 The first time I realized that one I was not in Africa was in high school. I was having conversations with students and a student came over to me and asked me, oh, so I hear that Africa is a lot of jungles. And I said, okay, sure. We do have jungles, just like many other continents do have jungles. Since Africa is not a country. And so if you say you have that, you know, I hear you guys live in huts and things like that. I said, here we go. You know, I've seen it on TV, but now I'm confronted with it. I said, actually, yes, we do. Not only do we live in huts, you know, our huts are in trees. So we have to climb up the tree to get to the hut. And then, you know, for electricity, we don't have like solar panels or anything. We have monkeys we've trained who ride bicycles to help charge electricity panels. And so we get our hot water. We have our, you know, electricity from monkeys that we've really trained hard. So, you know, when you see monkeys in zoos, you know, just recognize that sometimes you're actually saving these monkeys from a life of servitude from riding bicycles. Of course, I was joking. And the look on the student's face and, you know, other people realize that I was being very facetious and very snarky and people were laughing at the students. And so, you know, he felt so silly, so stupid and embarrassed. And then I also felt sort of sad and that I was being mean. Ignorance is no excuse for me not to have the opportunity to educate other people. So that kind of was my first entry into the realization that I am different. I am special, but also it was a learning process for me to, you can either play their game in, you know, being, planning to whether it's the ignorance or it's the racism of not knowing about other people who are not American. Or you can use it as an opportunity to educate and inform other people. And I chose from that day on that I would always use it as an opportunity to inform, not make fun of, otherwise that makes me no different from them.