 Well, I've been kind of the idea. I left South Africa many, many years ago. We'll keep it at that. And kind of left and came here with nothing. I think I had 300 dollars in cash. I've got a state, right? What I didn't say during the presentation. I also had two pairs of jeans, a few t-shirts. And I did have a few things, but ended up in the country and talked about how blessed I was, right? And I think one of the things I really want to iterate, like I reiterated or the immigrant story, is also how blessed I was to end up in this country. Many, many good things happened here for me. It's the hunger that motivates you. And then when people around you step in and I mentioned this lady, Susan Johnson, and her husband Tom, you know, I mean she would invite us for dinner. And so then after the hunger, the motivation becomes not to disappoint these people that invest in you. And not that you owe them. They never ask for anything back. But the fact that they picked you up and put you on that next level and enabled you to step to that next level. And so for me it was often my children, right? I want my children to live the American dream. It was my wife that sacrificed so much to make me successful. And oftentimes, like, you know, it had detriment, right? My wife's a great intellectual. Never got to do a PhD. Of course, she helped me do mine. So she's got a master's in stuff. But then also just you want to see the pride in other people and repaying them for those small acts of kindness, you know, which then becomes alive. And also in a way, then, if I really have to define it to you, my success is the result of so many random acts of kindness by so many hundreds, if not thousands of people. And that's what keeps you motivated to come back every day. That's why I work with students every day. If I can do a random act of kindness to a student, and they're not random anymore, right? We plan them. We're very intentional. I've got an amazing staff here. And how we do that is in a way all that payback, right? Because you've experienced in that you're like, if all of us are just honest and we sit back and we say, how did I get where I am? You know, it's really us. And I never want to have that arrogance associated with me to say that where I am today is me. Many people carry me. And in a way, my response to that is what carried me to be here. And so my story is one of being blessed. You know, if you think about it, I came to this country with $300. And I'm a dean of student success, getting to work with brilliant students every day. And I think that's where it's at. It's the blessings that underlies some of the suffering that we see.