 So my wife and I finally bought our very first home as a full-time doctor. Now as you go through medical school and residency, you just don't have an income to be able to pay for a down payment for a home. But as you become a full-time physician, there are several options that you can use to actually buy your first home just like we did. Number one is paying for a home conventionally, which is usually paying about 20 to 25 percent down of a down payment and then having a mortgage over 30 years. But number two, and this is the option that we took, is using a physician loan or a medical provider loan. Banks know that usually people in the healthcare field have a stable job, they have an income. And for me as an attending, I not only had all the money that my wife and I had saved over residency, but also all the income that we had to show over my first year of being hospitalized. And so we use this to obtain a physician loan, which basically required a little bit less down in the 20 percent, meaning that I could keep some cash in my bank in case I had some emergencies, but also have a very similar, if not actually better interest rates than all the conventional loans that are out there in the first place. Now if you enjoy that behind the scenes of my life as a full-time physician and you like to see my journey into cardiology fellowship as well as becoming a cardiologist, hit that like, subscribe, and follow for more content just like this.