 So, Laura, what does a day in the life of an archivist look like for you? Well, you know, basic caveat that, you know, every day is a little different. Which is one of the exciting things, I think, of our jobs is we do kind of get to do a lot of different things. But if I have to answer, for me with manuscripts, I would say the bulk of what I'm doing is overseeing processing of collections. So, a pretty typical day involves working with some fabulous student library assistants, student workers, undergraduate and graduate. And so just sort of working with them to process collections, whether it's, we're kind of always doing it. So, starting collections, checking in on collections, fielding questions about how to organize, what to do, what to do with weird things that they find. I would say that kind of makes up the bulk of an average day. But then, of course, we're all sort of juggling all of the other sort of added things that we're doing. So, kind of other various projects that our collections may be involved in. So, working with you, Allison, on instruction or getting ready for a class, pulling materials for a class, helping with the reference question, working on a digital collection or a digital project, maybe working with a donor, you know, getting in touch, checking back in with a donor, things like that. Those sort of little things kind of filter in throughout the day. Yeah, that's great. That's great. Chris, what about you? It's similar. I have a little bit of a different scenario because I have this little area of collections of the Modern Political Archive, and I kind of do reference for that as well as being the Political Science and Sociology Librarian. So, I do a lot of work for that as well. But definitely, it's about making the collections available to people and making sure that they are kept available and described in the right way so that researchers can find what they need. Yeah, absolutely great. Alicia, what about you? Well, like Laura and Chris said, every day is kind of different. While you do have a plan for getting a collection from maybe picking them up from the donor's house or office to getting them to be finished into our archival box like I have behind me, there's a lot that goes into that. And so it's kind of like cooking a recipe that has a lot of things on the stove at once. And so we usually have a lot of things from starting preliminary inventories to processing collections, preservation, taking things up to our preservation lab and having repairs or special enclosures built for them. So it's always different and it's never boring. I get tons of reference questions that I never thought that I would know the answers to. So that makes me really great at like just very random historical knowledge. But it's really interesting and, you know, being it coming from a history background that stuff is always really interesting to me to, you know, kind of search through the primary resources to find the answers for the individuals are asking them and kind of tell that story. So I kind of look at it that we have a lot of things going on from day to day, but they all kind of go back to what Chris was saying is making sure that we have the stuff available and that people can access it. I mean, because that's our main job here is to make sure the stuff is safe and then make sure people can get to it.