 Will you be in Provincetown or will you go somewhere else? So that's kind of a very simple circle. I don't think that I'm interested in that. Because I don't think that I'm interested in my... It sounds really expensive. Yeah, it's our interest. And it's seasonal too, so it's like... That's the other thing. Yeah. Is that you don't need... All your money. In two months of the year. In two months of the year. Yeah. Essentially it's the money you have. It's like two and change. But if there's 10 grand a month, and you can't even get 30 seeds in their space, I don't know if it's probably because you didn't even have hot water. What? I have conditions with my espresso machine. What? Wow. We barely passed our hot water. 10 grand a month. No seeds and no hot water. I know you're supposed to have hot water, but the landlord is just such a greedy ass. Yeah. And then I'll say it's probably... No, sometimes... I was a jerk. Most of them are, I mean... Yeah, sometimes you deal with that. I mean, more often than not, I think tenants deal with that. Like, that's the situation. That's the landscape. It's surprising to me, if I can imagine that when the family shop felt busy Friday afternoon, and the guy comes in and talks to the front-of-the-line manager, I don't expect him to have any hope. But is the owner here? Oh my God. I'm kidding, man. I was like... Still me. Still me? Yep. How can I help you? It takes me away from my business. Yeah, totally. So it's a good afternoon to chastise me for not having a barker out front. Then problems come, and we walk down a lot of commercial streets. A lot of the more established stores to the restaurants will have some ways they may not front-of-the-line manager who barks at people on the street to try to get them on the side. I didn't know that that was the term for them, and I'm just so happy it is, because it's annoying. A barker? It's so annoying. Wow, I didn't know that was the thing either. My problems to the street is not the experience I'm looking for. And why would he expect that from you? Or demand it. That's the part of the culture down there for the stores, restaurants, and that's how many people want to stay with somebody out there and aggressively go after business. And as some of the wanting to have a destination location, I was just in the wrong place. It wasn't for the right streets. And so, had I had no time to think about it before I dove into that space, I probably would have decided against it in the long run, but because it was a sublet and I knew that there was an outlet. Yeah. So what's the worst thing in my life? Right. So I should have $50,000 time for it, but I'm away with it. I don't experience it. It's so much experience. In the future. Are we not going to run this in the future? What works in this space? What doesn't work in this space? What, as just a person, not a business owner, but like, a person has to be there. Right. How does this feel? Do I like what I'm doing? Do I like this situation? Do I like the people who are coming on my job? Are they making me feel fulfilled? And at the end of the day, I love the community and I love to be able to have this sort of super passive, but also, you know, to be around, to exist in that community that's fully accepted. But, when the push comes to shove, you know, you're the leader and you're a business. You're no business queen. And so... Or will you go? Where do you want to go? So, we both come in a unit space, and and I'm not back in city, I'm tall around the city. Mind you, I was US and I was in Provincetown. The first few months, we were in a tent. What? Where? Where was this tent? In Provincetown. Renting the tent space for me and two of them. Like camping? Camping. Okay. Me camping. This is not the ramping. No. This was like straight up camping where we had electricity or water or something like that. There's everything we had. And so... Wow. Not only was that challenging for me, but it was just challenging for people who came to look for me in the middle of the business in the beginning to live through that. And one of the most annoying things is that not everybody is as tough as I am. No. Facts. And also, everybody is... You're Becca the Wrecker. You got to be really, really tough to be in the business even if you have one needs to start. But then to be confident about your business where you're willing to do it on time with no power in a community that doesn't know how to be first. It's a massive crisis. Oh, that's so interesting. I was not the only business owner in this one. At the end of the summer when some of my staff left because they got burnt out. I think it's about like the headline of the year. Wow. I had to move back into my shop which I totally wasn't supposed to do. And I looked up in the office on a beach here and went into ice cream freezers. The office was a little exposed to the outside and I wanted to be like within the radar and private and I was kind of breaking a little bit. And so I wanted to be share with them but I don't have a whip and some fancy props. And looking at them and looking at the experience of pushing back into the city.