'd like to thank our sponsor
New England Collision.

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and receive your initial call

until the time they deliver
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your satisfaction
and safety is their number one priority.

New England collision.

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That's tech fix
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But it's just so good to be here
once again.

And thank you so much for watching
and or listening.

It means a lot,
and it means a lot that we have a very,

very special guest here today
that I really admire a lot.

I had a chance to meet him,
but 3 or 4 years back and,

this guy has a faith
that I really admire a lot,

but he was really on on the cusp of,
Well,

you know, he was in a hospital for a while
because he was working so hard

for his family.

His motive and intent
is always to bless other people.

And then somebody pulled him aside.

I think a family member said,
you know, Joe,

you really got to get your act together
and, you know, come up with something.

You know, some, you know, maybe
read some books, develop some, you know,

emotional maturity in some areas.

Right,
which I'm still working on, quite frankly.

But you've done so well.

I mean, you teach dads
how to get home with their kids.

You have multiple businesses,
you're successful at everything you do.

And most of all,
you're a really good person.

You're a philanthropist.

And, Joyce, I know you met,
I met you once, Joe.

And I just thought,
what a terrific person you are.

You're very special. Yeah. Thank you.

We actually.

Yes. Joe Perone, Joe Perone, Joe.

So I only knew Joe from being the owner
of New England Vision.

Yeah, yeah.

And, I just
I shared a story with him because I wish

I had met him in December
when I had my head on collision.

So when he had me head on and
it was a very scary unknown time, I mean,

especially you taken away by ambulance
when I don't know where my car is.

I don't know how to navigate that.

And when you have an attorney, that is a,

what do you call it?

A self not.

It's for what?

Injury. Personal. Injury. Personal.

Thank you a personal injury.

Well, personal injury
doesn't really cover where your car is

and and how to deal
with the insurance companies.

So I was so grateful to have met you.

Now, I hope I never need you again
in the future,

but I was certainly past that.

Because you're companies like the.

You're like the concierge of accidents

where they call you
and you handle everything.

And I know that's just one of the things
we're going to enjoy.

And I'll talk from a personal experience
really quickly,

because I went to Joe once as well
for a, for a banger in the back of my car.

And the minute I walked in,
I was greeted with smiles from everybody

that was working on the cars, the worker
bees to the gentleman behind the desk.

And Joe checked up on me many times
to make sure everything was fine.

So, yeah, I feel like like I like, I'm in
a lavish hotel here, the with everybody.

But seriously.

And and I'm going to recommend
everybody to you

and I have

but Joe,
we're going to let you talk right now

because we're babbling
a little bit too much. But yeah.

Welcome to what's good with Johnny Joyce.
Yeah.

Thank you both for having me.

Love the show.

Thank you.

I love you with the content
that you guys are putting out,

and I have definitely resonated
with that myself.

And, you know what's what's good
is just such a blessing to me.

So, yeah, thanks for having me on.

And, you know, my name is chaperoning.

Yeah. Oh, New England collision.
But I'm a dad.

I'm, you know, investor
do a lot of different things.

And, you know, in a different season
of my life right now, which with, my boys,

Bruno and Marcelo and,
I love those names.

Bruno and Mark.

Yeah.

And it's, you know, you got a small demo.

Yeah. Right away.

Yeah, yeah.

But you Irish, you. No, no, no. Italian.

Blood there.

But yeah, you know,
it's a it's a great season to be in and,

you know, been
blessed with a business, been

blessed with a great business partner,
been blessed with a great team.

And, yeah, it's a 1998.

We started the
we started the business as workers.

And, now we've gone into full time
of ownership over the last,

you know, over a decade,
you know, the time kind of.

It blurs after a while. Yeah. Sure does.

As you, as you mentioned, Joyce.

Like,
that's one of the things that we offer is,

we do offer a concierge service
because we've, we've been in accidents

before, and,
you know, it's such a process.

And, and dealing with all of that
and dealing with for profit insurance

companies and dealing with

police departments and rental car
agents, it's such a massive. Yes.

You know,
if you know how to navigate around that

and you have people
that are willing to help you.

And, you know, our front office staff is
so they're they're such kind people

and they're just so empathetic.

And they have just
the it's a great present.

That's why they were hired,
because they're extensions of my myself,

my business partner Mike.

That's how we want to be handled.
That's all we want.

Would want our parents to be handled.

That's
where we want our siblings to be handled.

Like that's how we want.

It's a stressful situation.
That's the whole thing.

Nobody is looking forward
to going in there.

You opening up the door and you're
not sure what you're going to get,

and then you take that stress
and you give us ease.

Yeah.

You know that anointment of ease
as we kind of go into that doorway there.

But let's go back to where it all began,
kind of for you, because I'm an I,

I've heard your story before when we've
had coffee and Joyce for a little bit,

but but for the audience,
you're basically came from a point

where you were like,
really in dire straits.

And I'm not talking about the band either,
but but there were some

there are some challenging times there
for a while.

Cadillac and Lou has to bring the music.

Oh, it's going to be the music metaphor.
Yeah, I love it.

Well, you know, what you're referring to
is the period of time where

new, new business owners, newly

married
son on the first son on the way, and,

yeah, was was rushed to the hospital
in the middle of the day.

Didn't no anxiety panic, dehydrated.

You know, that was over a decade ago.

So that was like in 2013. And,

you know,

and yeah, it was, you know,
you think you're invincible,

you know, mid,
mid 30s, relatively healthy.

But you, you know,
you take on too much stress

and you take on too much, you know,
responsibility and stuff like that.

And, you know, thankfully,
you know, over a decade later,

you know, you find out that

that was all preprogramed,
you know, decades prior to that.

And, you know, our environment programs
us, you know, you got to be a go getter.

You got to get after that.

You got to, you know, build,
build, build sleep when I'm day.

Exactly right.

You know, we've all we've all heard it
and and to all the,

you know, the people out there
that have grown up with that,

you know, I definitely empathize
with that way of upbringing

because, you know, you're you're
just in a constant mode of competition.

It's never enough.

No matter how much money you get,
how much business you get,

how big the house is,
how nice the car, it's never enough.

And it never feels like enough.

And then when you finally hit a wall,
when, like I did, and you say, you know,

the stress is this is way too much,
you know, the pressure's way too much.

You know, all the things that I thought
that I wanted,

all the things that were,
you know, the world's markers of success.

Nice house, nice car, decent bank account.

Not any wrong with that.

Not that there's anything wrong with that.

But that's not the end all. Be all.

But you weren't really enjoying it.

That because you were always striving
for the next thing.

It was.

It was never enough.

Like it was never enough.
It was always something.

It was always the next, you know,
get to the next plateau, you know.

And if it was,

you know, this much money in the bank,
it was, you know, that much more.

And you know, two acts and three acts
and you know, all the vision boards

and all the things were always dollar
amounts, material things,

just things just things
that it could be very easily

replaceable, could be easily
gone, could be easily gained.

Right.

You know, so it was a
it was a humbling moment back in two.

So you're okay now.

Oh yeah I mean so well that way

you know that was the that was the part
the turning point was it.

In a lot of ways. Yeah. It was.

And so this was an unexpected
like health event that happened.

Yeah. Right in the middle of a workday.

You know we're pushing out cars.

We're getting people,
you know, getting them back in their cars.

And you know, we were the type of guys,
hey John, throw your keys on there.

We'll just keep taking them.

We'll just keep taking, you know,
we'll get your car out, you know?

Hey, even if it puts us in hospital,
we'll take a car.

That's right.

You know,
and that was something that, you know,

you know my business partner
and I, that's how what we grew up on.

That's everybody that we idolized.

Everybody that was, you know, our mentors
and people in business.

It was just be busy,
just stay busy, stay busy no matter what.

Just stay busy
because that was that was success.

Until you're in Saint Rafael's

in the waiting room with, you know, a
bunch of other people, and you're.

You don't know what's wrong with you.

Your your blood
pressure's high or dehydrated,

and you finally get to see a doctor,
and he says,

you know, you can't live like this.

You're going to have to be on

anti-depressants, medication
for the rest of your life.

You have a medical doctor
telling you this.

That was a wake up call.

That was a wake up call. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

To be to be on some kind of an
antidepressant for the rest of your life.

Like that was the answer.

That was their answer.

After all. The medical school, everything.

And and
and that didn't that didn't vibe with me.

And what changed at that point on,
you had a lot of time to think about it.

Okay? And now you act.

So people hear that and they go
back to the same old, same old.

You didn't. What did you do?

Well, you
know, one of my one of my first mentors,

had recommended a book by Jim Roan

and, went through the book.

And then I started really researching
Jim Roan.

He was one of my one of my early heroes
of, you know, self-development

and he said it and I and I,
you know, shook my head at it.

But he said, if you want
anything in your life to change,

you have to change.

And that that hit me really hard
like that was

I wanted to just resist that
so hard and say, what do you mean?

It's not the weather,

it's not traffic, it's
not the government, it's not bureaucracy.

It's not, you know,
whatever political parties in office,

no jail for anything in your life
to change, you have to change.

And it took me months.

It took me a year to figure that out.

And I said, okay, well, what do I change?

You know, how do I change?
What about everybody else?

And I was so worried about
what's everybody else doing.

And I kept going back.

For anything in your life to change,
you have to change

for anything in your life to change,
you have to change.

So I began making lots of changes,
wise man.

And you got the message.

And what was what was like?
What was the first change you made?

Oh my gosh,
you guys, I'll make you laugh. Yeah.

Go ahead. Yeah.

So up until that point,
the only book that I had in the house,

we had a Bible which was very dusty.

Right.

And we had one of those bathroom
joke books.

So that's all, yeah.

But the joke was on me because in,
you know, all of our libraries,

now we have them on our phone,
we have our Kindle.

You have you have
you can have a mentor day.

You could have a new brand new mentor
every day.

Right?

You know,
you think about it. So many writes a book.

They pour decades.

They pour a lifetime into 200 pages
for you to read.

How foolish are we?

Sometimes if we don't pick up that book
and read what story?

What they've been through.

You know what they've learned.

You know, success, you know, defeats.

You know how they did it. Like,
how foolish are we in that?

How that's to the degree of foolish
that I was because I didn't

I didn't own any books. Yeah, yeah.

And all that knowledge

are pouring out for really,
you know, pennies when you really think

about the knowledge you're getting
and these people just emulating them

and they, they help you eliminate
some of the pitfalls in a way, too.

They can get you to
where you want to go quicker by the

they're letting you know what they did
and what they didn't do.

And you picked up on that, I'm sure.

Yeah.

And, and I think, you know, a lot of
people say, well, what books do I read?

You know, you see what's on
top of the New York Times bestseller list,

or you see, you know, you see different
people recommend you a book.

And it really, I,
I see that as a little bit of a problem

because, you know, until
you know exactly what the problem is,

you know, throwing a book at it
won't help, you know.

So I know I knew at that point

it was it was really anything
on personal development.

Like what can I do if anything in my life
has to change, I have to change.

Right. Okay. Well, what do I change?

You know, what? Do I start working?

Where do you begin? Yeah,
where do you begin?

And, you know, kind of kind of a long,
a long way to, to say this,

but after every book and I could,
if you ever want to attach it

to the show notes,
I could show you my library of books.

It all comes back to the Bible,
no matter what book.

Every single self-help
book on this planet, on the shelves, this.

You have all of it.
The basis is all of it.

I would challenge anybody to just do it.

I will challenge anybody on this.

It's back.

It's back to biblical principles 100%.

Yeah. No.

And, but the books I did read, the
these people were, you know, less Brown.

Jack Canfield, Zig Ziglar,
Zig Ziglar, Norman Vincent Peale,

love all those books.

Love them. You know, Maxwell

malts, psycho cybernetics,
you know, and psycho cybernetics.

Probably one of the first books
that I read, that really helped

me understand more of the mechanics of of
what was going on.

And it was, you know,

setting your mind to,

to what you wanted
and the thoughts and what you thought.

But that goes back to the Bible as a man
think as it does.

So, so, you know,
those books were really pivotal.

But I the process of sitting down
and reading was probably

one of the hardest, one of the hardest
disciplines, that I had that I had to.

Yeah, you know, relearn and write do.

And it was, that was, that was,
that was one of the hardest things

was just sitting, sitting down and reading
and humbling myself and, you know,

you know, finding
even if you only take one chapter,

a day or a week, just sit with it.

You know, if,
if a book is speaking to you,

take your time with it and

really let it absorb into your body,
your mind.

Yeah.

It sounds like that's what you did.

Yeah.

And I, I kind of brushed back at my mentor
and saying, here, I want you to read,

you know, read these books
and go through these books.

I'm like, I don't have time to read.

And that was the number one.

The that was the first thing
that I had to change.

We have all the time in the world, right?

We have the same 24 hour,

you know, you've heard it,
you've heard all of these phrases.

You have the same 24 hours in a day.

We all have the same 24 hours.

But it was what we do with that time
and how we manage that time.

And it was I could sit down
for three hours and watch a ballgame.

Oh, there you go.

I was going to say TV like,
if you cut out one program perhaps.

Yeah. So it was like first change.

Reorganize your time. Right.

You know okay.

Instead of watching three hours
of the baseball game, maybe watch

two hours and 45 minutes and the other 15.

Let's spend some time in this book.

You know what.

What should I do to instead of
watching my favorite football team.

Which is horrible
because they're always losing it.

Me? Frustrated. Frustrating.
Anyway, I watch the lowlights.

I mean, the highlights.

So you could watch all these games in
just a three minute vignette, right?

And that take time to do other things.

But you have to be intentional.
Yeah, yeah.

About what you do
because the world is vying for your time.

There's so much going on out there.

It's easy to get on Facebook and Instagram
and scroll for hours.

You have to set time aside.

Like Joyce said, be intentional about it.

15 minutes a day can change or
get up a half hour earlier in the morning.

Read.

Get close to God, whatever it, meditate,
whatever you want to do

and take care of your
your your spirit, mind, body.

Yeah, we talk about that.

Yeah.

We get up in the morning,
take care of that,

take care, do some exercising
and just prepare yourself for the day.

And it's amazing how things can change
rather quickly, you know.

And there's another old saying
which is so, so true.

And that's what happened with you, Joe,

is that when the student is ready,
the teacher appears.

Yeah, I love that.

So you had to be
pushed into a hospital bed.

And to get ready

and the teacher the book appeared

and that's how it usually happens.

Because what would resonate with
you may not resonate with me,

but you could read ten books.

It's some obscure book
could say something.

And that one sentence, sometimes
it's like,

whoa,
I never thought of it this way before.

And then it just opens
your mind to the possibilities

that are given to us and within us.

Yeah, it's it's so true.

Now you have multiple businesses.

I know in New England collusion.

We're talking about
you're invested in other business.

What we're really what really has gotten
my attention is what a great dad you are.

There's a lot of dads watching right now
and they love to have more time

with their kids,
because how many dads are working

and they miss the key times in their kids
lives, and you're on the road to that.

But now I see everything on social media
with you.

You have so much time hosting your kids
Bruno and Marcelo,

what they're doing,
the martial arts, the discipline

they have going to school,
seeing how well dressed they are.

They're just you're just a great dad.

Tell me about that. Oh, man.

Oh, dress it up.

Yeah, that's one of the, I was talking to
somebody about that this morning, and,

you know,
you don't realize how hard of a job

it is to be a parent
at home, present and present.

They're making the breakfast,
making the lunches,

correcting the homework,
driving to the sports.

You know, it's a lot.

And it's actually the hardest job.

It's very easy.

I think the easiest thing that I ever did
was get in the car, drive

to work, spend 8 hours to 10 hours there,

finish, stop and have a beer or something
and drive home.

That was easy.

That was the
that was the easiest thing ever.

Now, you know, through,

systems, through changes that we made,

you know,
my business partner and I were able to be

hands off in the business,
give other people opportunities to

to have careers for themselves
and do what they love to do.

And, yeah, I'm able to spend

an enormous amount of time with children.

I'm. I don't miss a bus stop.

I don't miss a practice, you know,
every day, you know, and we're in it.

And, yeah, it's it's
definitely a blessing.

And, you know, something
I look forward to.

And that's another thing
you have to change.

You have to be prepared for that. Yes.

You know, it just reminds me of something
that was brought to, my life recently

and that
and how important it is to be present.

And, I won't say any names.

They don't have the permission,
you know, to talk about it.

So I'll just say that my husband and I,

helped out someone that was in need.

And, due to circumstances,
they weren't going to be around.

And their three children,

there was no
one there to, you know, take care of them.

So we committed to do this.

It ended up that we ended up actually
living there for six months

and taking care of our own families
and going back and forth.

But this the one daughter
is writing a book,

and she sent me part of the book
not too long ago,

and it floored me

to read this,
she said, because my husband was

he got up very early in the morning,
so he made breakfast for them.

So she wrote that

while they could easily
have made their own English muffins,

he would ask them what they wanted and one
wanted it dark, one wanted it light.

And she said, I never felt

so much love in an English muffin.

And it was, wow,

the littlest things that you do
for someone, for your children

at a young age,
they're carrying that with them.

They'll always remember that show.

So yeah, yeah, yeah.

Thank you for falling for that story.

Yeah. It's not even in English. Muffin.

Yeah. That's right. Yeah.
It makes a meaning.

Yes, I hear I've heard rumors.

Oh, we bake bread.

There's always smell of baked bread
or some kind of baked goods

in the morning. And.

And you're right,

I said, and there's some times
where I think about that

and it takes me back to my childhood
where,

you know,
my dad would would make the Sunday sauce.

Oh, God.

You wake up on a Sunday morning
and there's that, that Italian Sunday

sauce smell going,
and you know that it's comforting.

It's making us feel care.

Care? Yeah.

You feel so cared about.

And, you know,
you just said making memories.

That was my my grandmother's
favorite thing to say.

You know, when she.

When she was alive, we we she lived
on our third floor for many years.

We had a three family house, and,
she had the penthouse suite.

Oh, okay.

And we would go up there
as kids and go, go cook with her.

And she had no idea
that any of this was appealing to,

you know, a 9 or 10 year old kid.

And, you know, just looking back at it
now, it's like you'd

see those little acts of, you know,
Joseph, what would you like, you know,

make you this after school or make you
that after school and make you that snack?

And, you know, if she was here now,
she would see, you know,

Joseph,
you see how much work it ist, right? Yes.

But she always said,
we're making memories.

I'm making. That's true.

And I'm glad you. I'm glad you said that.

And see the impact we make on
people's lives by the way we treat them.

I'm Luther.

You're talking about your grandmother
all these years later,

and how we associate
certain smells with our child

in, you know, with the sauce.

And I remember
going home on Sunday afternoons

after going out and playing
football in the morning or basketball and,

and open up the door
and the smell just permeating

the room of mom and dad with her cooking
whatever they're doing in the crock pot.

All that.

And you're doing that now because you have
that time to spend with your kids.

Like you said, it's the hardest job.

At the same time
it's got to be the most rewarding job.

And I say that in quotations.

Yeah but you're there for them and
they're going to remember that forever.

And they're going to hopefully pass
that on to their kids down the line.

Yeah that's right.

Yeah. That's right.

And it's
you know saying that it's a hard job.

It's so true.

And many parents
would would empathize with it. And

like you

said it, it is
those small things that we have no idea.

We're just doing that.

We're just out of our,

our being, you know, you know, just just
kind of unconsciously doing these things.

And they see every little. Yes.

And you yes.

Even myself now working
on, you know, being present.

No cell phones like, you know, dinner.

We sit down, the four of us,
and there's no cell phones and there's

you're actually have conversations
with each other in the eye.

We do, and we do.

I love and the, you know, the maturity

I see in my sons where they can say hello
to somebody and look them in the eye.

Oh that's great. Yeah.

They could shake their hand and they're

not ashamed to look at somebody
or you know, they've like such confidence

and you don't realize that
these little things that you're,

you know, teaching them along the way
and, you know, they're just getting it.

Right. Right.

Raise a good human
love that other than that.

But I love that about you.

Like the you said, like he's so busy.

You're so busy,
but you learn to prioritize.

Yeah.

And, what you focus on, you can create.

And again, I go back to you
being in the hospital bed and you started

then in there to create the life
that would benefit you and your family.

But it had to begin with you
because unless you put your oxygen

mask on first,
you couldn't take care of anyone else.

That's true, that's true.

And to add to that point, it's
nobody really wants you at 70%.

They've learned, you know, nobody wants
you at 60 or 70%, they want you at 100%.

And that's that's a piece of programing

that we've adopted that,
oh, I'll take care of this person.

And we see we see helping others.

And you know, we're selfless.

Like I can't worry about me
I can't no, you have to.

You know, when we say treat others
as you would want to be treated.

Well, if you're not setting the bar
for yourself.

Yeah.

You know, like, I admire you for.

Yes. I'm just going to say.

Yeah.

John, your fitness,
you take such good care of yourself

and you die and, you know, texted you,
hey, you go for lunch.

You say I'm, you know, I'm on a fast.

I'm so, you know, I'm
so in admiration of that

because you're committed to that and it in
it just goes to show you that.

But look how much you have to give out
to other people.

Yes, yes.

It's like and you
I don't know if I would want John at six,

I wouldn't,
I wouldn't want stressed out John

right here.
You take such good care of yourself

and you see such a,
you know, priority in that.

And other people might see that as like,
oh, you know, I could

I could never do that.
I could never take care of myself.

But we want you at 100%
because look at John at 100%.

You know, I love John
and I just said, well, the thing is.

And Joyce and I talked about this too.

And, John,
you take care of yourself, Joyce.

I mean, you're committed
to working out as well.

Functionality.

The thing is, we're here for a finite,
finite amount of time,

and we owe it to our family, our friends,
the people that we work with

to be operating, like you said, at 100%
or as close to as we possibly can, right.

And God's given us this amazing temple.

Let's take care of it.

We all can do it. So many people.

So I'm not sure. I'm sure you can't.
It's just a decision.

You made the decision in the hospital.

Choice.

You made a decision many times
when you've had things

that could have stopped
you and your life and me as well.

And of course, many of you, everybody
watching you listening right now.

And you can do it.

You know, I can't wait to read the book
that you're writing.

Are you writing a book?

It's it's coming along. It's coming along.

All right.

I think I think it's more of a living book
right now than ever.

So it's I'm living it chapter by chapter.

So, you know.

Right.
You got to let us know when it's out

because we want everybody
to know about it.

And I am documenting it.

But it's a lot of documentation.

You know, your story needs to be heard
by the masses.

Yeah I appreciate that.

And it's

you know,
sometimes you don't know where to start

because it's like there's
just so much to start.

Yeah. Yeah.

There's a great rival doctor Wayne Dyer.
Bring him.

Oh, Lord.

Because I just love
he's a great philosopher.

And, he said to begin a book

he would take,
he'd make up an image for the cover

and he would just sit
it next to his computer, and he would just

look at the cover, and then the thoughts
would come to him about the book.

So maybe you think of a name. Yeah.

And it doesn't have to be permanent.
You know, it could change the name.

Well, I have a name.

Oh, well, there you go.

Because you can't
you can't unveil the name I can. Okay?

You guys are friends. We're we're off.

Are all friends here?

Living proof living, living proof.

And that was a song
by we're going to show.

And you're like country music.

Of course.

Ricky Van Shelton, Randy
Williams, junior, living proof.

Well, yeah, I know we're digging deeper.

You know, I went deep.

Yeah, I went into the kitchen
because I love baking.

So when you bake bread.

Yeah, the dough has to proof. Right.

So and bread is like,
what a life, you know.

So living proof it's perfect.

That's a great. Yeah. It's a
I didn't think of the bread angle.

Right. Yes.

Like the song MacArthur Park.

You know, you bake
and you go the rain. Right.

What does that song mean?

Those of me, I don't know what is there
I could eat?

I'm like squirrel,
my wife always said, squirrel.

Focus. Sorry about that.
You got the weave.

It's not.

I do all the time.

No journaling,
but Joyce knows that, so it's great.

But, Joe, you've been fantastic.

I mean, good luck with your business.
Thank you. New England collision.

So if you get into an accident,
this is the man to talk to.

I know you're doing many other businesses,
which we'll hear about in the future.

I'm sure Super Dad book is on the way, but

you blessed my life with your friendship
and your blessing.

So many people have others lives
everywhere you go with your philanthropy

and your mentorship.

So thank you for doing what you're doing,
Joe. Thank you.

Thank you so much.

And I love having you
as you're a sponsor of our show.

So we want you one more.

That's right.

And all of Joe's information
is under our YouTube.

And wherever you listen to us
I heart Radio Podcast Network as well.

So and so we're over at iHeart.

But thank you so, so much for watching.

What's good with John and Joyce,
who maybe you're listening to it.

They say a lot more people listen
and watch nowadays, which, you know,

I know
come over and watch and criticize us. No.

But, Joe, thank you so much for sharing.

And thank you so much for having me on
what's good with John and Joy.

So many blessings to you and your family.

And yes, remember to breathe,
relax your shoulders and all as well.

We love you. Just be a good human.

God bless.

Good message. Be a good human. Yes.