 So note that's another thing that if you got like winnings like a lottery or something and you got a W2G reporting those winnings, you might want to have withholdings out of the winnings. Most people don't do that oftentimes because they don't, they're not really thinking of taxes because taxes is one of those things that's kind of in the back of most people's minds is just being taken care of with their employee employer situation. The employer is responsible for my taxes, right? I filled out the, but, but obviously if you have a win, like win full profit or gains of some kind big hit, like a win in the lottery that's going to have a tax implication. You might want to withhold on it. Line eight C cancellation of debt. So enter online eight C any cancellation of debt canceled debt may be shown in box two of form 10 99 C. However, part or all of your income from cancellation of debt may be non-taxable. You can see publication four, six, eight, one, or go to IRS.gov and entered cancel debt or foreclosure in the search box. Now cancellation of debt is a strange one because most of the time you'd say, well, why would someone cancel the debt? Like if I had a debt with the bank, like mortgage, for example, I owed them a loan back, then it would be strange for them to cancel the debt. Right. If they cancel the debt, you would think that they would do that only because they didn't think that they were going to get paid from us. So they're going to cancel the debt. What happens if they cancel the debt? Well, generally you would call it income, right? Like because that would be the equivalent if they canceled the debt of them giving you money or some, and then you paying it back to them to pay down the debt. So you basically kind of got money that paid down that your debt obligations that are owed, which would be a taxable event. Now the funny, the issue thing there is that most of the time when there's a cancellation of debt issue, it's because someone is in a foreign financial hardship situation, that's what drove the bank to cancel the debt because they knew they weren't going to get paid anyways. So then you've got a situation where maybe the tax code will be lenient in certain situations. And we saw some with the COVID, the PPP loans is a strange situation with the cancellation of debt kind of situation that was going on with that. And then if people are in insolvent situations, there could be areas where the normal kind of income from the cancellation of debt would possibly not have to be included as income. So there could be exceptions to the general rule. So the general rule makes sense. If someone cancels the debt, you owed them money. Now they say that you don't owe them money. Then they basically gave you money, right? That you got income and like paid off the debt. So it should be income. But because most people are in financial hardships, there could be many exceptions for the IRS to say that that income is exempt from income for whatever reasons, line eight D.