 One thing that I want to ask is, you know, because things like suicide carries a lot of stigma behind it. And you even have a lot of people kind of shaming people who have committed suicide or think about suicide as being weak or not caring about the people around them. Those are just a few, obviously. But what are kind of the common misconceptions of stigma that you've heard around suicide? I definitely think being weak. That's a really huge one. Because actually, I don't think it's not a weak thing to go through with it at all. No, nobody who's experienced that will say that other people are weak. It's not an easy thing to do with in life. It's the opposite. Not at all. And another thing is, from personal experience, and I think hearing other people's stories and research and stuff, the reason why people decide or choose to end their life by suicide or attempt to do that is because they are trying to bring away from something. But it's not an external thing. It's internal. And they simply cannot get away from it. So the feelings are very strong. And the only way that you can think of getting away from it is probably sleep, but you can't sleep forever because you have to wake back up. Yeah, exactly. That's another thing that I used to do a lot. Me too, just get away from it. Stay asleep. Yeah, sleeping in. Yeah, not dealing with the world today. Actually, when you're depressed, that's why you can either become like an insomnia because you're too stressed and thinking that you can't sleep, or you just sleep forever. But I've done both. But I do think the darkness of your thoughts just can become a bit too much. Yeah, and it just feels like a natural and easy option to take. You just won't have to deal with any of the world's best stuff again. And to be fair, where you go, we don't know a problem. But I don't know, whatever surely can't be worse than this is what it feels like. But yeah, that's what I think. I think there's a big stigma around suicide being selfish, that it's something that people are like, oh, you're going to affect the people around you. It is true. People are going to have to mourn you and grieve. And it's not an easy thing for a social network to anyone that knows you to deal with or hear about. But there is also an aspect that it's not very easily put into words that most people could understand. But a lot of people who choose to do, who choose to take their life, it's not something that is often like a selfish thing. For a lot of people, they can feel like they're a burden, especially if it's a long-term mental health condition. And they feel like they're actually just by being there, they are reducing the mood, depressing other people around them that they're causing issues for people around them and that they are the problem in a certain family system or a certain social network. And so they feel that it's genuinely something that will help other people around them and that it's a good thing and that them being there is a bad thing. And it's not easily, I guess, relatable to a lot of people. But when you are in the midst of that really severe period where you are contemplating that a lot, it is very apparent. You don't care about yourself at all and you feel very much like, you know, things would be better if you weren't there. It's hard for people to understand. Yeah, I agree with you. And in a way, it all feels like you're doing everyone else a favor by not being there. So yeah, totally understand that and agree with you. Yeah. Yeah, and another thing I think is people, maybe like sometimes people might be driven towards suicide because unlike us, we do have some good support systems in place. People who don't have support systems in place may be more likely to go towards that route.