 Yeah, we on boss talk one-on-one. But I knew, I listened to a couple of your episodes with Bishop Eli, is that him? Yeah. That was a good episode. I like that episode too. Yeah, I like that. But because, yeah, he talked about his transformation and he did, how many years did he do, 40? He did like 38? 30 years I think. Was it 38 or 30? 30, I think it's 30. In total you did like what, 28? 28. 28. I did 18 years flat. I did 10 years free. Y'all got papers and everything. I done did everything. Yeah, yeah, so. What made you not go back? What made you not get in trouble again? Because when you come back out, we've always talked about this. Yeah, but he's older now too. No, but people were talking. People were sure. People knew who you were. And when you come out and they gonna come to you and try to offer you, man, you know, I got this, how come you didn't go back? It happened. Because I came home with a different mindset. I got an opportunity to hug my mom and daddy. You did? Yeah. When I came home, I hugged my mom and daddy, right? Lucky for you because a lot of people lost their mom and dad while they were gone. They lost them. And I seen guys that, hey man, now I'm good. I'm all right, I'm chill, I'm good. I was, I put myself away for a minute. Before I even came out and really started communicating with people in the hood. I put myself up because I was on a mission. My nephew was at this electrical company. I started working before the new parking that's been, that's built now. I worked at Parkland when it was straight dirt. Okay. We ran out of electrical for Parkland when it was all dirt, the big panel. I worked right there. You see what I'm saying? When they finished that job, you know what got me was when they finished that job and they told me, I had to, you had to go back and go through it. But my background. So I probably working at Parkland Hospital now having in with the electrical. But whenever you go for a hospital, they gotta do a dirt or background check. Background check and when they found out. They found, so what happened was the dude was telling me like, man, don't worry about that. I got you, I'm gonna make sure you. So I'm like, I ain't dead. So go ahead and go through with it. Man, can't be like, man, that ain't nothing we can do. Boom, that was my first, that was my first knock down. That hurt? That was my first knock down. Yeah, that hurt. You gotta realize I'm fresh out. I'm doing electrical work. I'm making like $25 an hour. Killing. Come on, man. I'm talking about it and all I'm doing is running. Man, I'm running. Why I just, man, I'm talking about every week we getting a check. Come on, man. I'm talking about like, yeah. And it's legal. And now, they finna tell me, I finna work at the Parkland Hospital and they tell me how we're gonna be doing it. All I'm gonna be doing is making sure, checking the, making sure that everything was right. If something break down inside the main thing, we'll just go in. So I'm like, oh, man, this shit, man. Ooh. So to get that, it kinda hurt. Disappointment. You see what I'm saying? So now I'm going back to, man, what I'm finna do, bro? Other jobs talking about $10 an hour. I went from making $25 an hour to you telling me $10 an hour. How long did that go on for before you actually got a stable job? Man, I'm, when I did, when I left, I'm gonna be on the streets. When I left, I had to make some help.