 Next question is from Tanner Sorals. What was each of your biggest client pet peeves when you all were trained? Oh, yeah. This is a good one. I've never picked one like this. You know, I got one off the top of my head. I used to hate having to explain or debate fads, fitness and health fads constantly. Oh, Lord. I'd be training a client for a year, two years, three years, you know, they've learned a lot. We've gotten real far. They've gotten great progress. And then they'd come in and be like, hey, my friend just lost 30 pounds. She did this HCG diet. Yeah. Have you heard of it? I'm like, ah, okay, let me look it up. And I look it up like, all right, here's why it's not good. But she looks really good. How did she lose that weight? I'm like, well, it's, you know, 400 calories a day. It has nothing to do with this HCG that they're injecting. And then I have to have these discussions and debates. And I would get annoyed because that almost, it's almost like you're, you wanna tell your client like, you should know better. Yeah. You know, I've been talking to you about this for three years that your company brought me. But that was one of my pet peeves. But I always, I always tried to stay patient and calm because there's so much bad information out there that, you know, a big part of your job as a trainer is just helping them sift through the crap and find the good stuff. Lying to me. That was like my number one pet peeve. You got me clean on clients lie. They told you you're a good trainer. Yeah, that's the biggest lie for sure. You lie. No, I mean they do. When they track their food and stuff. Yeah. Food tracking or telling you that, like if I, like, you know, are, you know, ones where I try to get somebody to stop doing cardio and, you know, I'd- They sneak around your body. Oh yeah, they would. I catch them. You know what I'm saying? I catch them doing things. I'd be like, what did I tell you? You know, and then we wonder why things aren't going to according to plan. The other pet peeve of mine too, and this is my own shit that I struggle with is because unfortunately I just don't have this thing. This is one of the attributes that Sal has that I wish I had is that- Larger penis? Oh my God, you just hit him out the park today. Yeah. Sorry. We would notice because you were in shorts. My bad. Yeah, sorry. No pants today. No, I don't have a photographic memory and I am the worst. Like I will read a study two or three times and it will take me at least four or five times trying to explain it before. I think I can explain it really well. And so when I would get challenged in something that I know I know I'm right. Like I know that I have the right information but then I couldn't articulate it really well. And I know that Sal can't relate to this because he doesn't, he has the opposite, right? He's really good at this. Probably made him really good as a trainer is that you could probably, someone could question him on what he's doing and then he could break down the study to support it. I on their hand read the same studies but couldn't regurgitate it. So it was more like, just trust me, God damn it. So that was a pet peeve. It would frustrate me when you would hire me as a professional and then I lacked the ability to, again, again, I know it's my own shit, right? It's not like, it's a matter of the client but it was a frustration, right? Or a pet peeve of mine of like having to like prove that I knew that I was talking about it. It's like, I wouldn't be here. I wouldn't be doing this if I didn't know what I was talking about. So that drove me crazy spending a lot of time doing that. One of my biggest pet peeves was when I would take all of the time in the world to explain like exactly why I was programming, the way I was programming and going through all these steps and trust the process and all that stuff. And I find out later, like they signed up for all these extra classes that they were doing besides our sessions. And it was just like, it was always never enough which is a battle that I was constantly having with clients and then inevitably we get to a point where they realize they're just spinning their wheels and cause I would have other people listen that would gain progress. And then we'd have that conversation again and come up. But yeah, they used to just be so frustrating to me cause it's, I mean, it just feel like it feels like doing more is always gonna push you forward. But- Like it's always better. It's just always better. And that's a hard argument to unravel and show somebody that they're wrong. Here's another one when I would go out to eat with a client which wasn't super common. I did maintain a professional line, but after you train people five, six, seven years, they'd ask you to go to lunch or come over meet my family and you do it and you would see them change their eating behaviors just cause you're there. Like, oh, I'll make sure we go somewhere healthy. And I'm like, man, I'm just a regular person like you are. And I've been training you for years. Like it's not a big deal. You eat milkshakes? Yeah, you could have a glass of wine and we could have pizza or you ever run into a client at the grocery store. It's happened to me a couple of times where I see a client with their cart and then they see me. Don't know that I saw that they saw me and then they turn around real quick. We'll leave the cart? We'll leave the cart? Yeah. Cause it's all like frozen food. It's so embarrassing. I don't know who's this was. So weird. I thought it was mine. It just jumped in here off the racks. But I mean, trainers are regular people too and you're more effective when you, the person is honest with you and then you can work together. And I think sometimes as a trainer I might've made people feel like they couldn't be totally honest. So that was, that's on me. It's like, you know, following along your lines Adam. That was on me pretty much. I mean, I think that's important to note, right? With any pet peeves, frustrations, we're sharing them and having fun with them. But I'm also a person who totally believes that it's a mirror of ourselves, right? So if I'm frustrated with anybody and I stand by that, if I'm mad at another person or frustrated and if I'm emotionally charged or irritated about anything that really isn't about the other person, it's really a reflection of myself. So yeah, we're having fun with these pet peeves and all. Oh yeah, like I could have communicated way better and would have absolved all of that. Right, yeah.