 I have a question from Yasa in Liberia. What role does failure play for successful entrepreneurs? And how do you know when it's time to stop working on a particular venture? That's a great question. We talked a little bit about the failure piece. We can just kind of touch base on that. But also, when do you know it's time to stop working on a particular venture? So I had an experience with a mentor who said a good entrepreneur knows how never to take no for an answer. But a smart entrepreneur knows when it's time to move forward. And then I realized at the time when I was sitting in my dishwash business, and I kept spending so much money. I kept losing. And I was putting so much effort into this. It's OK. At times, some people, there are some people who their breakthrough could be maybe in five years time. And then at the fourth and half year, you give up. But there are reasons, there are things surrounding it that makes you know, OK, you need to change what you're doing well so that you just strategize. But there are some kind of business or some kind of things you're doing that you know is not just taking you there. You are making the mistakes. And you actually don't have good knowledge in that area. I just started it because I loved the idea. I wasn't really seeing the solution. I wasn't really seeing the need I was providing. So that was when I realized that I'm not doing what I want. And so I realized it's time for me to do exactly what I wanted, what I have passion for, what I can sustain over time, stretch, even if there are still breakdowns at times. I know I can still cope with it and build my capacity over time.