 I have to say that one time I had a lady in a young lady who owned a hair salon. And what I met her was post-hedge. But I heard from her that the reason she made her hair salon all women's only was so that she could service the woman who wore hijab. Because otherwise you can't go into a hair salon. So it has to be all women's space. And she herself, after she went to Hajj, decided to put on the hijab. Which apparently for her from family and background and what she came from was a really big deal. And for her career as someone in the beauty field was also a very big deal. Somebody who was very, very concerned with the outward at all times. And here was a spiritual transformation. And she says every time my business kind of starts to take a nosedive and people say to me, you should open it up again for both men and women to serve, you know, to have more people come through. So your business does better. She says, but I'm a Hajji. Right? Her personal transformation was to make a decision that she really wanted to service. That she herself wanted to take on this next stage of the commandments of God which is for the woman to cover. And although that was difficult for her, it was a decision she made after her Hajj. She came back with that piety and wanted to continue with it. It didn't make sense. She said it did not make sense for me to go to Hajj and to don all of the scar and then to come back and leave it. Right? This transformation that takes place in this piece affected even her career. Right? And her daily life. Leave it.