 I had an interesting philosophical journey. At least I think it's interesting. And that was, I think, as far as organized philosophy or maybe authentic is not the right word, but like, yeah, we'll say organized. I would say that Nietzsche is probably one of the people with the most influence on me. But I also feel like to a degree, your personality will oftentimes dictate what philosophers that you can vibe with. So what idea is from Nietzsche, was it the Ubermensch? Definitely the Ubermensch is huge to me because I see it as an extension of basically the religious concepts of God and higher ideals, but just put into a different, a secular context. And the idea also that the Ubermensch is a striving and overcoming something that you're always working towards that very few will ever, it's not like the concept that you can just make them. It doesn't happen that way. And it's not based simply upon if you were, say, put through a genetic program and turned into a super soldier, like that wouldn't make it. That's like the very surface level and incorrect understanding what the Ubermensch is. The Ubermensch is the idea of this kind of human that transcends all the weaker lower aspects of humans, which we're full of. But I also think that there's an element in Nietzsche's writing that suggests that it's not something you can even be in all the time. Like it's even a temporary state because it's not something that we're capable of maintaining. It's something to strive for. Like a morality, an image, the ideal set of principles that we can connect to that doesn't rely on otherworldly kind of out there things. It's deeply human. With Nietzsche, I feel like the concept of the Ubermensch is something built on authenticity as well. As Heidegger would say, like Dasein, right? So when you are authentic and Heidegger being a follower of Nietzsche's and highly influenced by him with, I think that the Ubermensch is an example of authenticity in that it isn't about trying to be anything that you cannot be or to go against who you are. But to actually understand that, accept that and then work with what you can work with and create from your lump of clay that is you. Because I can't become, there's certain things that are just not gonna happen for me because it's not in my proclivity. I mean, I'm never gonna be five foot tall and 120 pounds. I mean, that again, I guess. But I know as you get more in tune with who you are as you start learning more about what unique things or at least what that combination that makes you, that Gestalt part of yourself, what those things are and how you can use them then you can work towards being that old, taking what that is and seeing if you can get to that point. Now, the likelihood is, no, maybe probably never. I mean, but we can never achieve Godhood yet. And religion is a constant, striving and a look at a higher ideal concept. Even if it's multiple gods or one God, it's still essentially all built around this concept. Like I like the idea of Catholic's original sin. If you think of sin, not as evil, but as missing the mark, the archer's term or derives or even like in Spanish without. So as being, if you accept that you are imperfect, if you accept that you need to constantly strive even against yourself because you will figure out the best ways at which to submarine your own capabilities, submarine your own dreams and wishes and whatever, you will ruin them more than anything else. And you will tell yourself that you ruined them on purpose for a good reason or you'll say that you'll figure out a way to put it on everything else but yourself. And so the idea of thinking of, well, as I'm starting off on this whole thing, I got a lot of work to do and that's just the way it is. And I got to figure out what areas those are gonna be. And so, I thought, if I think of original sin actually can be, that can be kind of a clever idea, but it's also just accepting that we're all uniquely strange and unequal in our own ways. But we have to figure out how that fits in. The word authenticity kind of connects to all of that. So striving to be your authentic self means figuring out exactly the shape of the flaws, the character of your little demons that you get to play with and around them finding a path to whatever the hell, ideal versions of yourself you can carve and pretending like that's such a thing as even possible. The other idea,