 This story is familiar to me and we can tell he's told a thousand times because as he gives that list of things, hear his voice go up the end, it lills upward. When I brought up the fact that I could use something to wake up, he immediately knew what I was referring to. I had made it clear that I was looking for Coke and I really was. Now let's just know he's just going through reading the awful list from memory, something that he's not maybe just rehearsed, but something he's just told so many times is just coming out. I had given Barack $250 to pay for Coke. He gets out, comes back, I start putting a line on a CD tray. It's not like he's loping, he's just going through, he's just telling the same thing over and over again, but it just seems so boring because he's bored with it too. And one thing I've noticed over the years is this thing that I call loose gazing. And when you're sort of looking off and just telling as you recall all your story, which is what he does 80% of the time, he's looking over here and Tucker's over there, he's just gazing off and telling the story. I think that's the way he's remembering his structure.