 generalities, but this is the way things tend to go. Luke, I just give you the opportunity to say anything you want before we move on. Yeah, one of the most common warning signs that you're dealing with that, one third of the population that's dysfunctional, highly likely to have destructive addictions operating in their life as if you hear from someone that their phone has died. My phone has never died. So people's credit scores essentially correlate with how much charge they keep on their phones. So responsible adults keep their phones charged, but if someone can't keep their phone charged, if someone uses the excuse that their phone died, like Andrew Huberman who was number one health and fitness podcaster was exposed in New York magazine over the past week and he would often use the excuse when he's operating six simultaneous girlfriend relationships, oh, my phone died. That's always a warning sign that someone's dysfunctional. And so one has to be very wary about allowing anyone into your life who is that dysfunctional because this is just a symptom. This is just the little movement on top of the water that reflects the whole maelstrom going on under the water. So people who can't show up on time who say that their phone died, people who bounce checks, all right. These are not people that you can build a solid community or bond with. They're just gonna be an endless source of chaos. So about a third of the population out there is probably gonna be much more of a sense of bring much more of a sense of chaos into your life. So good people make you feel good, bad people make you feel bad. We have to build our foundations on our connections with good, solid people.