 I was sort of stuck just sort of trying to find a way to learn and there's not really a lot of educational opportunities around me outside of the community college. I work for pro drivers. We are an agency that puts drivers to work. And I have been here just about nine years. I have a bachelor's in finance with a minor in database IT and a master's in international management. I currently work for a bank as a software engineer. I have 66 credits. I had 63 before the marketing essentials courses. So they added three credits to my transcript. I need 120. I'm hoping to get a degree. Again, I looked at going back and doing a full bachelor's. I just can't. I don't know. Part of me really still wants to, but I just I don't know that I can hang like it's just not for me. I went through a bootcamp and didn't have a bachelor's in IT, which they at the time they wanted. So the one thing I discussed with my manager is that in six months will we evaluate where I'm currently at to actually be put to that software engineering position that entry software. So I actually came in at something lower. And the conversation was reflected of that. This was really great because it gave me the experience that I need that the skills that I needed to learn without doing that full commitment. After completing this certification and also taking on a few couple of projects, I was able to renegotiate for the missing salary plus electric bonus for actually going through that myself. You know, typically, jobs like this are it's a male, it's men. So the fact that I can get on these calls as a female and talk with a little bit of education, a little bit of knowledge, I think that's huge right and so I think that was a big thing for me is like, this isn't something that generally women go towards and so Yeah, I absolutely loved it. So if nothing else comes of it, there is an empowerment that I that I did it, and then I can I can I can hang with the guys right like I have a little bit of knowledge there. But it's going to take time. It's going to take patience, and it's going to take discipline, but you can get through it.