 So I facilitate what has been a faculty and staff book club about race and racism done that since spring of 2018. And just this fall sort of pivoted to it's an art club now anti-racist teaching club. And so I've incorporated hypothesis into that to provide a space for maybe individuals who can't make it to our physical or zoom meetings so that they can see and read these articles about you know anti-racist pedagogy and teaching strategies, even though they can't come. It hasn't quite there are a couple individuals, what the one of them was a student in my art and science and teaching class. So she's familiar with it so it's still, you know, I think there's a little bit of a learning curve. So hopefully that takes off and they faculty see the benefit, not just in learning the stuff of the article, but in the community that that can that that can facilitate because that's what's been missing. We don't have those hallway conversations we don't have the workroom, you know chit chat the debrief or the you know the counseling session that you might have with your colleague. So it's been a lot of isolation. And that's made it extra extra heavy, but I will say a warm fuzzy moment happened Friday so my race power privilege and health course meets on Fridays. And we've been talking about taking care of ourselves and self care, especially as we talk about really difficult things. And so when we were doing our check ins for the morning, one of the students shared that she found this epsom salt. That was life changing and she did a soak and it was just amazing and how it changed her, her, her life that week. And she talked about how hypothesis was such a part in helping her connect with her classmates, so much so that she bought a bag of the epsom salt for each student in the class so that they could share this self care moment where she was able to like deep into the process and all that so I was like, Oh my goodness. I'm going to have to share this with the liquid margins people, because like the power of that. Beyond what I could have imagined so