 I'm going to just cut this whole thing. I'm just going to cut it, control X, and I'll bring it on over to right there. That's where it should go. Idiot. Okay. Okay. There's no, there's no reason to get all hostile. Let's go back to the, to the, and so now this is picking up this column. And let's pull these out to the right. And then I'm going to pick up this outer column. I'm going to pick up this outer column here. Okay. So there's the 300. Now that should pull over, or there's the 300. So 100,000 minus the 300 gets us to the 997. So there, if I pull this over to page one, there's the 997, 12,950. So the 12,950 is here. So we've got the taxable income, 86,750. Boom, page two, letting the software do the calculation, 14708. So I'm going to say, let's just plug that in, 1414708. Boom, 15,000 still on the withholdings. We're going to say it's fairly well-paid teacher here at the 100,000. And that's the two, uh, 292. Okay. And just for the, just because let's say, what if they were a married couple, then we can go up to 600. So now I said they were married, but now I've got 500 and 500. And they're going to cap them both, both, so that it'll be capped at 600 total, 300 and 300. And you can't do something like if I, so for example, if I pull this on over and then go to the schedule one and page number two, there's the 600. Now note, if I did something funny like this, I said like one spouse had, had, uh, what happened? K, POS, O, where's my educator expenses? There they are. Okay. So if I said something funny like one of them had like 500 or let's say a thousand, but the only, the other one only had 200 and they were both teachers, teacher, then I'd go back on over and it capped it at 300 plus 200, which is less than the cap that you would think would be 600, right? But that's not typical. I mean, you would think if they're both full-time teachers, you would think they would have something over 500, over 300 each, which would come to a total of 600. And so if I sum that up, bring that on over to page one of the form 1040, 600. If I mirror that on my worksheet over here, let's do that. We've got educator two, educator two, I'm an educator two. No, I mean the second educator, the second one. Not that you do it the same thing. That's a different two. If they spell them different 99, I think they do. I don't know if they do. I'm pretty sure. Anyways, 99 400 standard deductions up to 25 nine now, which I can mirror over here because now we're married couple, doubling the deduction, doubling it. Doubling it gets us to 73 five, 73 five. There it is. Page two, letting the software do the tax is now at the 8412, which is smaller due to the taxable income being lower. And because the tax table, the progressive tax tables being applied are different. So that's the 8412. So 8412, let's say, is here 8412. And I didn't change, of course, the wages. Now we have two educators. So I mean, if they both made 100,000, I should have doubled the wages in order to have a proper comparison between the two, but I didn't do that. I'm just have the same 100,000 here. So there's the total of the 6590. We've got a calculation of the 6588. 6588, it's a little different. Poor K, the 8412, because this is wrong, $2 off. It's not a big deal, but still, it should be exact, because I just copied the number over. OK, so that's the general idea of that. It should be fairly straightforward as long as you remember, educator, teacher's union. They have their own special above the line schedule one deduction or otherwise known as an adjustment to income. It's right at the top of the schedule too, as you can see prominently displayed at the first one in Part 2.