 Haleen asked the question, I have a problem with a document in Word where there is this blue box in the top of all pages. And I don't know how to remove it as I can't market. I can open a new document, which is blank, but if I copy paste there, this current document into a new one, the blue box is still there. Anyone could help. And I saw it, so she shared an image out on the forum too, just an empty Word doc. It looks like the blue box is up in the header, but it's not. And my next, it almost looks like there's a template, but it's a Word doc, not a template. So I mean, my first thought is it's the header, it's not. Second thought, can you select all and grab it? There's something like no. The third thing is that it almost looks like it's a blue box that was put in a template and you're accessing the doc template, but it's not, it's a straight Word doc. So I'm not sure what that could be. So is it actually a straight Word doc because somebody can take a template and just rename it to docX? I mean, that's not a big deal. I open it up as a doc. Number two, did she do a reveal codes? Because you can go in and do a reveal codes and find out what is actually sitting up there in the document itself. And of course, that's a totally user-friendly thing to go and do. It is, it is. Yes, it is. It was a thing that was confusing me. Sarcasm people, sorry. When she talks to me when she doesn't see it, but when she copies from something else over, right? Which is why I think it's a template scenario, Mike, that you just described, yeah. The normal dot dot? Normal dot dot? No, no, because if she's got a new document, it's not there. So it's the current document. So when she's copying and pasting, I would say go to the home tab, go to the, go to in the, in your editing pane, go select and open up the selection pane. So you can start to see what do you have on the page. If it's an object or anything along those lines, it might then come up for you to be able to select with a selection pane. Because if there's something there, you've got the eye that you can turn it on and off in your selection pane. So that's how you can select anything across the different screens. So have a look at that for an object first. Is it an object? Because it could be sitting as a background or it could be, you know, there's a lot of other components where when you're copying a page, if it's not something you can select, then it's, you know, it can be things like the water, a water marking or something along those lines that sit in the kind of the back end that you can't touch. So you need to be able to reveal. If it's on the one, it could be hidden, but when she copies and pastes, it reveals it to let you know it's there. Right? Yeah. Well, that's why if you, I was, sorry, to interrupt this, I'd say copy and paste it as an unformatted text, whether it appears or not. If you remove all formatting, does it go away? Yeah. Also, is she the only one that's having it? Yeah. Because when she's saving it, depending where she's saving it, is something to be applied. Is an eyesight-related issue. Do you see blue boxes on other things? Yeah, I think that is the person next to you getting the same thing. Because when they're saving, depending on where they're saving, is some policy trying to put a watermark or do some sort of confidential, something, you know, of that nature? So you've got a couple of different scenarios you need to check out. But I bet you it's hidden on this, the one she's copying from, but when she pastes, it's showing because it's supposed to, right? To let you know it's there. Yeah. Yeah. Or just, you're taking glasses on and off and it definitely is a, you know, a vision thing, but yeah, it's usually an object, so it's revealing objects. I would also say, and if it's an object or you've put something in, even if it is, so you can put in different sort of table parts, you know, when you go on, so maybe it's a text box or something. And it looks white on one, like it's there and you can't see it. So it's got like white on this. But when you move it into the new document, maybe the new document is based on the office template and colors and formatting. So it's defaulting automatically to the new color. That are set on the standard template to your template. So what doesn't look like there's anything there and you bring it over and it does here. It could just be because it's defaulting over to the new looks and colors. So therefore it reveals it. So yeah. You could also change the background color of your document to the same color blue and then it'll just disappear. I don't know what, we wouldn't notice it. I'm just providing options. That's all I'm just trying to. Yes, it did. So helpful. That's not the one she wants. I'm just going to fix your, how to fix your problems by Christian Buckley. And he blogs, he blogs these all the time. Doesn't he? I like to, as one of my favorite sayings is, I don't know the answer to your problem, but I admire that problem. Good on you. That is an interesting one though. I'd like to know the answer, which one it actually is. Yeah, I've applied. I've seen that sort of stuff. I've had that sort of stuff before, even. But it's usually, it's usually a couple of. You just have to go, right. Just go try things, poke around. Yep. Sometimes I wonder about you, Christian. We all wonder about you. You should talk to my wife, Mike. The non-paid non-attorney spokesperson, yes.