It all kind of ties back anyway. So, so I did my first dissection when I was in SI school. It was not a required part of SI school, but it was like kind of a recommended thing that you could do. And so si school started in September, and then we had Maine, so we had the winter off from being up in in the classroom. And it happened to be that that January, there was a lab that Anatomy Trains was hosting out in Colorado and Boulder, and I had tried to sign up for this lab four years in a row, and then four years in a row something had happened. This was, like, leading up to si school, something happened, like, one time we had a massive hurricane that hit where I lived, and like, everybody had to evacuate, and the whole city was like, shut down for like, a few weeks or more than that. And I was like, okay, not making the money to do this, this lab now and then another time I had a family emergency and had to spend a bunch of time in the Northeast, and then that, then COVID hit, and so, like, it had been several years of like, wanting to do a dissection, but I wanted to do it because I was terrified, because I would get these, like, I would just have these random moments where I'd be, like, doing a massage, or, like, just doing something, and I'd have this realization of, like, something I'm gonna go to med school and I'm gonna have to, like, dissect a human. And I would just get this, like, crippling anxiety. And I just, the way that I handle that stuff is like, let's just do it. Like, let's, let's just go for it. And so that's why I first was intrigued about doing dissection, actually, ironically, that was like before I even knew what Structural Integration was. But so I had been looking at these labs, and then happened to end up in SI school, and had a few friends who were in my training who were also going to go out to Colorado and do this lab that January. So I was like, Yeah, I'm going. And I was terrified. Like I was, I was like, I don't know how I'm gonna react. Like, I just know I need to be here, like, I just feel called to this for some reason, and I need to just, I need to trust it. And from the morning of day one in the lab, I was just. So in my element, like, so in love with the work and just so I felt so connected to what I was doing. And I am such a like, an esthetic learner and a tactile person. So like to see, but also to touch and to feel. And like to have that understanding of, like, actually, what is happening underneath my like, my hands when I'm working on a body. Like to know, like, actually, like understanding fiber direction, understanding like, layers in the body and the way the tissue is organized, and understanding how Fauci works, and understanding the connection of scar tissue, like through a whole system. And just to see the body in that way, changed everything for me. And from like, really, that first day in the lab, I was like, this, I want to teach this. Like, I want to be in this lab in a more, like, not just as a student. And so I asked my teacher Tom Myers of Anatomy Trains. I was like, What do I do to get in this lab? And he said, just keep showing up. And so I did every chance I could get. I just kept going out to Colorado, spending a lot of money and a lot of time, and every time I went, I just learned so much more. And I would come like, bring it home to my practice, and it would just like, change everything in terms of how I looked at the body, how I worked with the body, like my clients, but also my own body, and so deeply, like, just significant. And so eventually I was approached about getting to assist in the lab. And so now I get to lead tables. I get to lead groups of about, like, eight to 10 or so students through a full human dissection. So we get our own cadaver, and I get to lead these groups through and there's other cadavers at other tables and other instructors, and it's been the coolest, one of the most amazing honors of my professional career. To this day, it's just been amazing. And I'm so just in love with that work and but it all started because I was like, I know this is something I'm going to have to do someday in med school, and now it's turned into this thing that is a huge piece of who I am and what I do, and it's made like my understanding of the body. It's just really skyrocketed that, and that's been incredibly valuable in my career. And we get students all over, from all over the world, who come out to these labs. I've had students from almost every continent. And it's not just structural integrators. We get a lot of massage therapists. We get physios, physical therapists who get personal trainers like movement background, Yoga people, Pilates. Seen acupuncturists, and then I've seen people from like, more like Western, more traditional forms of medicine. I've had nurses. We've seen pas and doctors so really like and so many people who practice work that I've never even heard of. So it's just, even just learning about what's out there and how many modalities there are that I had never even been exposed to before. Highly, highly recommend, if for anybody who's a body worker who's curious about giving a lab a try, like a lot of people, come and they do one, and they're like, cool. I've done one. I'm good, like I saw it, like I got there's so much to get out of it. Even just one.