Speaker 1: Good. Okay, so let's get to that last question right there on your computer.
Speaker 2: Okay, I am tired of turkey, how can I get my family to eat something else for the holiday?
Speaker 1: Now, turkey, I see. You can eat something else but in part of the celebration of Christmas is that hours and hours you spend on the Christmas meal and missing all the present opening and all the other fun the family is having, because you are -- I mean everyone is always seems to be having fun serving the drinks and I am in the kitchen.
Speaker 2: Well, you hogged the turkey, like would you let me use the turkey? You won't even eat it. Like, I did that stuff last year, not all of us eat turkey.
Speaker 1: And the gluten, the gluten. We still talk about the gluten.
Speaker 2: It had essence of turkey in it and it has the memories of turkey in it, and--
Speaker 1: It was disgusting.
Speaker 2: Did you even put it into your mouth.
Speaker 1: I couldn't; I could better be cut through that thing.
So anyways, I think that's part of Christmas, whole experience of Christmas is --
Speaker 2: Hogging everything, taking it doing it in your way, not letting anybody else to have their sense of what a Christmas solstice is. When we sing solstice carols, you know --.
Speaker 1: I want to sing Christmas carols. so that is my tradition is Christmas carols, I mean what is a solstice carol.
Speaker 2: Snow, it is about snow and there are more, they are, sort of, what you do is you let them come from you. They are a part of that chanting.
Speaker 1: Your songs have no melody that one can remember.
Speaker 2: Melody is hard to remember. It's a sense of snow and then -- Happy holiday and thank you for your questions.
Speaker 1: Thanks. Happy holiday time.
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