“At our age, the end is much closer than the beginning”.
Two old men sit down every week to reflect on their experiences through life, how they live their lives in the present day, and most importantly, how they’ve stopped giving a sh*t.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
“At our age, the end is much closer than the beginning”.
Two old men sit down every week to reflect on their experiences through life, how they live their lives in the present day, and most importantly, how they’ve stopped giving a sh*t.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In this raw and reflective conversation, Byron and Paul tackle some of life's biggest questions as they navigate their late 50s. Starting with frustrations over World Cup ticket pricing and the inaccessibility of major sporting events, they spiral into deeper territory: Is the capitalist system still working for ordinary people? Should they have prioritized differently when younger?
The discussion moves from Porsches and material aspirations to the harsh realities of financial security, family relationships, and what truly matters. Byron shares poignant reflections on his parents—his mother's quiet dignity versus his father's self-serving legacy. Both hosts open up about their deepest fears: losing loved ones, cognitive decline, and whether their children will respect them in their final years.
They question whether the relentless pursuit of success was worth the trade-offs, discuss the fisherman parable about life's simple joys, and wonder if they should just "give up" and live more essentially. It's an honest, vulnerable conversation about aging, regret, love, loss, and what makes life meaningful when you're staring down the final decades.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.