 And physical therapists, we learned a lot of that stuff too, but we kind of touch on it in school. So I did a residency where I specialized in sports and orthopedics where I learned a lot more. But physical therapists more so help with the rehab of your body through exercise and understanding. So we, there's physical therapists with orthopedic side, which what I do, like somebody ACL tear, hip replacement surgery, rotator cuff, I do that. And then they have neurophysical therapy where somebody has a spinal cord injury where they're in a wheelchair. They're trying to teach people how to walk again or they have a traumatic brain injury or a stroke. They're going to see a physical therapist. Yeah, we on boss talk one-on-one, one-on-one. Yeah, we gonna talk. That kid, man, my boy Manuel's in the building, man. What's going on, man? Yo, yo, what's going on? Emmanuel, what's going on? Say that last name, man. Fasanya. Fasanya. Fasanya. Yeah, Fasanya, man. Listen, it was either me. Yeah. It's always been either me, man. Dr. Ida PT now. Hey, man. So, man, you, doctor, man. But you know one thing I remember when he was young, when he was here, he said this is what he was going to sit out to do. That's crazy. And did he know it was going to be in this field? I don't know if he knew what field it was going to be in, but I know he told me this right here in this store. It's crazy, like when you want something and you like just go for it, like just the jump. The God is going, people say the universe, I don't want to say replace the universe with God, but like everything that's working in the powers that may be work together to make that goal possible as long as you put all your energy, all your effort into that goal. So like I was driving to every physical therapy school. I remember I drove to Texas State from Houston one time, like a little two hour drive or something, two and a half hour drive for like a 10, 15 minute meeting, you know, and I drive right back. Gotta do what you gotta do. You know, I was going all around just so they could see my face that, yeah, my GPA may not be as high as everybody else's, but you know, I got thousands of hours of shadowing in different settings of physical therapy. I actually understand the field. I have a passion for this, you know, and that's what I was doing while I was in Houston, taking full advantage of that. And I was able to get in my second try to physical therapy school to, you know, I got into a couple of schools, you know, so it was a good opportunity. And I chose TWU Houston. This was the top physical therapy school in the state of Texas. I think it is like the car wrecks, because that's who go to physical therapy or chiropractic. What's the difference between a physical therapist and a chiropractor? That's a very good question. Chiropractors and physical therapists have a lot of overlap in what they do. Both, you know, use holistic medicine, basically using the body to kind of heal itself. You know, chiropractors are a lot, they deal with the spine a lot. That's a lot of what they learn in school. A lot of hands on, they're experts in all the manipulations of the spine from, you know, head to toe. And physical therapists, we learn a lot of that stuff too, but we kind of touch on it in school. So I did a residency where I specialized in sports and orthopedics where I learned a lot more. But physical therapists more so help with the rehab of your body through exercise and understanding, you know, we, so we, there's physical therapists with orthopedic side, which what I do, like somebody ACL tear, hip replacement surgery, rotator cuff, you know, I do that. And then they have neurophysical therapy when somebody has a spinal cord injury where they're in a wheelchair, they're trying to teach people how to walk again or they have a traumatic brain injury or a stroke, they're gonna see a physical therapist or you have home health physical therapies, you know, you have pediatric who work with kids. So we help basically get people, optimize their movement, help them move in good, like let's say you hurt your knee, it's hard for you to walk, I teach you how to walk, run, jump again, you know what I'm saying. So we rehab in that aspect, you know, versus the chiropractors. At the end of the day, we'll never forget what God, see God put us through something, man. Say we always, listen, man, we know already what God did with y'all was remarkable for us to see. That's what we want y'all to know, that's why we always, we was always fans from behind the scenes. We might not been at every event and not knew what was going on, but we love what God put in our life. All the people that God put through us, you know, the system that we've seen. And it's been a few more, you think it's just you and your boy Taylor, but I got some more people that God put through this store for some reason, he wanted me to touch him. And I got to touch guys like y'all, man, and in a way to where I understood, y'all taught me something. And that's the difference when you taught me something, you know what I'm saying? And that's what I needed to keep going. So thank you. Yeah, thank you, thank you, thank you. No man, we love you, man. You taught me something, I was at the scene. You said I put you in designer, huh? You put me in my first designer, man. Also, you taught me you were a black man that owned something, you know what I mean? So it let me see that as well, let all of us see that. And we all became that at a certain point in time in our life, so we appreciate that. We appreciate y'all, we saw black love, man. Man, yeah, yeah, y'all seen that earlier. I only showed y'all how y'all posted to hold it down. Oh yeah, we saw that real early. So I really appreciate y'all for being role models to us. Man, thank you so much, man. Like I said, man, you couldn't wrote this out, man. I love you. I know you already know you can come here if you ever need me, man. Hey, what's going on, y'all? This is Dr. Iida PT of Alita Lyons Physical Therapy. Check out my interview on Boss Talk 101. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101, 101. Yeah, we gon' talk, we on Boss Talk 101, 101. Yeah, we gon' talk.