 It's your fifth full year in the organization. You've been through a lot. And you've earned that excitement that you're feeling, as you said, it's a little different. But how do you balance that against the normal humility that all ball players have just because this game does humbly? Yeah. I try not to think that I'm going to come into the season and just hit 60 home runs because of the way the off season went. It's really fun to hit an off season, but it's hard. So coming into the season, I try to balance what the actual expectations are versus how many home runs I hit off of the hit tracks in the off season. But I think for me, the thing that I'm most excited about is the possibility to get a full season of the bats and really just to see kind of what I'm capable of. Because I do, in my mind, have expectations that I'd like to see come to fruition. And the game is hard. It's a lot harder. I feel like playing in New York. But I feel like the last couple of years have prepared me for what it's like to have highs and what it's like to have lows and really how to find that happy medium to just go about my business the right way. 60 home runs, the expectation you're talking about? You know, after watching the pace that Luke was on last year and knowing that that's probably what 60 home runs would look like, I don't know if I'm in that company just yet. You know specific numbers of mine, though, even if you're not going to share them with us? I have a couple of bets in my head that I've made with myself, not bets, I guess, goals that I've made with myself of. You know, I know in my career I have 162 games played. Exactly. And I'm hitting 258 with 24 and 82 home runs. So to know that over the course of a couple of years where I didn't get a consistent amount of the bats and that's the numbers I've put together, I feel really good about the numbers in my head that I kind of have looking at those numbers. So especially with the progress, I feel like I've made in some areas of my game.