 I had a really good question from Brie asking, does anyone feel guilty during a shutdown for not being able to play with your animal? Because I kind of get that too sometimes, like sometimes like, it's not, I don't know if it's something related to like social battery, but I definitely have it for pets as well. And like, I can get a little bit agitated if like pets won't leave me alone when I need to like, be my myself. But yeah, Brie, I can answer Brie's question like absolutely. So we have a Churrower and a Chinese Crested as well. The Churrower is called Trudy and she's black and tan. And Karen is the Chinese Crested. And then Maisie, obviously the Collie. And Karen is like, like, I was, I had three sort of like small burnout episodes followed by a long meltdown shutdown. I used the term happy meltdown, by the way, Thomas, I got that from you. Just as a way to describe like, yes, like last year I just had like so many amazing, like, and it all came at once. Like all out of nowhere, all at once, these opportunities, I got like copper hospitality to go and do and see amazing things. And I met all kinds of people, including like some famous people. It was amazing. Longed and in like lack of sleep and in that happy anxiety and the kind of like, I shut the mess and mess up, sleep for three hours, running on low sleep, but you're like super happy and excited. And it's like all of the amazing things. Think about like any of your special interests and like the key people in those and you get to meet them and hang out with them and then you get to do and like prolong that. And you think it would be amazing and it is and bang. Anyway, so I'm in my, I'm in my shutdown period and Karen is just, she can tell there's something like wrong with me if that makes sense. I'm using the term wrong in the dog's perspective. And she goes and gets me a bagel. She finds a bagel. I don't know where the bagel came from. One of us must have given it to her like days ago. This is like a three day old bagel. It might have been older than that. Maybe it's from the hedge. I don't know where she got the bagel from. It was our bagel at some point. And she brought with this bagel and she's a, she's a food guard is Karen. She absolutely guards food. It's weird because she's a tiny dog and she'll guard it. She'll growl at the cat. She'll growl at the big dog says she'll growl at everyone. Like I'm eating, but she like literally donated this bagel to me. And I'm sitting outside and I'm like, I don't want this thing. And I just threw it away and she only got it and brought it back to me. But she's like, yes, yes. Yeah. This is what I'm talking about. Like yours and put it next to me. And she goes on that. Well, I'm just like so unimpressed. And I'm just, I'm feeling absolutely exhausted. I've got a book, a book about autism on my lap, and I'm just actually exhausted. I can't deal with it. Nina comes home and I'm like, oh, Nina, like you got this in the car. And she's got it. She's just, and so what's she doing? And she's watching this dog picking up this bagel, bringing it to me and nudging it towards me. She's never done it before or since. We now call it the bagel of love. This bagel of love, we call it. So like Karen annoys me. Nina says, do you remember the bagel of love? You know, she's a good dog, Wally. But yeah, I felt like really bad, honestly, for like not like, I felt like I was kind of like not looking after the animals. Like I felt like, so yes, I do relate to that. And there have been times when I've gone through each depressive moments in life. And it's, or just haven't, I haven't taken care of the animals like I should have done. Well, I've, I've looked after people's animals before. And there was one dog that I looked after who was pretty much like one thing that I cannot stand myself is having an animal in the bed while I'm sleeping. I just can't do it. I know some people are okay with it. And that's cool. But I really can't do it. It just makes me feel not good. But wait, I was looking after this dog. And like, I had this, I had this experience where I was, you know, I was looking after the entire day I was playing with it and all that. And then I was like, okay, I think I've had enough today. And so like, I put it out, put it sort of outside my room, and in the dog bed and stuff and sort of went to bed. And I for the, for the night, it was like scratching on the doors and like barking and then like wanting to let it in. And I put the dog beds next to my bed. And then the entire night, it was just trying to get into my bed. And I was like, no, I don't want my bed. And it was like, because I had a wooden floor, it was like tapping along the wooden floor, just just trying to get on top of it. It was just, it's just way too much, right? Train the dogs not to like some folks would say you can have dogs and absolutely train them not to go and furniture, for example. Yeah, we do we let them we let them jump on sofas. But then again, with the caveat that they're not messy and whatever, but occasionally, Maisie will be running around in the fields should be really muddy. And she'll come in and the idea is we'll shower her down. We've got like a hot tap with this with a thing on, we can even wash her with hot water outside. Again, all of these things are like conscious ways of like, how do we make this thing that's really annoying? Better? How do we like resolve that? And I take a very autistic view, I dare say, and I mean that and not a pejorative way and very much a positive way. I take an autistic view of like life and I go, what, what is the thing that's irritating me the most right now? And how do I fix it? And it's like, muddy dog. Okay, how do I solve muddy dog? And it's like a tap to wash it with. It's like, hey, it can't be cold because that'd be horrible. Give me a hot, hot tap. It's like, cool, hot tap with a thing. It's always there. You just blast her down. She's a colleague, by the way. So not they're not like fragile. Yeah. Anyway, if she comes in muddy and jumps on the sofa, it's like, oh, you just made me like half a day's worth of work. So it doesn't happen. You try not be dogs off beds and things with your dogs in and our dogs used to be in bed with you. Yeah, or being in bed with a human. Yeah, I can see how that could be a problem. Well, any problem for me? Yeah. Like a snoring dog like last night is a good example. So Nina makes a bed before me and I think I can't really one of them is snoring. I'm like, oh my god. So try my nuts. I'm trying to like get them without waking her up. So I could put them put them away. But snoring dogs are a problem for me. Other than that, it's all good.