 Now being in school and in medical school all the way up to the age of 25, I've pretty much been in school trying to get the grades and stay away from the medical debt. And throughout the process, as I was spending hours and hours studying, I was also seeing on social media or my peers at my same age, we're getting new houses, starting families, having kids, having beautiful cars, and saying, man, I wish that could be me. But then I realized that the benefit of delayed gratification is that whenever I would have a level of success, that dopamine hit wasn't as high. And I was always focused on going to the next thing, instead of being super excited for something and then let down when the feeling was over. And so my personal experience, I'm much more excited of rolling a bunch of snow and making it a huge snowball versus getting the huge snowball ASAP. And that's allowed me to have a greater appreciation for the things that take time. For example, in investing where initially I started with absolute zero, my wife and I got married to now just three years down the process where we have a six figure investment portfolio, things like fitness where I could barely run a mile several years ago. I just ran my first marathon in December of 2021. I'll be running a half marathon a week from now.