 If you're feeling stuck on posting to LinkedIn because it seems like a professional platform. And of course we all want to come across well to our professional colleagues and it's public and like you haven't posted regularly or at all on LinkedIn, how do we get over that perfectionism? So what I'm gonna say, I'll say two quick things. One is a technical thing and then one is more philosophical thing. So the technical thing that might be comforting to you is that the algorithm is on your side. What I mean, what I mean is this, when you post something on LinkedIn, if your connections find it interesting, helpful, delightful, good basically, they will react to it or they will comment on it. And if they don't find it particularly interesting, delightful or good, they won't, they'll just scroll past it. And the nice thing you might say about the algorithm is that if your connections, the first couple of people that they show it to don't react, the algorithm buries the posts, meaning the rest of your connections basically won't see it. Sure, people could manually go to your profile, scroll down, click on activity, see, but most people don't do that. So the practicality of it is that I embarrass myself all the time on social media over the years, I've gotten quite used to it. And I know this, I'm okay with it now, knowing the algorithm because I know that if something is truly embarrassing, cringe worthy or just not good, just not that quality, then guess what? The first few people who see it are gonna just scroll past it. Maybe they'll cringe a little bit, they'll scroll past it and then the algorithm will show it to anybody else. Thank goodness. So that's the technical comfort that you could, so in other words, quantity really does lead to quality, especially when it comes to social media algorithms. So it's almost like it really is the case where you just have to throw a bunch of spaghetti against the wall and see which ones stick. The algorithms will be kind to you and not show the things that don't stick. And the ones that do stick, the ones where your connections, your followers are like, wow, that was interesting or I wanna celebrate that with you or that was funny or whatever, they will react, it will comment and then it'll get shown to a lot more people. And the fact that it's getting shown to more people means that the algorithm, which is really based on testing human reactions have proven that it's worth showing to more people. You see what I mean? So think about quantity that leads to quality. And the more philosophical point of view on perfectionism is, and I wanna thank Constance for bringing this idea forward, reminding me of this, is the small picture perfectionist versus the big picture perfectionist, a lot of us here watching this are recovering perfectionists or we're barely recovering perfectionists. And I call that small picture perfectionism, meaning I have to get this next post just right or something bad happens or whatever. That small picture perfectionist, like this small thing has to be just right, that small thing, whereas we can still be perfectionists, let's just step back and be a big picture perfectionist. Meaning in the journey of my career on posting on social media and LinkedIn, the journey is perfect. And the journey of learning and trying and trial and error and occasionally embarrassing ourselves or posting fringe-worthy things. And by the way, you can always delete things later, right? That's always an option. If you post something and it gets no engagement and later you find that to be cringe, you can always delete it, right? So that's good. But the big picture of perfectionism, the biggest picture in my opinion is somehow in some magical way, you might say we're all each of us being taken care of and supported and invisibly guided on our journey towards our calling, fulfilling our career purpose. And so all we're asked to do is to just show up and to try to keep this small picture perfectionist at bay and just keep showing up, keep posting, keep testing. Because otherwise, how will we find our career purpose unless we keep testing, right? Our experiments versus what the market responds to or what really where our talents and our strengths meets the world's deep hunger, our experiments and the market's big reactions, same idea. We have to keep testing a lot of things before we find that sweet spot. And the more we test, the more we understand what that sweet spot is and the more our intuition is honed for what to post and if going forward. So we have to hone our intuition by testing and noticing and trying and noticing what gets reaction, what doesn't. And that makes us a better and better communicator over time. So I hope this helps and thank you so much for asking.