 I guess the next person that I want to talk to is Dreadnaught and would you like to tell us a little bit about your neurodiversity and how that sort of influences your creativity? Yeah, yeah, absolutely. So as we mentioned before ADHD, to be honest, I was creative long before I even thought about ADHD, to be honest. It was only a few years ago that I actually got my diagnosis. And I mean, like, there were like major obvious signs, which I was completely oblivious to through. It tends to be that case. Yeah. I was just like, I didn't really click until later until I started like looking into it and putting everything together. And I was like, it was basically like a tick box when I was looking through symptoms and stuff. I was like, I guess I should get this looked at by a professional. Was there was there any like, ignition to you to doing that? Was there any reason why you started to look into it? Yeah, it was, I actually looked into it and got my diagnosis. My mental health in general was kind of deteriorating quite a bit at that point. I was struggling with quite a lot of stuff. I was like severely depressed, super anxious. And I wasn't myself, but I also kind of was aware of the person that I used to be. And I strived to be better. And there was that like hunger. So I was like, I need to get to the bottom of who I am. And everyone had like already like, I've already heard like years of jokes of like ADHD boy. I was like, yeah, maybe, maybe not who knows. But that was one of the first steps into it. And then it was more, I didn't want it treated. I just wanted to kind of be able to understand myself better. And that's what I know where you are in life. And yeah, yeah, yeah, things that you could perhaps a bit better. And which areas you might need a bit of support with? Exactly. When you know, when you when you understand who like in this case, when I understood ADHD better, I understood how it worked. I also was more open to speaking to other people with ADHD than like, suddenly it was like, okay, I've got this second, I can interact with these people and ask these questions, which relate to myself, which I otherwise might not have been able to like, understand that I was actually on the same level as them, if that makes sense. So yeah, it was it was an eye opener. And it definitely set me on a much better path. I like to think I'm pretty mentally healthy right now. Everyone has like, the days where it doesn't feel like that you feel like you're backtrack, but it's so much easier to get back on top of stuff. And I think having that understanding was a massive thing. And then I look back at all my music. And I'm like, Oh, yeah, actually, the signs are just right there. Besides like 150 BPM songs and stuff like that. But then it's just the mad things that I was trying as well. And I just thought I was just just being a bit creative and odd, but it's like, I've been trying to do like hard style metal and like, just merging like jazz with like, you just like all these mad combinations that I was just putting in, but then there'd be projects that were like a minute long. And I've come back to that. And my desktop was flooded with hundreds of projects. Most of them were unfinished. The ones that were finished were they were of different standards, but like they were ever growing. But the signs were always there. But that energy and that spontaneity, I think really, really helped from the production aspect. And it really helped me kind of find my own style along the way and try things that like, you know, I might not otherwise have come to my mind if I didn't have like these sporadic give you an example, like it's just a stupid idea. It's like a sampled and a cow in one of FMA and 12 gauges songs. There was just a sample on the side on the list. I was like, you know what, it'd be really funny if I can work this in somehow. I put it through a thousand different plugins. It would sound like a cow at the end. But things like that, it was a really cool sound by the end of it. And I was like, yeah, the thought process that maybe I wouldn't have gone down with it went for ADHD. I had a podcast that came out a little bit more recently. I'm always a bit tentative around giving timeframe for stuff because the order in which I release things tend to be a bit like all over the place. So I don't want to release that one or this one or like, so sometimes they're not always like in order. And I was talking to a autistic rapper called SD Flame. And he also has ADHD and he was talking about the benefits and difficulties when it came to doing his rap music. He's very high tempo and he's very, very quick when he's speaking. Very sort of fast verbal. And so a lot of the people who come up in the rap and then trying to develop their skills, they're actually taught to go faster. They're taught to process things quicker and speak faster. Whereas for him, it was more about learning to breathe and chill out. And it's very cool. It kind of sounds a little bit like Eminem, which you really, really, really check him out after that. That's really funny that you say that though. Like looking back and like early stuff, I was just constantly like and that was like my natural like go to it was like, how many syllables kind of fit into this line to the point where I'm stage. I was like, I couldn't breathe through half my songs. I'm not going to lie. Turning into Busta Rhymes. It was very much the same kind of journey there actually. And now like, you know, I've just finished what I would say is my first official single after trying all sorts of different things. It's the first thing I'm really proud of. And it's like going to be all over. And I tried the exact opposite. I tried some really slow flows and some other stuff. And that's something that I wouldn't have been able to do at the start. Because like you say, it's the speed comes naturally. I'm sure I can word from it all over for like hours if I wanted to. So I have to stop myself now. Fortunately, I'm quite good at just being like, right? Okay, let's bring it down. Bit of detance. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think brilliant. There's a spot on it. I never thought about that. It's really interesting that you mentioned that. Thank you very much for that dreadnought.