 All right, guys. We did it. Another conference down. That was amazing. This conference was both the largest one that we've thrown, of course, and also, strangely, the smoothest to run, which is great. I feel like, yeah, the conference is entering kindergarten. It's finally being able to kind of hold its own a little bit. It's funny. I was just thinking through this whole event what a basic dichotomy, a giant event celebrating isolation is. I realize, though, that it's kind of an industry of dichotomies. It's this industry that got its start back in the 50s and started booming in the 80s. Yet, right now, we still consider it kind of in its youth. The boom, it feels like, is just beginning. We have this age and this freshness combined into one. It's an industry where we tell people to hop in a crazy saltwater bathtub, not do anything, and trust that the really active, amazing work is being done through that. It's a business where we ask people to take some kind of risk, right? Just like Amy was talking about in the video that we played. A lot of times, it starts as a journey into someone's basement in this weird saltwater box. Or even if it's a commercial space, a journey into a strange business and into your own mind. It's odd that we're placed in an industry that is so much about compassion and humanity and about giving and sharing. Yet, we do need to be a business. We do need to survive. We need to make money at the same time. I don't think that in this duality, there's actually any contradiction at all between any of it. In a lot of ways, I kind of think that nothing is the key to understanding all of this. I think that everything begins with nothing. And certainly with the tanks, we know that to be very true. But more than that, I think that all of our centers, all of our pads in live, start from nothing. Every single day, we start from nothing. We just very often fall into the exact same patterns that we always have. Through introducing our clients to the float tanks, we break those patterns. We remind them that every single second, you're starting fresh. And you can leave behind everything that you didn't like and take everything that you did. And every time that you're breathing, you're making a new you, a new self. And I think the more we're in harmony with that, the happier we are at that development, the happier we are to change. As Walt Whitman said, do I contradict myself? Of course I contradict myself. I contain multitudes. And I think that's very true of our industry and of all of these wonderful explorative journeys that we get to go on. And I guess I just wanted to take this last little bit of the conference to remind you that it all starts from nothing. When you're heading back out there, just know that when you get back to your center, anything that you want to change, anything that you want to do, you can do it. Anything that you want to interact with, I like to think of our businesses as our little universes that we create. You don't need to run them like other people do. You get to create your own universe, both in your life and in your float tank center. And much like in business, in the tanks themselves, that's exactly what we're introducing to people. We're giving people a new start. And for some people that truly, truly changes their lives. And I just wanted to give a big round of applause if you join me to all of you, the audience, for coming out here and for doing the work that you do. Such a pleasure to be able to stand up here in front of all of you, to be able to give so many hugs. I actually wanted to, I had this idea before the talk that I wanted to thank every single person by name, but I did the calculations and it would have taken me 23 and a half minutes to list off everyone. So I dropped that idea. And instead I'll say, you know, thank you to the nothing inside all of us. And I wish you plenty of nothing going forward in your travels home. Thank you very much for an amazing, amazing conference. And hopefully we'll see you all back next year. And thank you to Ashcom. Thank you to Janine. Thank you to everyone else who helped put this crazy, crazy event together.