 I'm going to talk to you. Oh, you're going to talk to me? Oh, mama. Our road to child care was surprisingly difficult. We knew that what we'd been told to start searching is almost as soon as you find out you're pregnant, because there's just not a lot of supply. And there's very high demand. What surprised me was how sort of cutthroat it really was. Who do we know here? Hey, can you put in a good word for us here? It almost seemed like you had to beg and plead and do underhanded deals to get your kid accepted to a daycare. A full year later, we found out that we had a part-time spot for a couple of days a week. Hey, bud. Hi. How was your day? Now that we're about to have a second child. This next condo year, we'll spend about $34,000 a year in child care. It comes to like $2,800 a month. Essentially, we're having to pay two mortgages. Definitely weighs on me. It's a lot of money. We make too much money to qualify for a lot of the incentives. But that doesn't mean we're flushed by any means. It is still incredibly expensive. God forbid something happen, like car trouble, or anything else that might come up, because we are going to be paying those two daycare bills every month. The next couple of months will be interesting. We've got this one on the way. I'll stay home three months. I'm not going to be drawing a full salary. So it's definitely tightening of the purse strings. Even though my son isn't born yet, we will start paying tuition for him to be in school. We have to pay for that spot every month, even though it's basically a ghost chair. If we don't pay that money, someone else will. The quality of what we're paying for is probably a double-edged sword. It's a great facility. We have had tremendous turnover. Since being full-time enrolled, we have lost 10 different teachers. It makes swallowing that increased tuition every year a little bit harder of a pill. Soon! Soon! We don't feel like we're getting always that increased level of care. We don't have much of an option. It just is what it is.