 I think something I see a lot of times in the autistic community advocacy is, here's all these problems, not a lot of solutions. No. So it's nice to be a part of a solution, because that's who I am. If I'm going to complain, if I'm going to throw a little tiff, I got to have a, something to solve it. I think we were talking about that the last time that we met. And I, you know, immediately my, my thoughts went to, oh, I'm a problem person. But yeah, taking a step back, you know, I'm, I'm vocalizing my problems for constructive means. One for a solution. I was, even when we were talking, I remember I was telling you, look, you're thinking about like, what can we do? Like I want to solve this. I call it out loud processing, right? You're processing this and you're not saying, I hate the person or I'm angry. You're like, I want a solution. Like this is frustrating. And that's how I feel a lot of people feel with whether or not be work needs or education needs to like they're frustrated, their needs aren't being met. And they're like, hmm, how do we do this?