 So what is the job market for a pathologist assistant, a PA? Is it easy to get a job? How competitive are these jobs? I, in my experience, I will say that labs are growing and positions that are open are not because people are leaving there because the practice is growing and they need, there's more work, they need more PAs. Everyone in the class before me, they all had jobs before they graduated, the same for everyone. Wow. The same for the class before and the class before. I will say that if you are tied to a specific city or a specific state, then things will become more difficult for you because our certification is national. There are jobs all over the country. But if you're not willing to go to the job, you will have more difficulty. So it's definitely easy to get a job overall. Like you said, everybody in your class and the class before you had a job before graduating, which is incredible. I know with PA school, it's definitely not like that. Or with a physician assistant school, it's definitely not like that. You know, the job market's great, but it's not that great. So that sounds extremely good. Are some specialties in some areas better paid than others? I would say the average is around 85 to 95 starting, but that's dependent on where you are in the country just because cost of living is different. So if you're in New York versus the Midwest somewhere versus the California, I mean San Francisco is super expensive. So you better get paid more if you're working out in San Francisco. That makes sense. But that's new grad is average of like 90,000. How much can you expect to grow as you get more experience? I think definitely over 100K. And it's also highly dependent on what extra responsibilities you take on PA's can function in management roles. Actually being in a like a senior position, a highly trained position, you are most often pays are looked at as a leader in the lab anyway. But if you want to make more money, you're probably going to have to take on a management role. And I could easily, if you want to be a lab manager somewhere, even possibly move up into director position, you know, maybe 150. So just a really quick comparison here just because I'm a physician assistant student. Shawna is a pathology assistant student. It sounds like the job market is definitely more reliable for pathology assistants. And they make about the same almost identical actually to physician assistants with the same room for growth. So it's really interesting.