 Check that. Ah, really? Cool, cool, cool. Sleepy ways. Chicho. Any advice for doing less of everything and focusing on what you truly love? I feel I've become a yes man out of fear of scarcity, but in doing so much, I also feel I'm not working towards what I want, which is music. Sorry if this is random. It's not random. It's sort of related to this. Number one. Number one rule. If you want to obtain more freedom or obtain your freedom, start a savings account. I'm not saying savings in a bank account or something like this. I'm saying have some type of savings or investments, right? The other one is reduce your expenses, reducing expenses and creating sort of a saving, sort of a nest egg will get, will buy you freedom. Really. Get your freedom by reducing your expenses and increasing your nest egg, and that gets you freedom. And by the way, gang, if you haven't figured it out by now, you will never become, unless you're one in a million shot, you will never become financially independent. Okay. If you're only relying on a paycheck for you to prepare yourself for retirement and to be able to afford, you know, some of the essentials in life such as housing, transportation, healthcare, safety and all this just, you need to actively be investing in something. And that means you have to be actively aware of whatever market you're interested in, investing your time and resources in. For me, it's comic books. Okay. And other things, of course. Right. See, that's the kicker. I've just reached that level where I've increased my savings and I have a little cushion, but I feel like I am still operating in my old ways where I still feel like I have to be doing, doing the most. And it's sleepy waves. And that takes mental power. Right. A lot of people have a hard time letting go of routine. Right. That's why I tell people that the one thing I've told friends does and take this with a grain of salt, as far as I'm concerned, we need to have three months of, three months off a year to be able to ground and reanalyze our lives and make the right decisions. So take extended time off from work if you have a nest egg, if you can afford that. Right. If not build up your nest egg, don't eat into your nest egg by just not doing anything. Right. But it's okay to take a leave of absence and make sure you're reducing your expenses to read books, to create content and kick it in slowly in that way. Right. It's a juggling game. It really is a juggling game. I've had friends where they've been laid off, where they've taken some time off and they get fidgety. They don't know what to do with their time. Right. Ronnie, another haul. Chicho is making all that crypto game. No, no. I don't invest in crypto. Okay. Street name Liman. I collect all stuff. I have a collection of books over 100 years old and glow from the 20s. Nice. A bunch of coins, but no comic books, even though they would fit in that same category. Yeah. And you don't have to collect everything. You can collect what you know and what you love. Right. And by the way, you should actively, if you're getting a collection, if there are certain gains to be made, if you want to buy something, you can't afford it for your collection, it's okay to let go of some of your collection to generate money. If you're letting them go at a profit, sometimes you let them go anyway. Right. To generate more money, to make more investments. It's okay to do that. Okay. Birdie here. Take control of your own life. If you want to do something, go do it. Give yourself permission. No one else will. Birdie here. 100% I agree with birdie here. Right. Just do. Don't write off everything else. Don't burn your bridges. Right. We all have to, we all have expenses. We all have to live. We all have to, we all have to take care of business. Right. But it's okay just to do and fail. Have losses. It's okay to do that. Really. Don't worry about taking a hit, taking a loss. Considered education. Right. Like, look, again, one of the first things that you learn when it comes to gambling is if there's nothing on the line for you to lose, you're not gambling. You don't know what gambling is. That really applies to poker. Right. There are a lot of people that like playing poker, but there's no money on the line. It doesn't have to be a ton of money. It could be pennies. Right. There's nothing on the line. Well, if there's nothing on the line and you're playing poker for fun, you're not really playing poker. You're passing time. Poker really kicks up in intensity when there's something on the line to lose. Life is the same way. Investments are the same way.