 Max, the sun is coming out nice. Max Wilde, how are you doing? Hey Chih-cho, lately I've been feeling inspired by your math videos to relearn mathematics that I haven't done for 10 years. Is there any specific textbook or book that you'd recommend for someone trying to relearn? Max Wilde, the way I got into teaching mathematics is because I really felt bad about losing a skill that I had learned at university, at high school and university, or in my centralized indoctrination centers. So what I did, I took an ad back in the day, this is mid-1990s, right? No internet advertisements local wise, not like this anyway, right? So I took a classified ad in the paper saying math and physics, math physics and science tutor, and that was really cheap. I charged $10 per hour and I stated that I'm a geophysicist, math minor, however, I haven't done this stuff for a long time, so I charged $10 an hour and I will be your steady partner. And what I did for a number of years, and I did this as a part-time as a hobby, when I was doing geophysics and publishing comic books and stuff like this, I would pick up like two, you know, two, three clients, one, two, three clients for, I did that for two, three years, three, four years, right? And I would drive around all over the place, I didn't really make any money, it was $10 per hour is charging, but I sat down with people, I think I did it for two years and I had like total of like six, seven clients in those two years, right? And I would go to their homes, I would go to them, right, using gas money and all this traffic and whatnot, and I would sit down and we would work together. And that's how I relearned my mathematics and my large part, my physics. I remember one student I had, and I explained to them, I said, listen, this is my background, but, you know, and he was in grade 12, and he was doing math and physics, right, and chemistry. So I said, you know, I can be your steady partner, we can learn this stuff together, I'll help you out as much as I can. And we sat there for four months, I worked with this kid, awesome kid by the way, I don't remember his name, I couldn't even tell you what he looked like, right? All I know, he was awesome. We sat there and he taught me stuff and I taught him stuff, and that's the way I learned. I didn't learn the stuff from a textbook, I learned from doing, or relearned it from doing. And that's what I would recommend. It means you're getting paid, okay? You're meeting new people, you're getting questioned, asked of you, as to why do we do this? And I didn't know the why's, so I relearned how to do certain things, but I didn't relearn it as a monkey see, monkey do the way they teach you in our centralized indoctrination centers. I had to understand why it was I was doing something. So I learned the why's, and that was the key. When my students asked me, why do we do this? She told me, I said, I don't know, I just know this is the way we do it. This is the way I was taught. They go, well, it doesn't make sense to me. So I would go home and try to figure out why. Either do search online or read a book or whatever, and sometimes I would have to go back, right? Like for factoring polynomials. Why do we factor them? Why do we factor them? We'll break them up into things that prime factors, right? Prime functions. Okay, but why? Well, we factor, so broke it down, broke it down, and then you realize the reason you factor them is because of this, because of the power of zero. The only number where you can have multiple things multiplied together to give you that number is it has to be zero, and if as soon as you set it up to be zero, then at least one of those things has to be zero. That's the key. That's the reason why we learn how to factor. That's why we factor. But they don't explain this to you. In school, it's horrendous. It's horrendous, right? Think bones. Thank you very much for the tier one sub. Hope you're having a good day. Cheecho greetings from England. Greetings England. How are you doing? Salutations from the West Coast of Canada. Very British here, where I am. There's lots of tea time. So that's my recommendation, Matt. Really. And you get paid. You make money. And don't charge $10 per hour. Charge $15 per hour. Charge $20 per hour. But right off the bat, off the get-go, explain who you are and why they should hire you. Because you're going to work your ass off trying to teach them what it is they need to learn. I can't math. It's such a hard language to learn. Street name Lehmann, it's not. It agreed. The learning curve is steep. But once you reach that level, man, you can coast it. It's brilliant.