 A lot of people, men, women, I think men may be more guilty of it than women, think it's just a twinge. Oh, I just, you know, it'll go away, you know, I'll go home and I'll rub some, you know, been gay on it tonight when I get home and I'll rest and it'll be better by the morning, you know. Or some guys will go, you know, two or three days because it's the macho type thing to do. Oh, yeah, I hurt my back, but yeah, it's okay. It's not a big deal. Well, it is a big deal if it turns out to be a big deal and you didn't tell anybody when it happened and where it happened and how it happened because the longer you wait, the more difficult it is to prove that whatever's wrong with you now was a result of something that happened five days ago, 10 days ago, maybe two weeks ago that you didn't think was going to be a big deal at the time, but now it is. People are reluctant to do that. They are just reluctant to do it and I understand for any number of reasons they're afraid, you know, to lose favor of their employer, afraid to look like a wimp or something like that. So I see all the time where people say, well, you know, I got hurt last Thursday, but I didn't tell anybody about it until the following Monday because I just thought it would get better. I just thought, you know, I would rest over the weekend and it would get better. And unfortunately then the question becomes, well, did you get hurt back last Thursday at work or did you get hurt out of water skiing on Saturday when you weren't at work and then you came in to work on Monday and said, oh, by the way, I hurt my back last Thursday. That's when the issues start to arise. You can avoid those if you would just man up and tell them, hey, I hurt myself. I hurt myself, didn't mean to, but I did and it hurts.