The Ghost Bride and Other Legends From Coahuila

The Ghost Bride and Other Legends From Coahuila

Hello, Hello, this is Christina and Carmen. This is another episode of a Spooky Tells, the podcast for all things SWOOKI, haunted, places, myths, legends and true crime in Latin America. Just a reminder, I guess before we get into our topic. We are in every other week podcast now, yes, two times a month, because mama went back to school exactly. And one more warning, I'm a little sick in this recording here, so yeah, I'm sorry for the way sound or whatever. And also normally we have listener stories that we read, but I because I am sick and I'm a little baby when I'm sick, I have done nothing and so I didn't go looking for a listener story. But we love receiving them. So if you have want to send to us, you can email us Spookyitos at gmail dot com. You can DM us on any of our socials. You can leave it as a comment on one of our other listener story videos. Mm hmmm, call these spooky hotline. There's so many ways to get it to us. And yeah, all right, that's it. Okay, So today we are sharing legends from the third largest day in Mexico. Yes, no, my brain doesn't work right now. I can't guess. I thought you would know because you already said which state you I can't remember. We said Calle Mar Guahuila. No, we've already talked about Colima. We are talking about Guahuila today, okay, okay. And we've actually already shared one famous legend from there, which has been one of my favorite legends of all time. La Casaskankas. Oh my god, that was one of my favorites. I had a blast talking about Cassankas. I could not believe like how it earned its name. Yeah, yeah, like how audacious. So yeah, here are some more legends, and we have some classics here, classics. Okay, I'm ready, I'm ready. So the first legend we're gonna be talking about is the ghost Bride of Patos. I love a ghost bride story. One of my favorite stories kind of stories. Yes, yes, way back in the year of eighteen seventy three, there was a town and was now the state of Kuahila, which used to be called Patos. Present day it's the town of Tippela, about thirty miles west of the capital Saltillo. So back then, a young puppy love was brewing and a young soldier who belonged to the garrison commanded by Gunera Vitoriano Sebeta, asked the beautiful young woman he was in love with to marry him. After the proposal, the future bride lived through godparents, where she intended to remain until the day of the wedding. Apparently that was a ghostumedia. Back in the days, they would move out from the parents and lived with the godparents unsold the wedding. I didn't know that, That's what it said online. Interesting. The day before the wedding, a battle broke out between the federal army and the local militia, so the Garrison of Canada Victorian Osabella was called to quell the introduction against the federal army. The young soldier promises bred to be that he would be back in time for their nuptials. He said, Mimi at the chapel, because I'm coming straight here after the battle, and I'm just gonna guess how he didn't he did not. The next day, the right to be put on her wedding dress and made her way to the church of San Francisco Dasti's to wet her handsome soldier, and she waited there for him and she waited and waited and waited, waited. Yeah, she kept waiting until finally someone learned about what happened and told her that her room to be was killed in battle. Damn. That's sad. Yeah. But also, never trust a man in uniform because he might die in battle. He might die and never come back. Yeah. So yeah, the bride fell into the floor and chalk, and she never stood back up from the floor. She died there. No way, I don't know why I said it like that. And that's actually where she stayed. And actually she never got up. Actually she died right there. Wow. What she just died there? That's crazy. The sadness. Oh. Years later, it is said that the ghost of a woman wearing a white wedding dress can be seen wandering the streets, but her route mostly consists of leaving the church and heading south along Gaya the Candat's a bit. The ghost would make its way to the Godparents' home, and it got to the point where the godparents had to leave their house. Wow, because she showed up every day after her death. They were tired of it and they were like, we can't handle this. No. The home was abandoned for a long time, but eventually people not connected to the bride or the godparents moved in, and they also reported seeing the ghost bride. The ghost Bride continued to be seen well into the nineteen seventies, and the family who lived there who lived in the home then reported regularly seeing the ghost bride enter the house, walk around the patio, and disappear into a barn that was at the end of the patio. No, that's creepy, and you know, they didn't sign up for that when they purchased at home or rented that home or whatever it is they did. Yeah. I don't know if they knew or not, because I wouldn't have told them if I was that persent before trying to get rid of the house, you know, and it was abandoned for a long time. So right, Yeah, who knows what they knew? Yeah, Okay, Next we have another classic. Oh I love an Ali and if that ally involves Satan, I love it even more. In the seventeen hundreds, in the town of Santa Stevan de la la Scala, there was a wealthy six year old sixty year old man. I was like, wait, your wealthy six year old Wow, where can I get one of those. I want one of those? Can I adopt a wealthy six year old a wealthy sixty year old man named Don Juan de Solis. He was said to be from a family that was part of the minor nobility in Spain, so not the major nobility, but that minor nobility. Yeah, and he was married to a beautiful woman twenty years younger than him. Mmm so she was forty Okay, Yeah. They had an eighteen year old son who was away standing out a convent, and everyone in towned how hot he was and how smart he was. I don't know the son, yeah, the son, not the sixty year old Okay, no, but I mean assumingly, presumably he got his genes from him and the mom. So maybe they're also super hot and smart. I don't know, just a family of hot smart people. Yeah, yeah, of Spanish mind. They had it all yeah until until no, everything was good. Everything was good. They were a happy family until I believed no psych Yeah until one day some random man named Blas Casadis stopped Don Juan on the street and told him that his wife was cheating on him. But the young man, oh and he was like, oh no, my this I'll bring you a prove in a few days. A few days later, last told don Juan that he saw a strange man were in a cape entering his home at midnight. Ominous. So he's like, if you want to catch him, then you need to be there at midnight and you'll see this cape wearing a fellow. Yeah, so don Juan started skimming. He was gimming the trap and he told his wife, Hey, I'm leaving town for a week. But on his way out of town, he circled back to town and really leave. Yeah, but well he left and then he came back. I don't know why he left. To make it to tell the story right, right, make her believe that he left. Yeah, he came back right away. So he came back just in time to be at front in the front of his house at midnight, and sure enough he saw a man or in a cape entering his home. Don Juan had a zero chill, so he stabbed a man. Oh unfortunately it was his son. Oh my god, Oh my fucking god. I was not expecting that. Yeah, you feel like it could have like maybe like made the guy turn around for Okay, who are you, why are you here? Why are you in my home. Why are you wearing a cape? Right? It's midnight. He went straight to stabbing, straight to stabbing. That's why I said he had a zero chill. Yeah, yeah, mm hmm, my god. Yeah. It turned out that his son was sneaking out of the convent to see a girl he liked, and then he would come home at night. I don't know why he wouldn't go back to the convent, but he wouldn't go back home medmud night. Maybe it was closer, I don't know. Sounds kind of like a bad plan on the son's part. Yeah, didn't he know how stab happy his dad is? I don't know, right, how like zero chill the dad had? Mm hmmm yeah, and you would think Don Juan was arrested and he was put on trial for a murder. And during the trial it was discovered that there was no one with the name of Blast Cassidys in town or in any surrounding towns. Oh, that's a strange name too, so yeah Blast, what name is blasts? Blasts could have picked a different name and made up, right, Yeah, So the name could have been made up or could have never existed because it was a devil tricky Blast was actually Satanas and that's why he played that name because the rhymes yeah class last where was I? So? Yeah, it could have been the devil tricking Juan into killing his own son for fun. Yeah, just for fun, just you know, double things, because it's what he does. Yeah, trick you Quan ended up being pardoned, but heavy, Yeah, because it was the devil, It wasn't him, Okay, obviously, okay, right, you're right. So he ended up being pardoned but heavy with what he had done. He couldn't live with himself and he died of despair. Okay, well, yeah, probably deserves that for killing his son. I don't know, I mean legally not now do the eyes of the law. He was his pardon Now. Where the son was killed is known as Devil's Alley, and it is said that when a person walks through there, they get a sudden case of the chills and a whiff of sulfur ooh, which smells horrible. I assume, I don't know. They say it smells like ryan eggs. Luckily I've never smelled it. I've heard the same. Okay. Next we have the legend of Lataea. Ooh, okay, I love. I'm assuming this involves high heels, Yes, all right, and I love that too. It is said that there was once a young woman who lived on the streets of Bravo and Aguadrees in Tartigo, although back then the streets were called Kaye del Santo and Kayl. She took care of her sick mom during the day, but her mom's health just got worse and worse. The young woman cleaned, cooked, she did everything around the house along with caring for her mom. During the day, she was very responsible, but at night, while her mother slept, she would get ready, do her makeup, put on her cuted dresses and her taconas, and go out. Because it was pretty late, all the neighbors could hear her heels trotting down the street, earning her a nickname that stayed with her forever, La Taka. Okay. The neighbors even started to speculate that the young woman was meeting up Guruna Mante every night. Oh. They also rumored that she didn't actually take good care of her mom. I don't know, I don't know, I don't know the truth. Oh okay. So the young woman would go out every night until one night when everything came to an end. The young woman was coming back home. I know what she was doing, but she was out. Yeah. When she came back that night, she found the body of her dead mom. Her mom had died while she was out, and the young woman was consumed with guilt, grief and the pain. She blamed herself and she took her own life. She ran out to the street and threw herself onto the first car that she saw, although a different version says that the young woman was so consumed with guilt that she never left the house again until she died from sadness. Oh, either way, she died and since then hers can still be heard on the streets of Quaidas and Bravo. And it is said that you follow the steps, you will see l and suffer a similar fate to hers. So just don't follow the steps. Don't follow the steps. Okay. If you take anything from this episode is that you do not follow the steps of when you hear them in Sartigo on what is and what was it? The other street? Bravo? Okay, And next we're talking about witch town. About a witch town. Oh, lave is Naga. It is a small town. I guess maybe you could say, uh, what could they call it? Municipal municipality, Yeah, of Artiaga Kaila, so it's called laves Naga. It's tiny, only like four hundred people in there. So okay. So the town already had a reputation of being inhabited by witches. But in the sixties a rumor spread that the small town of La Biznaga was inhabited by witches after some villagers. Some villagers reported scene which is feasting on birds and then transforming into the birds. Oh h. And the townspeople also said the witches turned into snakes and panthers, that their faces could be seen in the flames of campfires, and that they use the branches of Viznaga trees as their transportation. Just which shit, Yeah, you know, typical witch shit. But the rumors of witches actually go back way further than that into the pre colonial times and during the Inquisition, La Biznaga had the highest numbers of witches that were persecuted. Oh really, according to records Okay, in an article yes, yes, present day, the presence of witches is no longer a simple rumor. It's what the town is known for, and witches they're out and proud. Some of them, like Marta Molina, are even popular on Il TikTok. Hmm, I gotta follow her. Yeah. And then it said that Martha descends from one of the witches from the sixties, Nativida. Wow, just a line of witches. And it said that back in the sixties, when Natividad was an active witch, that there was a battle between the dark light and but sorry, between the dark and the light forces of witchcraft. Oh what side was native? I don't know what side she was on, but white witchcraft or the light witchcraft one? Okay. Yeah, So nowadays the witches of Lawisanga are kind of like a kintu guranderas. But yeah, back when the battle was going on, the townspeople were caught in the middle of the battling witches, and those who chose sides ended up cursed and plagued with misfortune. Yeah, some of them died, some of them lost their money. The woman couldn't have children, you know things like that. Wow, that's wild. Yeah. And the graveyard was covered in amulets and artifacts that were used to cast and counteracts bells. It became like a battleground for the witches. But yeah, white witchcraft. Ultimately one out, but there is still one witch practicing dark magic in Nauisnaga. It's Martha oh Son. The I was probably on the dark side of witchcraft. Then who knows? She could have turned against her family. True, you know what, You're right, You're right. She's like, you know what, this isn't fun? Yeah, turning to the dark side. According to Martha, she says light magic gets no results. Oh but she promises, I've heard that about light magic. She promises she only uses her dark magic for healing and not for cursing. Fascinating. Okay, okay, okay, Martha. Yeah, that was the witch town Labisanga. Well, sorry, it's just said it wrong Biznaga. Next we're talking about Larsona, the dmos Arispe, which is in Taltio. Oh, Santio. Yeah, so in Lasona there is a cemetery that haunted ooh, it's the San Nicolas Tolentino Cemetery. It was built in the eighteen seventies. There lay the bodies of many young girls and boys, some that have been buried in the cemetery since it was first built, and some even before that. Because supposedly there was an area with humid remains found when construction of the cemetery began. Oh, was it already been used as a cemetery. Yeah, And rather than wales of despair, it is said that one can hear the laughter and singing of children that sounds kind of happy. Yeah, so it's like they're playing or something like that. Yeah. I tried to find like specific ghosts of children that can be seen there, but I didn't find anything. I only found like some tragic debts of the children that are buried there. And maybe it's there goes, maybe it's not. Like one of them was riding a horse with his brother and then he fell off the horse and his face was peeled off because he was dragging along there. The horse was dragging him. Oh my god. Okay, I thought, I thought this is going to be like he fell and hit his head on a rock. No, he died, but dragged and his face pilling's that's what it said. That's terrible. And the other one is a pair of siblings that the mom stepped out of the house to do I don't know what, and then when she was gone, they started playing with matches and they burned the house down and they died. Oh my god. Yeah. Wow, those were the stories I found, but like no specific stories of ghosts from there. Yeah. Also in Ramos Arispe, they say that La Senda, Lacienda de Santa Mariandro Sadio is haunted. Oh. According to a legend, it is haunted by the indigenous spirits of the people who lived in the area before colonization, and their spirits haunt the Assenda looking for revenge for being pushed out of their land. The Assenda was founded in sixteen seventy four after Captain Francisco de Elisondo and Franciscan Frey Frey. Yeah, okay, Fray Juan Laios conquered quote conquered yeah quote colonize the region and they pushed the Guahi Decos from their lands, although the Decos had also been facing attacks from the Apaches, so they were like getting it from both sides, both sides. Yeah, damn, it didn't mean that to Sendordy even did no come out and get Okay, I'm just clarifying. It is also said that there's a treasure. Of course in Acienda, a hunted has to have tales and rumors of a treasure, yes, within it. Yeah, a treasure of gold and jewelry hidden deep in the ruins of the assenda, supposedly buried thereby Aciendalos who didn't want their riches in the hands of their enemies. Many have tried to find the treasure, but none have come out alive, of course, m hm, because something malevolent guards the treasure, can lean. Yeah, the devil, he's yes, he's dressed very fancily, very fancy. I don't know you say that, how do you say? Yeah? So a fancy, elegantly dry Katherine, a gentleman, if you will. But according to the elders of the town, the Katine is no regular ghost, because he's saying himself like you guess, of course. Yeah. And whenever there's a Katherine, someone very well dressed in like a town or nacienda, a church, that's the devil. Come on, yeah, he's just there to trick people. When he does. It is said that the Katharine appears around midnight, midnight, okay, and he walks among the ruins of the essenda, and you can hear the sound of his baston as it hits the ground. And that's all I have for Yeah. Wait, and is that the the same ad yes, this is in the Sorry I literally said, I said again, I'm sick. Okay, no, no, my night, No, my brain is not working, okay, okay, well yeah, it's thank you for answering that you're welcome and U and you were saying that's all I have, okay. I just already finished saying that's all you have? Okay, And yeah, normally we would have a true crime piece to go with this state that we have done. But I have been sick and I have done nothing. I haven't done any school work. I haven't done anything but sleep and hydrate and blow my nose. I did binge watch Running Points while I was sick, though, so oh I just started it yesterday. It's very fun. I really liked it. Well. On that note, do you have any spooky recommendations? Do I? Hmm hmmm, let me check what I have read? I don't remember. I feel like now it's harder to remember that we're every other week. Yeah you said that last time. Oh, I don't remember what I recommend him last time. Oh the zombie book. Huh, yes, yeah it was a zombie book. I just listened to Malas by Marzla Fuentez, and I thought it was going to be more witchy than it was because let me well, let me read you the description real quick. I haven't heard of this book. Malass Oh yeah, called Malass. In nineteen pfty one, a mysterious ald women confronts Pilad I hid It in the small border town of La Sienega, Texas. The old woman is sure Bilad so told her husband, and in the heated outburst, leads a curse on Bilad in her family. More than forty years later, Lulu Mugnos is doajing chaos that I returned, her trouble father's moods, his rules, her secret life as a singer in a punk band, but most of all, her upcoming kissena. When her beloved grandmother passes away, Lulu finds herself drawn to the glamorous stranger who crashed the funeral and who lives alone and shunned at the on the edge of town. Pilad. They're unexpected. Kinship picks at the secrets of Lulu's family's past as the Signeta looms, and we move between these two strong, ir irrascible. What does that word? Female voices? One woman must make peace with the past, and one girl pushes to embrace her future. Rich with cinematic details from dusty rodeos to the excitement of a Selena concert and the comfort of conjunto ballads played at family gatherings, this memorable debut is a love letter to the techno culture and community that sustainable to these women as they discover what family means. And yes, it was all of that. I really sound No, it was, And the audiobook is really cool because it was. You know how, sometimes there's different timelines going on. Sometimes it's hard to follow with an audiobook, but this one, because there's two different characters, there's like a different I don't know if it's the same. It doesn't say there's no there is. There's two narrators, Christina Villa and Via Barian. I don't know which one voices who, but yeah, it's a different one for Pila and then a different one for Lulu, and they sound very different. So that was cool also to hear. Made it easy to follow. But yeah, you get like old school Texas and yeah, it was just so Mexican and Totkano. That sounds fun. Yeah, but yeah, I thought because of the description, I thought it was going to be a little bit more witchy than it was, and it wasn't really but it was still really good. Okay, Okay, yeah, I think I will check it out. I think you would like it. I think so. No, no, now, okay, because I haven't read it, I know, but I'm reading this one right now, Okay, I'll uh. I So, well, I'm almost done. I'm like, what did it say, like eighty percent done with the other book that was reading about Mexican immigration. Yeah, I'm like almost done with it. I have I'm almost done with the second to last chapter. I have like two pages left and then the last chapter. So I'm like in the middle of a lot right now. But I'll see what I do. I'll make it happen. Let's see. Do I have a spooky recommendation? Well, like I said, I loved Running Points, so it was very funny. That's not sweaky. That's funny. Another not speaky recommendation. But my TikTok for you page was giving me a bunch of edits of this movie called McFarlane Usa. Yeah, because I sent it to you. I had already seen it, like, yeah, told me. Okay, she didn't say that it was me. It was all me. Okay, whatever, I had already's seen a couple, but whatever. Anyway, Carmen sent me, thank you. It's all I wanted. But I had already seen a couple. Okay, Oh my god, I'm sick to laugh this much. It hurts. Okay and jail, welcome my head. Okay, I'll stop being laugh this much. Okay. Anyway, and yeah, I was like, I can't believe I have I had it seen this movie Mick came out in twenty fifteen. I want to say I remember seeing commercials for it or the trailer back in the day, but I never went to watch it. For some reason, I don't remember seeing anything about it. But anyway, mcfarlane'll say it's like my kind of white Savor movie, because I'm sorry to say, but sometimes I do love a white Savor movie. So this coach his last name is literally white, and nic call him blanco. Oh my god, I didn't relate that. Yeah, his last name is white, and he gets kicked out of coaching. Well, he gets kicked out of a lot of coaching jobs because of his like angerish Oh but like he threw a shoe at a at a spoiled word kid in the Midwest or something. It sounds like he deserved it to say, honestly, uh, And so he the only job we can find is in McFarland, California, which is in the Central Valley, deep in the central Valley, in the central Valley. Not like Modesto, No we're not. We're not talking Modesto. We are talking or driving down to La and all the little towns you see. It's one of those yes. And so he gets sent there and immediately clashes with like the coach he's supposed to be the assistant football coach, and he immediately clashes with the coach. But then he gets inspired to start a track not track, but cross country a team. And this is the school's first cross country team. And he sees these kids and are like they work as pickers. They they wake up early as before school, they pick you know, whatever is in season. Then they go school, then they run back to the field to get their as quick as possible to continue picking because it's they need the money. They like, you know, it's their job to help their families. And he sees them running and he's like, these kids can run forever, Like, how do we not have a cross country team? And so he, after like a bunch of convincing, he convinces seven of them to join the team, and then he's just training them and then we just it's just an inspirational movie because I love the movies. No, I'm I was serious. I wanted to cry and I did. Oh, there's this part because there's this kid who's bigger. There's three brothers, they're the Diaz brothers, and there's one of them who is bigger than the rest. His name is Danny Diaz, and you know from the beginning he tells them like you're you're gonna gonna be slower than the rest of them because they're You're you're bigger, right, But that's not a bad thing. You're like the uh what it is? They call him the anchor. You're the anchor of the team. And so there's finally they're at the end. They get to like the championship. Not to spoil but this is based on your story, Like yeah, yeah, I mean I think it's it came on twenty fifteen. I think after a certain time, spoilers are okay. Yeah, So they get to the championship and one of the kids who's like faster already he's uh, he's running too fast. You have to pace yourself for these yeah, yeah, yeah, but he's like they see him running and he passes them. He's like what everyone is like, what is Jose doing? He can't run this fast? Like he's going to tire himself out? Yes, and so he does. And so because the way cross country works, which I didn't know, it's like, well, no, it's too much explained. I already forgot everything. But basically, like you have to run at your normal pace and beat like the other people. But if you're like way behind, your team doesn't get that point or whatever some show like that. Don't quote me, but some shit like that. Any cross country experts out there, let us know. You know what, if only Paul was here because he did a cross country, night's going he did a cross country, but he is not here right now. He's not working. Okay, well, you know you should watch this movie with him. Yeah, maybe he'll like it, I think so. I don't know how anyone could not like this movie. It's just a heartfelt movie. Anyway. So they're in the championship. That kid is running too fast. He ends up burning out. He's too slow and he comes in way after his normal time, and so he's like they can't rely on him for that point, right, But then suddenly Danny Diaz, oh low kid, runs faster than everyone. He's running, he's running, and then they see him and the coach is like, that's not Daddy Diaz, that's not Danny Dia, and so that's just stuck in my hand, that's not daddy. Oh my god. Anyway, and yes, I cried when it was when he turns the corner and you see Danny Diaz running as fat as he can, beating all these other kids, and they also it's like it's it in like the nineteen eighties and they're the only Mexican kids in cross country, and so there's already that added layer. And then you see little big Daddy Dias just running big Dannya. It was beautiful. And then at the end you get this little like you know how the based on true story movies have like a little like they write on the screen like where Yeah, but the last scene you see in the movie is the actual coach with the current middle schoolers or high schoolers I think they're high schoolers, and then they ride on there that the members of that original nineteen eighty something team, they still joined the cross country team for practice. Two or three of them were teachers. That's so cool. When I was seeing the edits of the of the movie, I saw a lot of comments from people that were from McPartland and there you were like posting pictures with the coach yes, and with some of the original members too. And then there was a comment I saw. I don't know who it was because I don't know the names of the people. Now I already on top of not knowing their names, I also forgot. But they're like, oh, it's so sad that such and such went to prison or something like that. That Massio, Yes, that Massio the ass but apparently he got his life together. That's good. Like people make mistakes. Yeah, and the point is supposed to be able to take. Yeah, so I'm glad that he did. Yeah. Yeah, but yeah, it's a very very very heartfelt movie. Got I also rented nineteen eighty three. Uh I think eighty three. Oh my bad, No, it's a nineteen eighty three movie called it Northing. I was like, that doesn't sound right because you told you're gonna rine and my brain's not working. I see that I rented in Northey, but I haven't watched it because I've been going to see like a seven pm. And I know, being deprived of Christina right now, no one to go to so early because I feel like shit, she hasn't seen anything. I sent her on TikTok, no I have it. I have And then I was like, I need to stop. I need to pace myself because she then she's gonna ignorese right once. Then it wanted to see all of them. No, I'm going to see all of them. Come on, now, you do that. I don't do that. Yeah, oh I do that when I get too many of them, Like, let me just look at the most recent ones and then one from the top. So the evening I saw them all. Yeah, no surprise. But yeah. North is the other movie that is I rented and I only to watch it. I'm ready to cry. It's the story of two Guatemalan siblings who flee the civil war, but like a specific massacre during the civil war they flee, they're making their way to La Uh and I guess it ends in a very tragic way. I don't know you, oh my god, but I'm ready to cry and I forgot that I had seen scenes of the movie before. Oh really, Yeah, there's a part of a two uh maneatela and he's trying to teach me how to sound like a Mexican and he's like, give me your Mexican accent. And I saw that scene before. I'm yes, yes, but I didn't know it was from that movie. And then so I'm excited to watch it. Not tonight, I still feel like shit, but hopefully tomorrow. Yeah, you sound better than yesterday. Yes, I do feel slightly better than yesterday. But again, I'm a baby, so slight thing that's wrong with me. And I'm in bed, okay, so in bed sleeping all day. Yeah, and Kyle's making soup for me. Great, I love that for you. Yeah, I'm already almost done with my soup som okay, so yeah we can add this here. Yeah, I'm just talking about soup now. Yeah. Yeah, for the record, I love soup. Wow mm hmmm. I only like possola and ramen and sometimes fa my god. I love almost any soup except I don't like the creamy ones like creama mush Italian ones, yeah, or like you know the one that you get in like a bowl in San Francisco and you can eat the bowl oh clamtowder. Yeah, I don't like that either either, I do. I would eat the I like the bread, the bread, and then it tastes good, like when it's soft with the soup. Like if someone else finishes all the soup and then I eat the bread, that would be perfect ideal. Yeah yeah, So any like thick, creamy soups I don't like, but like a liquid like oh wait, I like I love of course you do, yeah, of course, and yeah all the Mexican soups except yeah m hmm. Okay, we can end this well. I had soup right before we started recordings, so okay, stay spooky and watch out for I don't know on I forgot the streets already, all right, quite a se when you are in Kuiguila, Bye Bye s. Book Tells is hosted by Christina and Carmen, produced and edited by Christina, researched by Christina Carmen, and with the help of Don Shout out with Don. If you're enjoying the podcast considerably, gonna say five star review, We would really appreciate it. If you don't want to have a five star review. Just don't leave a review, but don't eve anything lower than that, please, I'm just kidding. You can reach out to the podcast at spooks at gmail dot com. You can go to our website at pookitas dot com and fill out the contact form. If you want to support the podcast, you can join our Patreon, where we send exclusive stickers, have bonus episodes. Eight dollar members get an exclusive key chain. It's super cool. I got new ones and these ones are huge. And if you want to support, but you can or don't want to join the patreon, that's fine too. You can also get some merch. You can find shrets that say spooky and old English letters. There's a beanie. I love the beanie. There's also a hat. There's a no Mamas shirt which is a fan favorite. There's a lot of options, crap TOMPs, sweaters. It's almost wetter weather. We're nearing a spookie season, so yeah, get your hoodies. You're gonna need them. If you don't want to do all that, that's fine too. You can just listen like you're listening now, and that's the best support that you can give us. Like I always say in our ad break and yeah, if you like history. You can follow Estodia's Unknown Mining, Carmen's other podcasts, and you can find as spooky tails on all of our socials at Spooky Tells. All of this is in the show notes and we appreciate every single listen. Thank you so much, Stay a spooky