 such as, yeah, we had Char Shambu Suri just made some fire in the yard and jump, blah, blah, blah. What was this, what's the poem saying? Zardiman betul, ghermizutobiman, and it continues, something like this, but there were some new feelings. The fireworks sounds made reminded us the gunshots we had in the time of protests, yeah. Sanchez, just to let you know about Char Shambu Suri, I was really young when I came over from Iran. We're in the southern Iran, Uzestan, and by the way, gang, for those of you that don't know the celebration, Char Shambu Suri, the last Wednesday before spring kicks in, so right now spring is kicking in today and tomorrow, right? We're in the cusp of it, right? So last Wednesday, the last Wednesday, and it's the new year for Iran. The first day of spring is the first day of the new year for the Iranian calendar, right? So the last Wednesday before the Iranian new year, which would be the last Wednesday before spring kicks in, there's a celebration called Char Shambu Suri, and what communities do is build fires, right? You build like a bonfire, and there's different sizes. You can have little guys for the little people, right? And you have big fires for grown-ups, right? And what you do, you line up, people line up, and you run and jump over the fire. And when you jump over the fire, you say a poem, basically it goes, my fear to you and your strength to me, to the fire. And this is a tradition, I believe Sanchez, correct me if I'm wrong, from the Zoroastrian era, because it's not fire worship, but fire. Zoroastrianism is fire is regarded as a holy sacrament, I guess. You could think about it that way, right? So it comes from the Zoroastrian era, okay? Zoroastrian tradition, I believe, correct me if I'm wrong, Sanchez. So you jump over it and you let go of your fears and you strengthen yourself, right? It's an amazing period. It's an amazing celebration, really. It's an amazing celebration. It's community gathering, and so powerful, so powerful. Like, wow, there's nothing like it in the Western world, really. There's absolutely nothing like it that I have seen here in the Western world, okay? Oktoberfest sort of comes close to it, but Oktoberfest is a drunken, just drunken debauchery, it's insanity, right? And Oktoberfest is related to harvest, the last harvest of the year, stuff like this, right? Cleanser for mini-tradition, fire is a cleanser for mini-tradition, yeah, Cheryl, for sure. So it's an amazing vibe. I came to, from Iran, here when I was young, right? Like 10 years old, okay? Back then, this is what we as children used to do for fun, right? As something we would do. I'm pretty sure I'm okay to say this on Twitch, but keep this in mind. We're like eight years old, nine years old. We used to make, I don't want to say the word because it might be a trigger, but take metal piping, right? Fill it full of things that combust or go boom. Close it up so we would make, as eight years old, right? We would make little, I'll type it in. We, oops, that's not it. There we go. Oops, gotta put the B in there. We would make this, right? And you would throw it in the bonfire, right? And it gets hot and they would explode, right? There are tons where you throw this stuff in and people are jumping. I was, as kids, we'd be waiting. You're not, you're not supposed to do this. Adults don't like it because it hurts people and people would get hurt, right? Sometimes people jump over it and they catch their pants on fire and people have to put it out. Like, they're really big ones. Like, I'm not, like, I'm talking flames huge. Like, people when they're jumping, they're jumping through flames, right? Burning man comes close to a certain degree, but burning man is different, right? Burning man has that fire tradition to it as well, right? So people would jump over it and you put it in there and you wait. Sometimes if you were lucky as a kid, this was your entertainment, you would get the explosion while someone was in the air jumping. Amazing times. I came here and the, like, pampering, the lack of danger for children, the protective aspect of it was insane to me, right? It was like, wow, these, like, they don't do anything. Like, to me, I was chaos. Our family, kids were chaos when we came to Canada, relative to the kids here. The kids here were docile. As an eight-year-old, not as a 10-year-old, I knew how to make those things, right? And in high school here, I used to make them and sell them to kids, but we used to do it with, here, I used to do it with Screecharoos and different things, pound the Screecharoos, make little things, and I would sell that stuff in high school, as in grade eight and grade nine, in grade 10, to my friends, because they didn't know how to do it. And they were afraid, right? So Happy Noroes, Sanchez, Happy New Year to our Persian community. Okay. And I haven't done that, Char Chambers Suri, making those things for a very long time. But if, user schmoozer, schmoozer, user schmoozer, but if, but if, Ispeces, love us. Lonely Piggy, how are you doing? Salutations, salutations. Lonely Piggy, oh my God, Cheryl. And this is why we're only able to get sparklers and those charcoal snake things. They made pipe bombs illegal in Canada now, or at least in BC, I don't know what's going on in the rest of the provinces. Like in high school, during Halloween, I was one of the people that was having Roman candle fights with people. Stupid thing to do, really. But man, it was fun. Do not recommend doing it. Really, it was stupid. We did it for a couple of years and I realized this is a little dangerous, right? Sanchez, yes, you're right about, we say, Zardia man, as to Gormiz, to as man, while jumping on the fire, meaning your reddish will be mine, my yellow will be yours, which roots in the Zoroastrian and Mehir tradition, Mehir tradition, which is simply about wishing bad vibes and bad luck goes away from us and loved ones this year, while we are starting the spring and lifting that bad stuff in the winter of last year. Bad stuff in the winter of last year. Cool, cool, cool. Awesome, awesome. So you say, Gormiz, to be man, Zardia man beto. Okay. Okay. Zardia man beto. Yeah, Zardia, no, Zardia man beto. My yellow to you, you're red to me. Cheryl, chicho, neighborhood terror. It was fun. It was fun. The most I did, I put six pound at six Screecheroos and put them in one. Do not recommend. Six Screecheroos in one is pretty heavy, pretty, you got to be effing careful, make the fuse, effing, or don't, don't do it, make the fuse effing long, really long, right? Because the powder gets on the fuse. Like one thing with, with these types of things, when you're doing it, the powder gets on the fuse. So if you light it and there's powder on the fuse, it goes instantly to the explosion. And when it goes instantly to the explosion, it might blow up in your face. Do not do, do not do, really. I didn't, I didn't know anyone, anyone, when I was growing up in Canada, that had the capacity to do what I was doing, because they didn't grow up with it. Right? They didn't understand the danger, the insanity of it. Okay, so do not do. Okay, we're only picking. When the revolution starts, at least we know Chicho is gone. No, I don't, I don't do that no more. No, I'm only a kid. I'm peace-loving dude, right? Peace-loving guy. I'm sharing a form of chaos, chaos.