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Faith Fuels Creativity: How God Shapes Our Stories and Lives | Episode 224
Faith Fuels Creativity: How God Shapes Our Stories and Lives | Episode 224
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What propels us to create when rewards aren't guaranteed? Scott (known online as EdgiScript) joins us to explore the profound connection between faith, creativity, and mental well-being in this soul-stirring continuation of our previous conversation.
Scott shares a perspective on creativity that flies in the face of conventional wisdom: "Treat it like you will never make a dime... Do you still want to do it?" This litmus test for authentic passion forms the foundation of his approach to writing Spirit Man Comics and other creative endeavors. Rather than chasing marketplace validation, he creates from an internal wellspring of purpose that ultimately produces more resonant, meaningful work.
The conversation takes a fascinating turn when Scott compares life to a board game of Monopoly—something we play with intensity and desire to win, but ultimately put away as we move into eternity. "This life, in comparison to eternity, is gone," he reflects, challenging us to consider how this perspective might reshape our priorities and creative pursuits. Is legacy what we think it is? What remains after we're gone?
For creators wrestling with process, Scott offers practical insights into capturing inspiration (he emails himself ideas), overcoming the intimidation of the blank page, and the value of collaboration (his partnership with Paul who handles the business and technical aspects of their comic). His candid admission—"I'm a brilliant idiot"—reveals the humility that permeates his creative philosophy.
Subscribe to join our growing community of thinkers exploring the intersection of mental health, creativity, and purpose. Check out Spirit Man Comics at spiritmancomics.com to experience Scott's work firsthand.
We pick up our conversation with Scott (aka EdgiScript) exploring the profound intersection between creative work, faith, and finding purpose in a world obsessed with instant results and legacy.
• Sometimes it's hard to see why God has put us in certain places until we understand the bigger picture
• Planting seeds often requires patience as we may not see the fruit of our work immediately
• Proper mental health comes from realizing our limitations while recognizing the immense worth God places on us
• Life compared to a board game—something we play passionately but ultimately put away as we step into eternity
• Writing advice: approach creative work as if you'll never make money from it to ensure it comes from genuine passion
• The creative process often works best when inspiration drives the work rather than forced discipline
• The blank page presents the biggest challenge for writers—sometimes writing skeletal versions helps overcome this block
• Collaboration is crucial—knowing when to leverage others' strengths complements our own limitations
• Scott's work with Spirit Man Comics focuses on creating meaningful content rather than profit
Check out Spirit Man Comics for free at spiritmancomics.com or find Scott on Reddit as EdgiScript.
#unleashingspirit #spiritman #spirituality #manifestation #energywork #consciousness #mindfulness #personalgrowth #innerjourney #selfdiscovery #spiritualawakening #higherconsciousness #energyhealing #spiritualpath #spiritualtransformation #edgiscript #faithAndCreativity #GodInspiredLife #spiritualCreative #faithFuelsPassion #christianCreatives #FaithBasedArt #GodShapesOurStory #purposefulLiving #inspiredByFaith #creativeJourney #faithbasedCreativity #spirituallyInspired
Welcome to this episode of the Voices for Voices TV show and podcast. I am your host, founder and executive director of Voices for Voices, Justin Alan Hayes. Thank you for joining us If you can give us a thumbs up. If you subscribe, follow, share all that good stuff that's free also will help us to reach our goal of trying to reach 3 billion people over the course of my lifetime and beyond, and we don't know if we'll get there, but we have a huge goal and without your love and support, we wouldn't be this far down the journey with us. So we are going to pick up our conversation with Scott, otherwise known as EdgiScript his username You've probably heard of him Spiritman and we're going to pick up our part two of the conversation, where Scott was talking about an individual who is now near and dear to his keep up to date with you and all that fun stuff. So, Scott, go ahead and pick it up as you'd like.
Scott Edgiscript:Oh, thank you. Yeah, and I just wanted to say real quick, when the last one just kind of cut off like that, I started laughing when we were disconnected because I was like you see, god, I'm so glad we just proved. I don't know what I'm doing.
Justin Alan Hayes:So yeah.
Scott Edgiscript:So no, but I really I'm. I'm actually appreciative of those moments. Right now in my life I've come to a place where I've said, you know, thank you God for making me look less so anything that happens, you lift you, glorify yourself. That's one of my prayers throughout the later part of my life is glorify yourself, don't lift me up. I don't need to be lifted up. I'm very happy to explain to anybody how I am incompetent and I can't do this, but but anyway, where where was it?
Scott Edgiscript:Yes, I was talking about Dragon's Tower, and she's an amazing, amazing person who's just been such an inspiration in my life too. But but where I was going with that too was just to say just, I was thanking God. In that you've given me, you know, if nothing else happens, if I don't see any other fruit, this was enough. You know, I've touched someone's life deeply and I just thank God for that. So anyway, that was kind of going around with that. Sometimes it's hard to see why God has put us in the place he has. It was kind of where I was going with that. I don't know when else should we go.
Justin Alan Hayes:Yeah, I mean it's really detailed. On that. I find myself a lot the old adage, you know, plant a seed, it'll, it'll grow eventually. I have a hard time, after I plant the seed, to take a step back. I'm I'm always trying to like, watch it, watch it, watch it, and then and then sometimes be a lot of times, be disappointed and I go well, why isn't it growing?
Justin Alan Hayes:I did this thing with put this seed and uh, and and I think that's a that's a hard thing for a lot of people is is to have that, that patience, especially with how digitized everything's come with their phones and, uh, how connected we are. Like, oh well, I did this thing, I did this project, so it should automatically bear the fruit. And and then we get into, uh, you know, comparing ourselves to others that may have been doing things longer than us. Uh, and yeah, I do that all all the time. But uh, you know, look at, you know things my parents have and what they've done, and it's like, well, it's taken so many years for them to be where they're at. So I can't really compare myself as well as another organization that has been around for 100 years and we've been around for five to say, oh well, why aren't these things happening? And I find myself in those ruts and so I definitely follow what you're talking about.
Justin Alan Hayes:It's not for me, it's for God, and at the end of the day, once we're gone, it's going to me. You know, it's for, it's for God, and uh, and at the end of the day, once, once we're gone, um, it's going to be those good deeds as people that we've touched that are going to really take our legacy. Um, cause, we even think of presidents and supposed important people, and now, with the Pope passing and there's, there's only so many people that get kind of remembered. So if we're in it for you know all the glory and the fame for ourselves, uh, it doesn't matter. We're not going to be remembered like we. We think we are and I think that's a hard thing to handle, yeah, the.
Scott Edgiscript:The history books in heaven, I believe, are much different than the history books on earth. And that's one of the things. And your show is about mental health and you have a focus on mental health, and I think that's one of the most important things, for proper mental health is to realize just how worthless you are and how much worth God has placed on you. You can do nothing on your own To take a deep breath. That breath itself was gracious from God. You don't deserve it. You didn't earn it. You did nothing to make it happen. You didn't put this earth in place. You didn't create the atmosphere. You didn't build your own lungs. You didn't do anything. God gave it to you because God said you're worth it. Few years.
Scott Edgiscript:And one of the things that, uh, one of the things that jumped out at me was that we, we, we don't see the creation of man right off the bat. We see, you know he builds everything else up to that point and it was all for man. He was building the house he was building, uh, and there there's a. There's a lot to this I won't get into here. Take three days, but he was building a house for his bride. It's one of the pictures that we should see in that and did.
Scott Edgiscript:One of the things that hit me is man did nothing to deserve any of it. He didn't even exist. How could he have done anything to have said God, I deserve what you're giving me when, when he wasn't even in the picture? You know God? God formed the mountains, formed the seas, uh, created the plants, made the animals. He was setting it up for his beloved, and his beloved didn't even exist yet there's nothing man could have possibly done. That's a picture of grace. That's a picture of undeserved, unmerited favor.
Scott Edgiscript:God said Justin, I love you and I'm going to give everything for you, long before you were ever a thought on this planet, long before you existed as a human being. And that's what I try. That's what I try my hardest, and I fail, like everyone else, but I try my hardest to focus everything I do on God. What makes you happy? Because this life is but a vapor. It's going to be gone. I don't care if you live to be a thousand. This life, in comparison to eternity, is gone. So it's like to me, I relate it to, it's like sitting down and playing monopoly.
Scott Edgiscript:Yeah, you want to win, you want to do good. It is this fun game and all that, but at the end of the day, the board gets put away and you keep going with your life. That game was just a half hour hour, whatever it takes to, however long it takes to play, and whether you won or lost is irrelevant to you now living your life, and that's this life that we're in here. I relate it to a game we're we're playing this game for, for what's going to happen after this game. This, the board game, closes. We box it up, we put it away and now we step into eternity. Uh, now, now that life is what matters, uh, uh, everything that happens here is, uh, the only thing that matters is God. How am I pleasing you? How did I make you happy? How did I make you smile with what I did? Because then, for the rest of eternity, we're going to reap that reward. And I don't know, I guess I'll I'll stop with that thought. What you got, anything?
Justin Alan Hayes:no, no, thanks for going into depth, because I, I mean, I, I, uh, I love to learn and and to kind of be refreshed, and and I like your analogy, the board game, where, yep, you're playing your own ball and then the game ends at a certain point and it goes in back into the box and, well, you know, life kind of continues and even when you know we have loved ones, that that passed, uh, really wrote the the same, the same thing, go through grieving and go through grieving at different levels, but at some point it's like, okay, well, the ceremony is going to be over, the burial or whatever instructions that are being done, the calling hours and all that.
Justin Alan Hayes:Then there's going to be a point where, okay, well, that part's done, and so then it's really up to us to keep them alive in our minds and our spirits. And that part is really hard even just to think about. Like, oh, my gosh, like, well, that's gonna be me someday, and then people are just gonna, they're just gonna go get a hold of their lives like oh my gosh, like I thought.
Justin Alan Hayes:I thought I was, you know, the important person and that and it's like well you know it, uh, my, my cousin, he, he said best we were, uh, we were together a long time and and he said he's like I've been to graceland, and he said you know what's missing? And I said so I don't know. And he goes well, all of these things are there, but all this isn't there. So you can accumulate whatever we want house, car, boat, what have. You can't take it with you. And I think that just a good reminder and it really kind of just brings that perspective down to where it is. I'm guilty of having an ego and you know time yeah, time to time and and I do okay.
Justin Alan Hayes:Well, when you get, when you kind of get brought back down to the earth and back down to life and uh, like, wow, like what, what's actually going to happen? And then to your, your point and you know point and the purpose, and why are we here? And we're here for a reason and many reasons, and some we know, some we won't find out and others will.
Scott Edgiscript:Yeah, I want to share. There's a friend of mine who's a missionary I want to share. There's a friend of mine who's a missionary and he is a missionary to Mexico and he's a Mexican citizen, came across illegally years ago and he and he jokes about how he would. He was living in LA and the the the agents would come once a week and they would say, yep, you're not supposed to be here, come back, and they deport him. And by that afternoon he was back because he knew how to get back in. And you know they would, they would deport him out and he would just be right back.
Scott Edgiscript:And it was just a cyclical thing. They just kept doing their job, deporting him. He just kept coming right back and he said that one time, coming right back, and he said that one time. So he moved to Iowa, which is where he moved to Iowa and he's working a factory job and this little Jewish guy wants to keep telling about Jesus and he and he's sick of it, he doesn't want anything to do with it and he keeps telling this guy, get away from me. Oh, I'm sorry, you cool, yeah, yeah, my daughter.
Justin Alan Hayes:She's trying to like whisper, like whisper, and I'm trying to yeah, everything, everything's good. No, that's totally cool, yeah anyway, yeah we just had a former uh neighbor where we used live, and she brought an Easter basket for her.
Scott Edgiscript:And my wife's in the basement.
Justin Alan Hayes:I'm up here and she's like she's got to go to the dentist. She's in her car. I was like, well, give her a hug, say thanks. She's like no, no, she's already gone.
Scott Edgiscript:Anyway, sorry, I didn't mean to cut you, no, that's okay, uh, but, uh, hey, once again, proof, it's not about us, um, but this guy, he said he kept, he kept, this guy kept witnessing to my friend. Finally, he says you tell me about jesus one more time, I'm gonna beat the living snot out of you. And he kept going. So this guy with a few of his friends meet him after work outside and they beat him up and he essentially doesn't see him again, leaves that job, goes somewhere else and about a year later he accepts Jesus as a savior and he said and that guy was one of the reasons as a savior. And he said and that guy was one of the reasons.
Scott Edgiscript:Because he said that, uh, that guy, uh, was willing to be beaten up for this. And he said, uh, uh, that guy just wouldn't give up. And he said that that just kept eating at him and and he and he, he was like it. It must really mean something, this must be real, if he was willing to go through that for me, uh, for this. And. But the thing about the thing I always remember about that story that that makes an impact to me is that guy that he said he was one of the reasons. I, I don't believe he knows you know what happened.
Scott Edgiscript:So, and that that's why I say it's important to understand. I'm here, I have to obey God when God says go, he knows what he's doing. You might never see the results, that's okay, you don't have to. You just got to trust him that he knows what's going on. So that guy never saw the results of this guy not only turning his life to Christ, but now he's a missionary and he's reaching hundreds, thousands of other people and he's touching lives and he's reaching out to hurting souls that need him. And this one guy might be going. God, you know what's happening. Why am I doing this? I'm not seeing anything.
Justin Alan Hayes:Wow, when you're in your creative space, is that, is that time that you, uh, you set aside, or is it moments that come up and you're like okay, I gotta stop what I'm doing and I gotta get this down?
Scott Edgiscript:I'm just, I'm just curious on how that and I know it's probably like- yeah, a lot of different things well, for me it's um, I there there is a small percentage, I'd say about 20 is just. I should work on this, just focus, just sit down, make it happen, uh. But I don't like to do that. As much as possible, I, I want it to be just flowing and it has to come out of me, uh. But there is a certain amount of discipline where you say, look, just set everything else aside and focus. But usually what I try to do is, when I come up with an inspiration for something, when something hits me, write it down, write it down at that moment. And usually I can't write it down. I don't have a pen or paper. So I will, I'll grab my phone, I'll pull up my email and I will email myself, and I will, and I will text hey, this is my idea, and so I send that email to myself, so I don't forget it. And then, when? Then what? What's going on is? I'm working, I'm doing other stuff and I'm constantly thinking, oh, that I got to get in on that, I get, I get hungry for it. So then my first free moment, it's like when I jump in. The juices have been flowing and and I just start writing and I start creating, because it's already been working in my mind for a long time Now.
Scott Edgiscript:When that? When does that inspiration come? I don't know. You know it just happens Sometimes. It doesn't come. It doesn't come. And you're like, you know, I'm honest, maybe with Spirit man you're like I really told him I'd get him the next comic. I told the artist, paul, I'll get him the next comic and I got to get this done. You know, and you'll sit and you'll focus and you'll and and you'll work on it. And for me personally, the most difficult thing about writing is the blank page to start with. It's it's oh my goodness, it's crazy difficult. Oh my goodness, it's crazy difficult. I might have a few ideas about how it goes, but I don't know how to start and get there to that point, or what have you? Once, it's like once I start writing it the, the damn breaks.
Scott Edgiscript:It's like what? Sometimes I will write something that sounds dumb, just to get something on the page, or I'll write a skeletal version of it. I won't write in depth, I'll just. I'll just write how are you doing? I'm fine, I need to get this done. Ok, then let's do it. And you know, a very bare bones version that does not sound good at all, but I'm getting the general plot or the general idea of what's happening out. And then when I go back and reread it, it's like now my mind is not focused on creating something, it's following along with that and now things start to flow. At that point, now I start to speak more naturally. Now I'm'm.
Scott Edgiscript:You know, I wouldn't say it like that, I'd say it like this, and and now it starts to become flesh and not just a skeleton.
Justin Alan Hayes:That's how I work, so uh, an individual who, uh, I guess what might be, things or topics that an individual as they're growing up might reveal to them or to their teachers or family, that writing, creating might be a way that they want to go and they want to at least try out. Do you have any, maybe insight? And I know it's probably there's no one one size fits all, but just kind of overall yeah, no, you're definitely right with that.
Scott Edgiscript:That one size does you know? Definitely that does not fit all uh. Some advice I would give to people who are thinking about it is uh one, uh. Treat it like you will never make a dime. Treat it like you will never see any money from this at all. Just assume right now you will never have a career in this. You will never make any money whatsoever. Do you still want to do it? And if the answer is yes, then go for it, because then it's a passion growing within you.
Scott Edgiscript:Now I'm not saying that certain people can't have good careers and make lots of money in things they don't really love. I mean, I have many jobs that I've had in my life I've been very good at and I'm professional and I care and I do the best for my employer, but I have never had one job that I've said. This is the job is why I'm here. The money is why I'm here. I need to make a living. I need to pay the bills. I've longed for a job. You don't have to pay me, I just want to be here. I've never had one, so I'm not worried about making money off of this. I mean, I would love to make money off of this.
Scott Edgiscript:If my novel sold a million copies, you know if, if spirit man, if it took off, became a major motion picture or something like that, I wouldn't complain. But I'm not looking for that. I love to do this, whether I make a single dime on it ever. And quite frankly, paul and I for Spirit man we put a lot more money into it than we've seen back. We give away the comic as much as possible because we see it as more of a ministry than a money-making venture.
Scott Edgiscript:But that's the number one rule I tell people is does it come from here or does it come from here? Because if it comes from here, then you're going to love it and you're going to. You're going to. You is going to come out onto the page who you are and your passion and that is going to make the final project so much more believable and real and exciting and emotional and just absorbing. If you, if this is the only thing going on the page, it can be entertaining. I mean, how many? How many movies have we seen in our lives that we came out of and we went? Yeah, I had a good two hours. That was. That was a fun time, never going to remember it again. But yeah, I, I paid my ticket and I enjoyed myself. Versus how many movies or shows you just, you just repeat and they, they sucked you in and they just absorbed you and I am never going to forget that moment and it changed me as a person. That's the difference between writing from here or writing from here.
Justin Alan Hayes:And I think the reverb a little bit back to that play that you were in and going into that last scene, slip bow have all these thoughts. You were doing it because it was in your heart and not just in their head.
Justin Alan Hayes:It made that those comments at the end where her voice was crackling made that all more like okay, yeah, this is what I love to do and if I have an opportunity to be paid to do this type of work, I'd love it. But the feeling and the chills and uh, just like, oh my gosh, like I'm, we really did affect people and it we're not always, uh, we didn't have to focus on, you know, the the negative things and all those can be be worked on, um, but just just the mere fact that it was entertainment, but it was. It gripped them from like an emotional standpoint, not just a money standpoint.
Scott Edgiscript:Yeah, yeah, and in no way am I trying to hint that if anyone makes money off of this it's corrupt and wrong. No, of course not. No, absolutely. A worker is worth his wages. I'm not saying that at all. I'm just saying if you are, if you are truly passionate about this, about your writing, then it's just going to make the product. Not only is it going to make the product better, in my opinion, but it's going to be something you enjoy doing. If it's coming from here and you're doing it for a buck, then you're going to hate it after a while. It's gonna it.
Scott Edgiscript:It it's just a job, it's not a passion and, as we all know, in any job we've ever had, there come annoyances, there come. Oh, I wish I could find a better career. I wish I could find. Uh, if it's coming from within you, you'll never have that because it's it's, it's who you are, it's what you want to be doing. Yeah, that's the best advice I can give anybody. I mean, there's a lot of little technical things that you know, everyone should to you know, for one thing, a little simple thing learn how to spell, please. But but little things like that, you know. But yeah, yeah, it's just, it's just got to be within you yeah, no, I'm the.
Justin Alan Hayes:I'm the same way it, being 40, 43, uh years old the first I was in the first part of my life. Looking at my, my family and the, the, uh, the, my dad, dad and grandpa in their 70s is kind of when they end up passing on first half doing things based off of my mind and want a better title, want a better salary. I mean, obviously everybody wants to be paid, uh, a good wage and and now with voices for voices and and the things that we're doing now it's more of the. It's kind of like to your point, like put a lot more money in it than um than that way that we've gotten out.
Justin Alan Hayes:But I'm pulled in by the, the heartstrings, versus, yeah, the the mind and making the buck. And uh, I mean people ask me all the time I was like, yeah, like 10 years ago I've never dreamed that I would be at the pendulum, you know, went so much the other way but that hits the hit to your point that you know if you do something you like to do and you would do for no money, then that's something to be a good, good thing to at least to explore and and see. Now, when you um because you mentioned you prior to, prior to the internet, we got about eight minutes left. This isn't a plan. Um, thank you for that. I should have said that last time it popped up.
Justin Alan Hayes:As far as the submission process, you mentioned that prior to internet, you had to face-to-face, you had to share to see if there was an interest in it. How does that process, or has it changed? You know somebody has a work that they put together and they say, okay, now what do I do? And not that somebody is going to be interested, but at least to test the waters.
Scott Edgiscript:You know what? I'll be honest with you, I'm the last person to ask that question to. I have been so blessed. Paul does 90 of everything. Uh, he's online, he knows. I mean, I mean I went to my first comic convention, my first comic con with him with this comic he set everything up. I have been so blessed that, um, I don't know anything about that. I just write and I say Paul, here's my script and he's got it. He sets up the website. He set up our website. Spiritmancomicscom is all him.
Justin Alan Hayes:It's awesome by the way. Check it out.
Scott Edgiscript:Oh, thank you, and it's free. It's free online for anyone who wants to check it out, uh, uh, but all he does, the artwork he does, he does all of that himself. And right now I'm kind of in a I I'm very intimidated by all of that. And it's not that I'm unintelligent, I just, you know, I've got other duties, I've got other things going on, I have other other scripts. When I have free time I just want to write. I don't want to dig into, well, how do I do this and how do I do whatever?
Scott Edgiscript:So when I started looking to get my novel published, I went the traditional route. I went to publishers and I got some positive feedback. You know, hey, a lot of interest in this, but unfortunately we can only publish 1% of what we get. You didn't quite make the cut, all that kind of thing. But I, other than that, I don't know. A lot of people have told me you can, you have this option, you have this option. You have this option. You can self-publish, you can do this. I have no idea. I have no idea if I have first clue as to how to do that. And and again, I bring that around to. If anything good comes from this. It ain't coming from me, you know. It's coming from God, because I'm, I'm, I'm a brilliant idiot is what I am, you know. So I'm sorry. That's a lousy answer to your question. What do people do?
Justin Alan Hayes:No.
Scott Edgiscript:All I did was say I want to write, and God basically threw so many things in my lap that I am just so blessed with and I just I give him all the credit for all of that.
Justin Alan Hayes:And I think that's a good lesson, that some people innately are able to do that and all the intricacies. But then if we don't know somebody or we don't have that knowledge ourselves, the best thing kind of if the car needs to take the mechanic and you would go to the specials you find people and reach out to your network to see who's out there who's trustworthy, and then it's okay to ask for help. I think that that's something that.
Justin Alan Hayes:I know I've been, I can do everything myself and I can power through it, and well, that may be the case, but it comes at a cost of mental energy, physical energy, depending on what it is, and and so it's okay to ask for as for help and yeah and and paul right now is looking into, uh, what we can do to try to make spirit man a monthly comic.
Scott Edgiscript:It's been a slow process because I write the script, I hand it to him. He does everything else so he's we've got, we've gotten.
Scott Edgiscript:He's trying to finish inking and coloring what we have right now put together, kind of a pack, and if we can get some interest, if he can get it out there, maybe we can hire someone else to to be involved, maybe we can start putting it on shelves. He's looking into that right now and but from my part I'm kind of like you know what? I trust you. It's just, I hand it off, I'll, if I can help, let me know. It's not that I'm lazy, it's not that you know I don't know what I'm doing. You know I really don't, so you know?
Justin Alan Hayes:yeah, I think that that really dovetails into our last couple minutes. So how can, how can people learn about you, the work you do, spirit man? Um, not all those, you know, those personal plugs with the work that you do Absolutely wwwspiritmancomicscom.
Scott Edgiscript:Why do we even say the www anymore?
Justin Alan Hayes:I do that.
Scott Edgiscript:But spiritmancomicscom, if you want to check it out, absolutely free for anyone, a print copy if you would like it. There's a way on there you can order one. It does cost because we have to, we, it costs for us to print it, but we basically make zero on it. Uh, we basically give it to you at cost. Um, I, I have a presence. If you're on reddit, uh, you can look up edgy script, edgi script, check out my stuff again. They're they're just me having fun, uh, but if you want to read that, you can, and maybe one day my novel will be published, but I have no idea oh well, thank you for setting aside, you know time to to talk with us and chat and share thank you so much you're.
Justin Alan Hayes:I definitely value your opinion and what you do and want to get as much clean material into everybody's hands, especially children as we're growing up. There's lots of choices and to have the background and how you approach things are very very helpful conventions.
Scott Edgiscript:We've had a couple comments. People walk up and look and goes oh my goodness, your women have clothes on.
Justin Alan Hayes:Yeah, yeah right, yeah, yeah, and that's a that's, that's a big thing, because the little things they add up in the mind and uh, great, well, do we miss? Did I miss anything else you wanted to share?
Scott Edgiscript:No, just thank you so much. I really appreciate it. If you ever want to contact me. If you need me again, give me a buzz.
Justin Alan Hayes:Absolutely Great. We want to thank our. I was able to do it the last episode because we ran right up against time, which is actually good that we were able to max that out. That's what we like to do. We want to thank again our listeners, our viewers. We're well over 200 episodes. Check us out.
Justin Alan Hayes:We're everywhere from video, youtube Rumble, and then all the audio platforms, and then all the audio platforms, and we just are grateful about the opportunity to share the work and individuals like yourself and keep doing what you're doing. And, yeah, we'll definitely be reaching out here in the near future as we all progress, in whatever manner that is, we'll go Great. So until next time, please be a voice for you or somebody in need.