 I don't know how my friend did it, to be honest. He's always been incredible smart, known him since grade two. He went to the University of Ontario Institute of Technology for Nuclear Engineering. I went to the college on the same campus for computer systems technology. Dropped out after one year and a half, I'm fine though. But he managed to get good enough grades in year four of uni to get a job right off the bat and is now making over 100k per year and is literally already a millionaire due to crypto. Cool. Good on him. He was lucky enough to find a discipline that he excelled in and I hope he loves that he's working in and he's immersed himself in. Everybody's not like that. Some people, it takes people sometimes a long time to find the discipline they want to be in. Sometimes, many times, people immerse themselves in a discipline. They love it. They do all the stuff. They become like you said millionaires doing this. And then after a few years, they realize they're not happy. They don't want to do this. They were just doing it because we're good at it, right? Really because we're good at it. Now should you focus your life, your energy? Just on things that you're good at? No. I think there has to be a certain amount of challenge. I think there has to be a lot of novelty. Okay. A lot of novelty. Thank you very much V6 to P for the cheers. There has to be novelty. You look, in your life, when you're graduating high school or whatnot, I forget what the number is, but the stat says that most people will change their careers, if you want to think about it as careers or their jobs, multiple times in their lives, right? And that's the way it's been with me, and that's the way it's been with most of the people that I know, okay? The ones who stuck just with the one thing that they're doing, because first of all, it's the ball and chain. They get into a corporation, they got their retirement plan, they got their connections. This is what they know. They didn't spend the time to learn more things. I don't give a rat's ass what you're doing. Learn something that is completely disconnected, not related to what it is that you're doing at work or your passion, right? So for example, your friend is a nuclear physicist is in crypto and stuff like this. Fine and dandy, right? But if that's the only thing that he's doing, he might get burned. Thank you very much Matt for the sub, right? He might get burned, right? He needs to, and I hope he's smart enough that he does, have passions and interactions outside of that circle, right? Whatever it is that you're doing, make sure you have multiple different systems that you're engaging in, because you learn things from those systems, right? And they may come a time where you don't want to be here, and if you haven't at least created some pathways for you to enter different systems, you're going to have a hard time. You're going to have a seriously hard time, okay? That's one bit of advice I can definitely give you guys.