 did a post about trigger stacking in dogs. I feel like it can help explain a lot of the experiences that autistic people have when we have meltdowns and shutdowns and things like that. It's the same in humans. Cortisol is released when you experience like a stressor, but the cortisol, it doesn't just like rise up and then die down really quickly. It can, I think the half life of it is like an hour, two hours, something like that. So it sticks around for quite a while after the events. And so if you go through your day and you sort of, as you said, constantly bombarded by sensory, social things, that cortisol builds up. And then you get to a point where something very little happens, like you can't find your keys to your house. And, you know, it's just buried down at the bottom of your bag. And so you shut the bag to the side and you get overwhelmed and you have a difficult time with that. Whereas usually you would just be like, okay, my bags, my keys are going to be in there somewhere. I'm going to check that.