 You've never had a car. Yeah, I don't drive. I still need to learn how to drive. You're in Washington DC, but you have the metro. But there are places, Adina, like smaller towns, where you actually need a car. And to even get groceries, you may need a car. So what does that portion do? Something that you should factor in, both to your costs and sort of standard of living when you're looking at universities. So am I going to need a car? Do I need a car to go down and buy a gallon of milk? And so to get a driver's license, it's a little complicated. And again, you should check with your university. They should give you instructions on how to do it. If you have a driver's license in your home country, sometimes that can help. But you still have to take tests here. You have to take a driving test and a written test. And it's a bit of a process. I think it's a valuable process, even if you're living in a city and even if you don't have a car. People like to go on road trips. People like to, we have car share services here. So people like to get into a car and go out to the suburbs, to a Chinese supermarket, that sort of thing. And so even if you don't need to buy a car, I think it's really helpful for you to have a license eventually at some point. I see. And there are cases where going back to roommates, two or three roommates get together and buy a car together. Is that, have you seen that in your experience? We have a group of students from Germany who rotate every year and they pass the car down to the next group every year. So the car is probably 15 years old by now. And it's just enough to get them around campus. But yeah. That shows the camaraderie between international students. And that's one of the wonderful things about the learning experience. We're going back to the learning experience.