 You had to do a lot of time. You did nine years? One thing, no, no, no. Let me tell you. So when he read about it in the paper, he had a stroke, and it paralyzed the whole left side of his body. Yeah, we on boss talk, one-on-one. One-on-one. Yeah, we going to talk. Four years, like four years, I had my daughter. She was four when he died. So like four years after he got out. So when he did the 15 years, how long were you locked up at that time? I had never got locked up. That's what I'm saying. He took the whole charge. But watch this. You get secret in daddy the very next year by the fades. Wow. They were after you from the get-go. My daddy had told me that. It's like, oh, you're going. If you don't stop what you're doing, then I lied to him. I was like, I promise I'm going to stop because I'm going to. Because even after all of that and how you felt when he went and how many years he got knowing that he was a preacher, you still didn't stop. I stopped for like 30 days because he asked me to. And I was like, I tried. So why did you go back? Because that's all I wanted to do. That's all she knew. And I say all I knew, I've always had a hustle mentality. That's right. And I always wanted to make some money. It was basically all I knew, but that's what I wanted to do. You know what I'm saying? So then now here I am, then got caught up by the feds. And I'm stuck like my name. And I'm stuck like too. Your daddy did nine years and you, for how long were you out while he was in before you was eight? Not even a year. So you wasn't even out a year, but that had to be a tough year. Just being with you. It was. I think I would still go like I leave quiet her some Saturdays. I'm driving to the prison. Straight to him. To go see my dad. To go see my dad. Because I was his, you know, I was a daddy's girl. And so. Was your mama mad at you? Yeah. Of course. She was mad at me and him. Yeah. Because she divorced him. I can imagine how she felt about you the whole time. How did that, how did that make you feel? What she did? Like even though she was mad at me, she never like, she would still keep my kids. Oh, she didn't treat you terrible. I don't want you terrible. She had an exposure to whatever, but she's like, Oh, yo, Chuck, you're going to go to, you know, she'll always send you going to, you are in the data in jail. She don't. She always said, and I said, stop speaking that on my life. She like, but this was going to happen because that's how you live in. So you just got to take it for what is work unless you change your life. And so she never got to see me change because she died while I was in prison. Wow. At the age of 42. So when you young, yeah, but let me go back. I want to, I want to go back to your dad being locked up all those years. You go to prison yourself while he's, when you get locked up and go to prison while he's locked up, who got, who gets our first, you get out first, right? No, he did. He got out first. So you had to do a lot of time. You did nine years. No, no, no. Let me tell you. So when I, when he read about it in the paper, he had a stroke and it paralyzed the whole outside of his body. Wow. And then he knew you was going to get caught up because he just was hurt. Right. He knew it. Because I mean, he knew it. He knew it. Because he said it to you. But he never, I'm still reminding him, still going to visit him, put money. I'm doing everything I'm, I'm thinking it's necessary. But then when he, when he read it, once he got in the hospital, he wrote the federal judge and he said, whatever time you're going to give her, just add it to the time that I already have because I don't want my daughter going to prison. Wow. And what did, what did that work? That judge, when I went before the judge, the judge told me, he said, you're a witness to society. You're going. He said, you're going. You are. He probably knew that you was the reason your dad was even in there. Of course he did. Wow. Yeah. It's crazy. And so your dad's in prison, you're in prison, you're writing him, he's writing you, y'all writing each other back and forth all the time and just tell him you love him and tell him. No, he was just semi positive stuff. He was like, yo, don't give up. No, he didn't say, yo, but he was like, listen, don't give up, nothing beats a failure, but a try. At least you didn't get the life sentence that they offered you. You know, you got an opportunity to get out and make it right. Yeah. Like you got so much talent. Do whatever it is. Do make money with your talent. If you know how to flip the drugs, you can flip other stuff. So you're going to, or you're going to lose your life.