Well, you know, my mother used to always say, you know, if you don't own land, you don't really have anything. And if he grew up in the Depression, right, so that was that was the mindset was that, you know, land was king, and you had to own a piece of it. And a piece of it would be, you know, the land that your house sat on, essentially. But I think, you know, some of the generations subsequent to mine, so it's, I don't even know what we are
getting mixed up with Gen. Z. 2020s. Right. Gen X, Gen Z. Millennials. I can't get Malta Yes,
do you lose? Do you definitely lose track when you get older, but I think subsequent generations, their sense of permanence. And what conveys permanence is very different from ours, especially this most recent generation. So it especially on the heels of a pandemic. So with COVID people, people are working from home, it's not like you have to have a fixed place to live. And you're going to commute from that fixed place to live to your job. And you're going to come home at the end of the day and your church is going to be down the street and your people are much more transient now than than have ever been in the past. But even before this, even before the pandemic, the sense from younger generations was an apartment is fine. I don't need to own a home I don't need to pay for the home and then pay basically you know, you know, well over a third of that to the bank and interest. There was a mindset change around how you paid for the home as well as the the importance of owning home.