 There are moments in your career that I remember you being very angry. One of them was a BJ Penn fight. Well, if you almost stopped BJ Penn, the round ended and you jumped up and punched the turn, you punched the cage. Yes. Remember that? Yes. You were still mad. You need to canalize your emotion when you fight. You need to be stoic, no emotion. But there's times that it's time to use your emotion, but to use it to propel you, to use it to motivate you to be able, for example, to finish the round with more energy, even though you're physically exhausted, you use that dose of emotion to push yourself. But the emotion is a little bit like fire. It can help you cook your food, but it can burn you. It's like, it's like fear, fear. Because someone would say, if you have a huge ego, like I have an incredible ego, I'm very, very proud. I'm a very proud person, which helped me be a better fighter, but also it's an issue with some time in life. If I use my emotion when I get hit, like I did for Matt Sarah, because I wanted to give it back to him right away. I didn't like to be stunned. I've never been stunned in my life, never. It was the first time that I got stunned. And for me, it was humiliating, humiliated. He humiliated me. So I wanted to give it back right away so we can shut everybody's mouth. And, you know, I can say, you see, it was just a little mistake. And that's it. But if you use it for that particular thing, it could be a big mistake. You need to canalize it and knowing when it's time to use your emotion. You keep it inside of you. And when it's time, you let it, let it explode. Isn't that it?