 I see all the time young people feel like they have to figure out, they have to do the risk assessment first. And as long as there's this tiny bit of risk, they can't just pull the trigger, they can't make the move. They're just so like, you know, stuck because they're so afraid of making a mistake. And I really do agree with you. Like the name of the game is exploration. It's being willing to like see life as a little bit more of a playing field and, you know, a little bit more of play. And it's when you start to like move in a particular direction, that things start to gain traction. It's kind of like, you know, when you're riding a bike, you have to be in motion before, you know, you start going and that's, I think one of the hardest things for people is to make a move in a particular direction before they know 100% that it's gonna work out for them. I wanna go to the four groups of students that you have put together here because I think it's very important. And for those young folks that listened to this show, they might be able to see themselves in one of these groups of students that you have here. I believe it's a drift too soon decided. The searchers and the samplers and the purpose driven. If you could go through those for us, I think that would be quite helpful. Okay, so those four categories come up when you're doing research on a general population of students who you're trying to assess for levels of purpose. And what you find is that there are some students who aren't looking and they haven't committed to anything either. They just don't care. They have no clue about purpose. You know, that's one category. Another category of students are the people who are really working hard to search and they're trying all these different things but they haven't committed yet. That's probably like the best scenario for a searching, you know, a college years is to be searching and you haven't committed somewhere. And then there are those who commit too soon. They have committed already coming into college without having explored. Maybe they are like, I'm gonna be a doctor because my parent was a doctor. They're just like, that's the safe bet. And so they don't explore. They commit too soon. And then there's the eventual process of getting to a place where you've done a lot of exploration and you're ready to make your first commitment. It's not your forever commitment because purpose is constantly evolving from one stage of our life to another. Just like you guys, like what you just described in your own career journeys, you'll probably have other chapters to your, as much as you love this one, it's probably gonna grow and evolve and that's great. So purpose means like a first commitment, a next commitment, a third commitment and that continues to evolve down the road.