 So we are triplet, and we do have different last names because we're adopted, but we grew up together, if that makes any sense. Our third partner is Kira, Kira Cobb, and so Kira and I were like the twins in the household, single mother household, and Kevin was like a single child in a household with a mother and father, so we had these big mixed families, so he was growing up on the farm, and we were growing up like in this little urban area adjacent to North Little Rock. It offered for a very diverse set of experiences. That was a part of our family culture too. Everybody had, everybody big mama or grandmother, had a garden in their backyard, I mean that was just, that was the North. Had fruit trees in the front, you know what I'm saying, in the yard you can go pick fruit, and it was just a part of us being outside, a part of nature, and with the onset of technology, we really fathomed away from it. We didn't have to buy greens, remember? Right, yeah. We never had to buy greens growing up. Mother always had greens. Yeah, greens. So also bringing me some greens. Everyone had greens. We didn't have to go to the store. I didn't even know they felt so green that the store was weird. Really, when we were little. Food was abundant then, and so I guess that's my segue into how I got started because food was not abundant. Here I am, a single mom. My son is almost an adult, and after being in Dallas for almost 20 years, I moved back home, and I remember today that I had to choose between a pack of hot dogs and some gas in the car to take him to school, and it was a rude awakening. I mean, I had been into gardening for a while, but I didn't take it serious like I can make money with this, I can feed myself and my family, it was just something to do. So I'm walking through the grocery store, and I see all these beautiful vegetables and fruits and greens, and I'm like, this should be free to me. It's growing out of the ground. So we just industrialized a human right to eat, and that's when I made the decision I'm gonna grow, cook, eat, and repeat my food from now on, and teach other low income single mothers or fathers, or just would be people who want to be more sustainable and independent how to do it as well. The Grow Operative is a co-op or a grow op, a grow operative, and it's a conglomerate of would-be or fellow gardeners and urban farmers, and after gardening for so long and then wanting to monetize what I was doing, and on a lot of other people who just garden and want to monetize what they're doing, I started the formal process of becoming an urban farmer where I was at my home, in my backyard, and studying value added products and things like that according to USDA, and then now just we evaluated what I needed and what we need as gardeners. It was hard to source wood for garden beds, soil, sometimes plants and seeds can get expensive. So as a grow op, we provide that to our members and friends. We have a portion of the grow op, a sacred grow, a sacred portion of what I do as well to help people get greenhouses. They don't have to be this big, they can be of any size. As long as you have an enclosed space where you can control those variables, we bring that to rural farmers and low income people to get them to see that it's not that hard. We're building greenhouses in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, which is, you know, the culture of gardening is very tranquil. So when people are exposed to it, it can actually change the culture of that entire area. When you get food from where you're from, we're tied to the land in a sense. So it's a better quality of food and if you pick it fresh, the potency of whatever is in that plant is there. It's not, you know, fading or half-lifing off. You know, especially herbs. If you think you can't grow anything, grow some herbs. Oh my God, lemon thyme. It comes back every year. Milk will go all over the place and just love on you and smell good. And like Sid said, it's a lot of stuff that is growing in your yard that people think are weeds like dandelion. Dead nettle. And you can just get a shovel or whatever put in the pot and it's going to grow up. And it's nutritious. Right. And it'll come back every year. So there's really no such thing as a brown thumb. There's, you can, you can grow something. Yeah. You can grow something. I mean, just try it. You know. Don't knock it until you try it. You know. You can't grow. It's going to grow itself. So you don't even have to worry about it. Oh yeah. Something for you. So you have to find a plant that fits your personality, you know what I'm saying. That's a good one, Sid. Right. That's a good one, Sid.