 Next question is from Teenie Tangy. Are there any lessons you have had to learn twice? Oh, shit. Personal, working out. Oh, working out, I learned every lesson 15 times. Yeah, and I feel like that's too easy. I feel like that's too easy if we go the working out. Yeah, like working out too hard. I think every lesson, and I think that's why I think we have so much patience and empathy and I think why we repeat things over and over on this podcast is because I remember and I'm sure you all remember a lot of the lessons that we teach, they had to be taught to myself more than once, you know? Like I had to like change to do it and then see the results from it and then still go back to old behaviors or habits and then again, so yeah, you know, let me think of a personal one that comes to mind that I've had to learn. Yeah, the workout ones are easy. Yeah, working out too hard. Yeah, I've learned that one, I don't know, 1,000 times, you know, not doing proper mobility work. I still am learning that lesson diet stuff. I learn that shit all the time. It's like I'll eat something and then afterwards I have, oh, my stomach and I'll be like, yeah, because you ate that, duh, and then you end up, you have to keep relearning. That happens a lot and I think, you know, I think the lessons I learned once were the ones that caused a huge consequence. You know what I mean? Like, you know, if like texting in the car, like if I did that and then I hit a car and caused someone an injury, I could see myself learning that lesson because the consequence was so terrible, right? But if it's not that, I don't know very many lessons I haven't had to be exposed to several times in a row. Yeah, I'm trying to think of a good, a personal one. Like, you know, I always talk about how your greatest strength is your greatest weakness, right? So there's things that I tend to lean into because I know that's my strength, but then bites me in the ass many times. And like an example of that is like I'm assertive and a lot of times that serves me, serves me in business to take charge, lead, do these things. But then if my social awareness is lacking that day, many times I could really turn somebody off and it could kill a business deal, it could rub somebody the wrong way. And so this is a lesson that I constantly learn. And I don't think I ever, or I should say I'm constantly learning. I don't think I've perfected it. You know, how do you know always like this is the time I lean in hard to the assertiveness or this is the time where I back off, like always trying to refine that. So I'm constantly learning that lesson. That's got to be a tough one too because I could see how after you had a situation where maybe you were too assertive, it's easy to defend yourself to yourself. Well, whatever, screw it. That was their bad. For many years, that's how I was. For many years, it was like I'm an acquired taste. You either, it is what it is. If you're too weak to stay hanged, I had that attitude for sure. And as I got older and wiser, I think, and more socially aware, I think that I've learned to know when to throttle it down and when to pull it back. But I'm still, again, it's not a perfected skill. It's something that I'm always trying to harness. I have a similar one to that, but it's more geared towards, like I will jump into anything that I feel super passionate about and like an idea or without like completely sitting down and doing the research, the market research, the, you know, like playing, like drawing it all out in terms of like, you know, the mind map and the business plan and all this kind of stuff, which to me I felt has been a superpower because it's been able to allow me to make connections with people I wouldn't have before and learn these lessons that I can, you know, build off of and, but the problem is that mentality persists, which then I get myself back in a hole because I jumped in before really, you know, doing my due diligence of research and really like understanding what I was in for. So it's really, to me, it's more of a calculated risk because I like learning that lesson like over and over, instead of just jumping in with the risk because I'm willing to take the risk is to be a little bit more measured in that, but still, you know, find that balance of like, I can still figure this out like as I'm in there, but just do a better job of actually like looking into it first. That just reminded me of something, a lesson that I've learned. It was choosing partners. I've done a lot of business ventures and many of them I've had partners and failed more than once, right? So I made the wrong decision more than once enough to where I probably thought, oh, I should just never have partners ever again, yet here I am in a four way partnership, right? Never, never even had. Sexy. Yeah, right? But, you know, I think that in the past, I tended to lean towards just either one, a friend or somebody I felt really comfortable with or somebody who I think had similar characteristics as I did. And I really think that what makes this work is that the things that we have in common are core values, which I think that's our foundation and that's important. But then we couldn't be more different as far as our strengths and business and that's why it works so well. And I think I didn't learn that. I wouldn't have learned that had I not had multiple partnerships fail and not work in the past to come to this place to recognize that, you know, understand that everybody in this partnership plays a significant role. And I could never do Justin. I could never do Salah. I could never do Doug. And that's a good thing. And because we have similar values that we always fall back on, that's the core foundation and the partnership. A lot of that stuff wasn't taken into consideration in my 20s when I was partnering up with people. That was a mistake. I think I had to learn more than once. I got one that I learned over and over again. That was recent. So, you know, you talk about greatest strength is your greatest weakness. I like to call it the shadow side of an attribute, right? So, you know, I have a lot of self-belief, you know, self-confidence. I have quite a bit of that, but the shadow side of that is arrogance, right? You can get so much self-belief that it makes it hard for you to listen and hear other people. And I'm aware of this. It doesn't mean I'm good at it. It just means I'm aware of it. So, I'm at the phase before I get good at it, I guess, or whatever you want to call it. But I had this happen with my kids and with Jessica. So, Jessica's always telling me that sometimes I'm not present, you know, that I'm not paying attention or my mind is wandering or I'll be on my phone or whatever. And so, you know, we were with the kids and we were talking about, you know, things that we do. And my daughter goes, yeah, she goes, sometimes you'll start a sentence and you won't finish it. It happens all the time. It's super annoying. And I'm like, what? And my son's like, oh, yeah, you do that all the time. I'm like, what do you mean? You'll be like, oh, wow, you guys. And then you'll look at your phone or trail off. And she goes, you need to work on that. My daughter says that to me. Now, Jessica's been saying that to me for a long time. I have not been listening to her because I'm like, yeah, anyway, I know, I know me, you know, I know, I know. I don't always know me. And so it made me like, okay, I got to listen more and consider that I may not be aware of something that someone else may be aware of. And I got to be able to consider that. But it was my kids. My kids were like, my daughter was like, yeah, that's a problem. She literally said to me, you need to work on that. Oh, yeah. But they're brutally honest. Yeah. And everybody was laughing at the table and I'm like, shit. There's another one. We were talking with the kids and I'm like, who's got the worst temper? I'm thinking like, you know, I'm not going to have the worst temper for sure. I'm like, oh, you easily? I'm like, holy shit, am I that not aware of that? That I lose my temper? Dad yells. Yeah. So learning to listen and consider people's either, you know, criticisms or complaints of me, especially people around me, that's a lesson that I think I got to keep working on learning.