So tell us a little bit about the plan and then what unfolded. And something that I realized toward the end of gap year is that I think I thought I was taking the year off in which to do what you just said, really reevaluate my relationship to work and my particular kind of work. And what I realized was that that had actually already happened. And, you know, we've talked, you know, I'm sure probably you'll link to our past conversations here. You know, in the couple of years leading up to taking this break, that's when I quit social media. That's when I went through, you know, what I wound up calling parasocial energetic burnout after having shared so much of myself with so many thousands of people on so many platforms for so many years. That really changed the shape of the work. I no longer post pictures of myself or my life on the Internet And that been true for a couple of years now two and a half years almost And what I realized was that my relationship to work and having a job or capital C career or all of the things that go into that had actually already changed. And what I needed was a break to be like, so what do I do about the fact that that's true? Right? So it's not that I felt changed by the year so much as that I had already changed. And so therefore, my situation felt a little bit untenable because I had to figure out what I was going to do going forward. So what my vision was at the beginning, or I guess at the end of 2024, when I was mapping out what I thought this was going to be, I really wanted to deprioritize work and earning and feel what happens in my body and in my mind as a result. The question that I had really was, who am I without work? And I think this is something that a lot of people can relate to. I think it's something that a lot of self-employed people who have made their passions or part of their identity part of the way that they earn money, especially people like me who came at it from more of a personal branding context, that there is so much of the self involved.