 So, a lot of the recognition of the exiled questions comes from deprogramming, from stepping outside the normal paradigms, belief systems, lenses, and habits, really. So, I mentioned one of the habits earlier on, which was find the culprit, find the person to blame. And that's how many people reflexively respond when they face a situation of injustice. Or something, you know, like, I mean, I could take the, you know, pandemic response as an example. Like, I don't know about your audience, but I think that there was an awful lot of horrible policy that caused huge amounts of unnecessary illness and suffering. And so the habit is, who are the dastardly villains who deliberately perpetrated this crime? That's the habit. Well, if there is any other explanation, you're not going to see it if you're fixated on finding the dastardly villains. If you put down that lens, then so much more opens up to your vision that had been invisible before. And so that's what I've learned to do, is to put down some of these habitual rubrics, habitual filters on reality, and then other things become obvious. And so that's just one of them, find the villain, you know, find the enemy. There's a lot of these cognitive filters and organizing principles that we've learned, you know, in modern society through our schooling, through our economy, through our education and science. And a lot of them are built into science, like one of them would be find something to measure, you know, find the reductive cause. Find, look for who's in charge, you know, as a theory of change, convince somebody in charge to change something. Yeah, there's there's, I'm not going to try to catalog all of the these hidden templates and habits. But that's the basic principle is that that reveals questions that are not being asked.