approach. So the first thing that we did was just guide with questions. We were like, we know we don't have answers, but what does a child need to thrive and grow? And as we kind of dug in, we realized that, oh, it's a lot more than just like putting a child into school, which you remember was the narrative at the time, like, give a kid a backpack, put them in school, everything's better, and the barriers that a child living in really deep poverty have to overcome are different, whether they're three months old at zero to three months at birth to navigating child their hood to being five. Dive to being, say, 12 or 13. And so we really wanted to get to the root of the root of the problem. And in order to do that, we had to look a layer deeper. So everything that we did was with this intention of, how do we go deep and stop these problems from happening in the first place? So what started as a home grew into a school, grew into a meal and nutrition program grew into family development. Then we were like, wait, what's better than helping an orphan, helping their mother before they become an orphan, helping their community system, you know, creating jobs and financial equality and opportunity, and so that led to the Women's Center and health and wellness programming. And if a child's drinking dirty water and they can't survive to the age of five or they're severely malnourished, you know, so it, you know, there's this hierarchy of needs, and you can't get to like this kid overcoming the challenges of poverty, until you start way at the bottom, so like, basic vaccinations and survival, and then you move your way up, and until you're at, like, digital literacy, and they're in eighth grade, and they get a computer, and they're on Khan Academy, and they're like, learning how to code. But if you see what I mean, you like, really start at the base base, and then building systems that are about a whole community and getting to, like stopping the problem in the first place, so that you're not just drinking out of a water hose. And that just involves community leaders and people really deeply rooted in the mission and coming together and in the good and the heart of the community. So creating full service community schools that serve the heart, and creating women's centers where women are empowered and free and safe and and that is how we've grown our work over the years with deep listening, deep questioning. You know, never going in with answers, never, ever. It's like, you know what? What's the next step? What's the next step? Where do we go next? And so that is how we were built by the people, for the people deeply, deeply embedded and listening. And it's been incredibly successful to the point where annually, now we have 3000 visitors a year, people wanting to come and learn and and dig into how we do this work, but I will tell you the root of it is very simple, and that is that children need to be loved, nurtured, treasured, kept safe, educated, and at the heart and center of all communities, which is so Basic we don't even have to say it, the root of all violence, of all generational poverty is is simply some children not being given the childhood that they deserve and the basic human needs and rights. And if you can solve for that, if you can take care of the most vulnerable to me, like the most sacred of our whole human family and an earth, then you solve every other problem stemming from that, and that's what we're all about, and every child, one child at a time and again, just going deep. And we weren't looking to like, go out and spread a flag in every province or every region or every country, we were just like, boom, draw a circle, go there, and then people come to us to learn and take that into their communities. You know, the other tropes of the world, who witnessed something, experienced something, and wanted to change it so that that couldn't happen to other children. So that's been the journey. It's been wonderful. It's been learning. It's been incredibly, incredibly hard and difficult, filled with failure, filled with learning, filled with stumbling and falling flat on our faces. But but here we are today, and so proud and continuing to learn and grow and evolve with the sector, and we kind of pulled ourselves up by the bootstraps. Never expected to have a nonprofit or a global movement, or 5123, none of those, like, we went in, you know, bright eyed and, like, very, very not, not knowing what was going to be ahead. So, but