 Here we are in our example Form 1040, populating it with LeCert tax soft, where you don't need tax softs where to follow along, but it's a great tool to run scenarios with. You can also get access to the Form 1040 related schedules and forms at the IRS website. The website with no different thens.com. irs.gov, irs.gov. So our starting point, like normal single filer Mr. Anderson, we've got the 100,000 W-2 income, the 12,950 for the standard deduction, 87,050 for the taxable income. We can mirror that on our worksheet where we have, let's, let's fix it here. So we got 100,000, 12,950, 87,050, page two doing the calculation in the tax soft, where 14774, 15,000 of the W-2 withholdings gets us down to the 225, and that's mirrored over here as well. Okay, back to the software. We're mainly focused on page one, looking at that calculation, getting down to the taxable income. So we're looking at jury duty now. So if we go to jury duty, then the general concept would be, well, if you got paid by the jury duty, then you'd have to include it in income. And so we saw that in the income section, but then you might say, well, yeah, but if I had to pay that money back to my employer because my employer was paying me as I went to jury duty and they were like, since we're already paying you, we want you to give us the jury duty money because we're just paying you your normal salary or something like that, then you end up in a situation where you might have to include it in income because the IRS tax code says that everything that is income needs to be included unless there's an exception, but then you may also be able to remove it back out so that the adjusted gross income will go back down to zero. So the net effect will be then we're going to be increasing the income line by the jury duty pay. And then we'll adjust it back out with the adjustment to income so that it doesn't mess up the IRS. They can see it included in the income line. If they have that information on their side, it won't mess anything up. And then we're going to remove it back out because we didn't actually get to keep the income. So there's no net effect on the adjusted gross income. That's what we're looking for. So let's see what that might look like. We're going to go to schedule the one and say there was jury duty income. That's line H here, line H, we're going to say, boom, it was a horrible case. I've been traumatized by it. I should they should be paying me way more for. So there it is. There's 1000. That's going to be included over here on first page of the form 1040. So now we've got the 1000 included and then we're going to remove it back out with the adjustment. So let's do this in our worksheet too, just for the for the joy of it, the simple joy of it. So we're going to say that schedule income is going to be increased. I should have jury duty because I, well, maybe not. I don't know. I'm going to say, well, let's add it jury, jury duty. Is that how you spell it? Let's say 1000, 1000 from jury duty. There's one R in jury. I named my dog jury. So that's, this is jury, jury duty, jury duty. That's what I have to pick up when I go walk dog, jury duty. In any case, if I sum that up, let's sum it up. Let's actually just put that on the outside here. Why don't I put that out here and then it sums up to a thousand. Pulling that over to page one, there, there it is.