Yeah, well, society wants us to compartmentalize our lives, you know, they want they want this section over here to be school, when that section over there to be work, and then you have home. And the first thing I would say is that you can integrate it all together. Historically, before kids were required to go to school for past, you know, a certain grade, everything was done together in the home, and there's so much learning that happens in the home, that school can never replicate. So first, I would just say, you know, understand that you don't have to compartmentalize your life that you can bring that into the home. The other thing I would say is just do it, just try it, try it for one year. And you can always send your kids back to, you know, public school or wherever, if it doesn't work out, just give it a try. Because I think it takes a good three, maybe four months to get into a groove. But once you get into a groove, I think you will see that you are capable of doing it. And the beauty is that there are so many different curriculums nowadays, it's so many different levels of support that is offered in the homeschool world, that there's something for everyone. And so I think the first step is knowing your intentions and what you truly want out of your child's education. For us, I don't care if my children are straight eight kids, if they go to college, great. If they don't, that's also fine. Our main goal is to instill a love of learning in our children. And that is the number one goal. And so if you know that your what your number one goal is, and if it's academics, that is perfectly fine, but just know what your number one goal is. And that can help guide you towards the right type of schooling type of curriculum out there for you. But you just got to give it a try. You just got to kind of jump in headfirst and say, Well, we're gonna give it a year. And if it works great. And if it doesn't, it's all right.