 I think the word patience itself is a very sort of passive thing, you know, if you look at Subur, it's a very active thing. I would probably translate it more as perseverance rather than patience because I feel patience in English is a very passive thing. It's like, I'll just wait for this time to be over and then I'll be okay. You know, it's not like that. Subur is supposed to be where no matter what situation I'm in, I've got that strength to continue and do what is required from Allah, what Allah requires from me. I'll have that strength within me and that's Subur. Whereas we sort of, oh, just wait it out and things will get better and I'll get over it. That's not what Subur is. So I think it's that concept of perseverance, just pushing myself and knowing that God's given me those tools to be able to handle it and to be able to then move forward and grow from it. And it's again, looking at the positive rather than the negative. The sad thing is, I think the way Shaitan works, he constantly makes us look at the negatives. So even when something is very positive, for example, we've been given the opportunity to go to Fuziara. You know, we'll go for Fuziara, we'll say I'm going for Fuziara for ten days. Now, when it gets to the seventh, eighth day, I'm already starting to feel negative. It's like, oh, I've got to go back and next week at this time I'm going to be back in London. I was always meant to go for ten days. I was never, I'd never gone there to stay there. You see, and then what I do is because I'm feeling very negative, the last few days are wasted to a certain extent. And then I come back and then I go through what people have referred to as the post-Syara blues. Again, you know, I'm supposed to come back spiritually uplifted and you know, ready for this world and bring it back into my world and everything. But what Shaitan has done is he's made the positive experience of Zyara into a negative thing because all I'm doing is feeling sorry for myself. Oh, I'm not back there now. I wish I was there. Is it just that or the fact that separation is a part of our existence? Yearning. And they are purpose and the reality of that. It pushes you to emulate those personalities, not to sort of feel sorry for yourself. They never, you know, you never see them feeling sorry for themselves. It's like none of the Ahlulbe ever felt sorry for themselves. Yes, they felt sad because they were humans. Of course, they felt sad, but they never felt sorry for themselves. Whereas we're constantly feeling sorry for, oh, you know, it's not fair. I was in Zyara. You know, just the difference. It's like, yes, you will feel sad because of the yearning of being separated from the, you know, from them. But look at the fact that you were there. And what did I get from it? And, you know, how am I going to bring it back to my life? What am I going to do with that opportunity that God gave me? How am I going to grow from it? So constantly be looking for the growth and the positiveness rather than the negativity. Keep the Zen. Yes. Thank you.