 Coming here has been our coming out story, honestly. We both were in Georgia and she said that she'd go out there. When we became more than friends, we didn't tell anybody there. It's a different climate in Georgia. Even with the Don't Ask, Don't Tell being repealed, it's just completely different. I do, our idea still feel like there will be people will treat you differently if they knew. When I say people, I mean just leadership or co-workers even. But what matters the most is promotions and EPRs, things like that. So, no, we did not tell anyone that we were more than close friends. But here, it's been a new life for both of us. When I did tell my CSS team, everyone was very accepting. Just like you said, they knew and they were just like, okay. Okay, alright. Like all the way around, you know what you're like. Sometimes the job stresses you out and stuff like that. But to me at the end of the day, you have that person to come home to. And it is now a new time and things are changing progressively. You know, to where you can be with who you want to be with. You can take pride in you're with that person. You're with this person. Nobody's gonna judge you for it. Yes, back then they were like, oh, he's with that dude and you know, things like that. But now you have a reason to have pride about who you're with. You don't have to hide that. So that's what pride honestly means to me. I would say be who you are, be who you want to be. Because, you know, I tell people all the time, it doesn't matter. You can be the world's smartest person. And people are still gonna find a reason to talk about you. So why hide the fact that, okay, I want to be with this person. I want to be a woman. I want to be a man. I want to be a boy. I want to be a girl. Just do it. Because you're gonna live your life regretting everything because you didn't. You're worried about what somebody else thought of you.