 Well, that's an interesting part because I know that the make crime is something that a lot of autistic people might experience. Just as a baseline for people who don't understand what make crime is, it's basically when an allistic or neuro-typical individual befriends an autistic person or starts dating an autistic person with the intention of using and manipulating someone for money, for any kind of romantic intimacy type thing, or to do with giving them access to their property and their spaces. And it's something that a lot of autistic people can be quite vulnerable to because of the statistics around loneliness, isolation that a lot of us experience. So with that, I mean, do you have much experience with this jolly? Like, do you think that there's any aspect to, I guess, what we're talking about that make us more vulnerable? Yeah, so yeah, make crime is similar to a hate crime in that it's also illegal and it is punishable by the law. But it is something that's really hard to sort of pinpoint and actually take action because, well, it's complicated. So like a make crime is the grooming of autistic, autistic or disabled elderly, otherwise vulnerable people, befriending them with the intention of manipulating them for personal gain. And that can be like physical, sexual emotion. You put it better than me. But yeah, because it is complicated, it's very difficult to spot, but it's even harder to report. Say like, yeah, I may could sort of borrow possessions and like never give them back, or they could convince you to lend them money and they have no intention of paying you back, they could, you could be like, Oh, I'm I'm paid and suddenly you're doing a pub crawl and you're paying for everything because they conveniently forgot their pass or whatever. Or it could be more sinister. And the thing is, it often starts small because they're testing your boundaries to how much they can take advantage of you. So it will seem like nothing's happening. And then suddenly it's like they're taking advantage of you like, maybe like not all cases, but maybe with like sexual favours, or they're moving a relationship on too quickly than, than what is actually comfortable, but they're sort of coercing and pressuring your consent to make you feel like it was actually your idea when it wasn't. And because, you know, pressured consent is not true consent and coerced consent isn't consent. And it's very hard to process that when you're autistic and your consent is so routinely trampled anyway, in terms of like unintentional gaslighting where we're taught to sort of mold our consent into whatever people see or see fit. Like, yeah, like I'm not consenting to masking all the time or making eye contact, but I don't feel like I've got a choice and that's not true consent, you know, and it's similar thing for make crime. Like I'm not, I wouldn't ordinarily be consenting to this sort of treatment, but I don't realise it's happening. Because it's so, so slow and it builds up. And also, like you said, the whole loneliness thing, the isolation factor, we are so happy to have friends. Like when it happened to me, I was there like grinning all the time, like, I have friends. Finally. Why do I feel so alone? So isolated? Why do I feel like I don't actually have any friends? And it's because I didn't. I was scared. I was alone. I was isolated. But they trick you into thinking that actually, this is the best thing ever, I need to be lost without them. But of course, you'd be much better off without them. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So yeah, I've experienced it. I doubt that the only I think the way that I could probably add to that is it's always been things related to to work for me, like with with neurotypicals that I've worked with. That tends tends to be the case. But it's it's never like, it doesn't tend to be like quite avert in that way. It's, it tends to be kind of kind of like a lack of respect or a lack of respect of my autonomy, where in relationships that have that aspect to it. So I remember lots of, you know, times where I've, you know, put a lot of effort and a lot of time and a lot of everything into into a certain projects. And, you know, they've kind of just kept expecting me to to put more and more of my time into it. And then when I kind of turn back and say, you know, this is, you know, you're not really respecting my time and this wasn't agreed to and things like that, they kind of brush under the rug. Or, you know, they may not value exactly and take seriously any issues that I might have. As it's, you know, something that some, you know, an autistic man who doesn't understand the situation is being like, so I've had that happen to me in that sense. And then perhaps some instances where I was at school, and people have befriended me or got into a romantic relationship, but not really. And just used me as kind of like a sense of humor, like to make fun of. And that's part of it. Like they all like mate mates will often use your autism against you in there. And they will take advantage of you. They will push those boundaries and it will be for personal gain. And that can also look like laughing at you because you're autistic and sort of putting you in those situations that make you like shut down or melt down. And then they'll be like, haha, look at the weird autistic person. And it's just it's not nice. And that's often how it starts. And if it's allowed to continue, and sometimes it is because we don't realise it's happening, which is so grateful to our friends. Yeah, it can, it can get worse. It can get a lot worse.