 I think we have to stop confusing firsts with most special in our lives. So the first time we did something, went somewhere, experienced something, you know how we tend to pack up on that and say, well, it'll never be like that again. That was the most special experience, the most special place I went to, the most special moment in my life. Because when we do that, when we conflate firsts as most special, what we do is we make the sacred in our lives a non-renewable resource, a non-renewable experience, and it's not, because this may not be the first time that you have been on a date or been to Paris or bought a house or got married or had a child, or whatever it may be that's happening in your life again in some way today, but it is the first time, perhaps, that you are going to Paris with that person who's a new love in your life. It may be the first time you're moving house with these people in your world. It's the first time you're doing something as this new version of you, as the best version you've ever been. So all of that makes it a first each time. And I want you to not think that the best of your life is over because there are no more firsts like those firsts, because that's not true. And I want you to look forward as you grow and get older to sacred seconds and thrilling thirds and fantastic thoughts and so on, because that's what life holds for us. If we don't park up on, that was so special, it'll never be repeated. Yes, it will. Love you guys, hope they help you today. Cheers, talk to you soon.