or you can be a total badass, Rockstar. And well, I didn't say about as Rockstar, you could begin to move your business, your business as in the clients that you see, even if you're working for someone else into being a body positive business, and be like, you know, have a little sticker on your on your workstation that says, all bodies are cool, or being fat is gray. And then when someone says, oh my God, I've tried this new diet, you can say oh, did you see that sticker? Yeah, actually, I'm transitioning into a book being a body positive hairdresser. Do you know anything about body positivity? And they'll say, oh, yeah, what is it? What is it? And then doing that? I think long term, something like that is probably going to be the best for your mental health, right? Because like you say, 200 clients talking about it. And your boss, and you say you think it's hurting your mental health, I think, you know, long term. So I'm not saying tomorrow, go out and do that. Because that might be really big and scary. But maybe in the next two years or five years, that's the transition where you begin to talk about this type of stuff. Because I mean, what would you do if a client started saying other inappropriate things, things that you feel more confident about that it's deeply inappropriate sales come in, sat someone sat in your chair and started about spouting racist shit and started saying, Hey, do you want to join my, my neo Nazi group? You would probably not smile and nod and be polite. You'd probably like what the fuck, right? Because it's, it's, it's fucked up. It's, you know, it's bad. It's not cool. It's, you know? And, and so, right now, you're, maybe you're still in learning fatphobia. And so, you might still be like, well, they've got a point, you know, you know, I Oh, I'm not sure what to say. But getting to the point when people were people, if they talk like that, to you about fatness or dieting, it just be a boundary of yours. Where in the salon, we actually don't talk about dieting, because we are a body positive salmon. What does that mean? Oh, it means that lalala we think that it's cool to be fat or whatever. And like I say, that might be something that's, you know, way, way, way, way down the road, but it sounds like protecting your mental health in whatever way you can. And it could be that you don't have any conversations and and what you do instead is you go home after seeing all these clients and you just go and do a ton of of work on how you feeling about the conversations you had that day. It could be that you go home and you just do a ton of self care. It could be Go home and you, you know, get a takeout pizza and have a nap. Right? But just as put it out there that you deserve to be in a workplace that is free from bigotry, that is free from shaming, because that is not okay. And you say you like your career, you know, you'd like your career, that it's not okay that you have to consider finishing ending your career because of fat phobia. That's not okay. So yeah, it's I mean, it's complicated, right? I don't think there is any perfect answer to that of how to deal with people. Because, again, you know, in with the jam technique, Judge, where is a power with clients? Yeah, the power they're paying you. If you had, you know, a waitlist of so many different clients that wanted to get with you. The power is probably more in your hands. If you're, if you're a new hairdresser, and you've got, you know, not that many clients and you're struggling to fill your books, the power is probably in their hands. But it sounds like I don't know, 200 clients sounds like a lot to me. I don't know. I don't? I don't know. But that sounds like a lot to me. And so what if you did lose some clients? Because you said, Hey, we don't talk about diet stuff in the salon. Saloon. I mean, you know, you know, if you if you have that have that wiggle room to get rid of the worst offenders.