 So how different is it to work in my lab? Well, first of all, when I started here at UC Berkeley, I already had like six or seven people working with me. I always was terrified of the moment that people would start transitioning out because I just thought, wow, I'm such an amazing set of people and they all get it. You know, they get the philosophy behind the work that we do. How am I ever gonna replace that? And to my wonder and amazement, it actually, it just, I have the most phenomenal people in my lab always. People kind of self-select to come to me who have a deep interest in science and in scientific excellence and have a deep interest in the scientific problem and the pathogen that we're working on, but who also have a broader vision and that want somehow a context for their work that actually has a tangible meaning in the world. You know, and so there's many ways that that can happen. It doesn't mean that everybody is like rushing to Nicaragua at the same rate that I am, but what it means is that they wanna have a context where they're doing their molecular biology or the immunology work, but our group meetings will have presentations on the molecular biology, the immunology, but then also there'll be presentations on the clinical work and there'll be somebody coming back to Nicaragua talking about a dengue epidemic or an influenza epidemic and so they really can feel the context, the real world context of the work that they're doing. And then personal, my personal philosophy is very much that science is an international program and that it's about international diplomacy on many levels and that it's also about global citizenship. And so I think the people in my lab buy into that on many levels. Like I said, they come from people who are already versed in international work. There's people who are simply molecular biologists and but they all come because there's something else and there's like an overall philosophy that they wanna be part of.