And I was like, so happy that I didn't have to part with my laughing Buddha because because it was cracked. I thought, you know what, I can just fix the crack. So that's what I did.
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But I just love different stories that come out from all these folklores and beliefs and all that because I see a visual, like I literally had a visual of when you said, I didn't realize if I had said this before, I'm sorry if I had forgotten about it, that the crow is actually helping transport the person who has passed on to the next, wherever they go. And I had a visual of a very folk-like painting in my head. And I was like, oh, that would be interesting.
I wonder if I can remember it by the time I go home. Maybe I can try and sketch that. That would be so cool.
Oh, yeah. You should definitely sketch that. As I recall, and I love crows and ravens, but as I recall, each one of us, Fahmi, Victoria and me have some attachment to crows.
I know my former mother-in-law, who's half-Indigenous, her mother was Indigenous. She told me, according to her, my totem is a crow. Oh, so is Vicky.
Well, mine is the raven. Yeah, raven. The raven, and she's got another something.
I've got my list here. And in the order, let me get it out here. And I think mine may be raven.
I think I'm using that interchangeably. It's probably raven. Yeah.
Mine is raven. My first primary totem is the wolf. And then my second one is the alligator.
My third one is the dragonfly. The next one is the dog. Then the buffalo.
Then the horse. Then the black panther. Then the raven.
And then the blue heron. Those are my totems. Wow.