 Bump, bump, bump. Leaf says, I totally agree with guarding your heart. I found out a few years ago that no more caution is expressed in the Bible than that. It doesn't mean a person should have a rock walls up but healthy boundaries. Yes, let's differentiate between walls and boundaries. Boundaries are simply what's okay and what's not okay with me. That's totally fine, which is a reflection of your standards. I'm gonna repeat that, reflection of your standards. So I want you to picture this as a coin. On this side is your standards and this side your boundaries. The standards are, what do you want in relationship? For example, I always talk about what I want. I want a relationship where we spend three or four days and nights a week together doing shared activities, hobbies, mutual interest, spending time with family and friends, traveling together, partnership, building skills, which includes our personal or professional life and intimacy, both physical and emotional intimacy. That's my standard. The boundary is whether or not someone meets that standard. That's the boundary. So the standard is what you want with clarity and the boundary is sticking to what you want. A wall is simply a wall. In fact, I wanna read something for everybody here. So bear with me one second. On my front door, I wonder, this is scribbled, but it says open and receptive to love, relationship leading to partnership, open and receptive to love. And I really put the word easy right here, just as a reminder, open and receptive to love. When you have walls up, you're not open and receptive to love. You can't be open and receptive to love if you have walls up. So take down the walls and have standards and boundaries in its place. Lee, thank you so much. All right. Sylvia says, amen. Thank you.