 I made a video about monotropism, which was one of your first ones, wasn't it, sir? I thought I wanted something that was like autism, that wasn't, that kind of explained how I felt, or at least some of my struggles, or at least something that explained what I'm sort of good at. You know, this kind of tunnel vision that we often have, you know, generally a lot of autistic people relate quite strongly to monotropism. It's a fantastic study, by the way, if you want to read it, it's only a few pages long. Three autistic authors, and fantastic, fantastic piece of writing. Yeah, for anybody who doesn't know about much about monotropism, it's basically at its, at its basic level, it is like the style of focus that people have. So like, I think, I think you're right. There was maybe two or three sort of autistic researchers, like actually autistic people who sort of came up with the idea and there's like monotropism, and then there's polytropism. Monotropism is more characterised as like an autistic thing, whereby like you find one thing to sort of pull you in quite a bit. You know, you hear phrases like autistic inertia. What was the other one that we used in terms of hyper focusing? Of course, that's another one that they get thrown about quite a bit. And it's quite an interesting theory, because I think one of the shining positives of that kind of study and that kind of work is that it very much sort of takes away sort of the pathology of it. So like, within the sort of medical school system, you know, autism is kind of seen as this, like through this very deficit type lens. And it's kind of our behaviours around sort of being focused and struggling to transition are sort of highlighted as being like challenging behaviours or something that we need to fix. Whereas this kind of concept of monotropism sort of brought in that this is kind of like a inherent like autistic trait, which I think kind of brings a bit more sort of power into the hands of the autistic people. I think it looks at it, not sort of like from an othering perspective. But from a just saying how it is, you know, it's a different neurotype. It's a different way of being. It's neither good nor bad. It has good and bad aspects to it, of course, but it just it just is. Totally.