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Well I don't remember a time that
-
I didn't feel it was an issue but
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I, it wasn't diagnosed until adulthood.
-
(interviewer): Mmhmm.
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You know, we take care of our dental health.
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We don't take care of our mental health.
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People go get their teeth checked.
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(interviewer): And it rhymes too.
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It does. That's why I say it.
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And when I was growing up. You know.
-
I mean I'm in my mid-50s.
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Even ADHD was not an issue in school.
-
I mean nobody talked about it.
-
Seems prevalent now.
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But I would imagine there's
just as many kids now
-
That have it as had it when I was a kid.
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It just wasn't identified
when I was a kid.
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So I was troubled.
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And I was outrageous you know?
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I wasn't. I wasn't just the kid
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The class clown that had, you know,
-
a funny quip from the back of the class.
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I mean, I was outrageous.
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I would, you know.
(interviewer): Right.
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I'd call the yellow pages and
-
hired companies to bid on an
-
addition to the library.
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So there would be uh people.
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There would be people outside measuring
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and the principal would go outside
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and say, "What are you doing?"
-
and they'd say "We're from so-and-so
construction company and we're gonna"
-
"bid on the addition".
-
And he'd say, "Who authorized the addition?"
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And they would say, "Howie Mandel"
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I gave them my name.
-
(interviewer): Laughter
-
Yeah.
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The only way I could talk to girls
-
is I would go into the girl's restroom
-
cause I didn't look like a boy.
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And brush my hair in the mirror.
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And talk to girls who came in.
(interviewer): Did you really?
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Yeah.
-
(interviewer): You must be joking.
-
(Laughter).
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No I'm not.
-
That's where my wife met me.
-
I didn't finish,
I didn't finish high school.
-
I don't have a GED.
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Can I still be in ABILITY?
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(interviewer): Yes. Laughter.
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(interviewer): What about your wife?
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She is not in school anymore.
-
(interviewer): Laughter.
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(interviewer): She's off to a cabin?
-
She is. We've been together over 30 years.
-
We celebrated our 31st anniversary.
-
When we got married I was doing
stand-up comedy.
-
And the next night I was playing Yuk Yuk's.
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So I uh, invited her on the stage.
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She sat in a stool on the stage
-
and I was doing stand-up.
-
Cause that's how I got my tickets. That's how,
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They flew me back up there
cause I got a gig.
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And that's how I afforded to go to
-
my own wedding.
-
And then she. The next night
Terry was sitting.
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And I said that, you know, regardless
of how the show goes,
-
I just want to welcome everybody
to my honeymoon.
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(interviewer): Laughter.
-
This is it.
-
So that was our honeymoon.
-
We didn't go anywhere.
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She just sat on stage.
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at the comedy club in Toronto.
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(interviewer): Wow.
-
For three, four nights straight.
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♪(electronic music)♪
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I, I masked it for many, many, many years.
-
Where I'd, you know,
-
and I shook hands.
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You see me shaking hands in old videos.
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And my uhm, you know,
even right up to my talk show.
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I'd shake everybody's hands.
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So I was living, you know,
-
and I hid a lot of it.
-
You know, I didn't, she was not in the,
-
in the, in the bathroom with me
-
while I'm scalding my hands, and so,
-
so I didn't really let her in on that, but
-
she knew that I was, like, obsessed,
-
with, you know, washing my hands.
-
(interviewer): Mmhm.
-
Also, I could also,
-
I could also cover it with logic, you know?
-
(interviewer): Mmhm.
-
Let's make a path of
this hotel room with towels
-
Cause you don't know when, what's
-
dripped all over this carpet.
-
So she would walk along my path.
-
(interviewer): Laughter.
-
Let's take the comforter off the bed
-
with the salad tongs,
-
Cause you don't know what's on the
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(interviewer): I agree (Laughter)
-
you know, and she thought I was like a,
-
I think the blacklight bothered her.
-
(Laughter)
-
I went and spoke up in Capitol Hill.
-
and uhh. I tried to, that's where I lend
-
my time and uh that's what I support.
-
and I uh, I mean,
-
mostly it's just about trying to
-
remove the stigma. Because I think there's
-
a lot of help out there and I think a lot
-
of people could use the help and uh
-
and as I said before, you know,
-
my whole thing is that, I don't think
-
there's anybody alive that
-
could not benefit from
-
a professional mental health person
-
you know, being a part of their lives.
-
You know. And I would imagine there still is
-
a stigma attached to that. But I, you know,
-
I didn't really take care of that.
-
But now I'm taking care of it.
-
Look at me. (Laughs).
-
I'm in ABILITY magazine.
-
(interviewer): Laughter.
-
♪(electronic music)♪