Continuing I have seen a lot of arms of various sizes, including fat arms, my experience has been that many people with fat arms don't have enough fat directly above the deltoid to warrant the use of a 1.5 inch needle 1.5 inches 38 millimeters. And so what Courtney is saying is that when we look at our arms, most of the fat is actually at the back of our arms. And on the kind of the side here, the deltoid muscle where we're where we're actually injected. Sometimes when we think of an injection, we think of it like right in the middle of our arm, right. But the deltoid muscle is actually very high up. And it's if you look at your arm, you'll see there's kind of like a dip, a dip at the top, and then it kind of gets fatter. But there's like a little dip, and it almost feels like it's going into the shoulder. And so that is around about where the injection is going. It's like very high up in your arm. And so if I'm looking at my arm, actually, that there isn't that much fat right there. It's kind of like a little dip of thin arm. And then the fat is on the top. And behind. Now most of the fat is definitely behind. There's probably like, I don't know, five inches of fat there. But right there where theoretically the injection goes. It is definitely a lot thinner. Also, what Courtney says is that, that people who are giving the immunizes are trained to also push the fat aside. And so I'm like, I'm just trying to see what it what that looks like for me. And yeah, I mean, I can see it, I can see it. And so we don't know whether that's the thing we don't know, right? We don't know whether the person injecting you is considering these things. We don't know if they're trained. We don't know if they're aware. And so when I've said before, hey, I need do I need a longer noodle here because I'm fat. They've said no, you're not fat enough. And I felt okay, that's fine. I you know, I felt like they knew what they're talking about. And hopefully it was because they knew what they were talking about versus them being like, can't be bothered to go and get a longer noodle. We don't have any longer noodles. Somewhere I read I think it was in one of cats posts. Someone was told that there I've run out of long needles in the hole of New Zealand. And that was just a straight up lie. And so the thing is, we don't know, right. And so the reason why I think it's important to read Courtney's words on this as well is that, if even if you think that you've been given the wrong needle, you probably it sounds like regarding this, this is what Courtney says, regardless of the location of the injection, your body will still absorb the full dose of vaccine, but you're going to have more localized side effects. And it just it takes longer for the vaccine to get around your body. Also, I wonder then, I wonder, I just wonder, I just wonder about this. So I don't want you to panic, like me, me reading cats. stuff, which is perfect, great. We need all this stuff. I was like, Oh, shit. I thought I was immunized. But what if I'm not? And whites? I mean, if you're really stressed about it and worried about it, go and talk to your doctor and your doctor can have a look at your arm and be like, yeah, actually, you know, your arms actually not that fat, even though you're you're fat. Or it, maybe it is and maybe your doctor will say, Hey, go and get another vaccine, someone in my building got a third vaccine, it was something to do with having a vaccine passport, you have to have to have the same. So I don't think having a third is bad, you know, don't think is gonna hurt you. And if you haven't got your vaccine, if you haven't got your vaccine yet, if in doubt, just ask for a longer needle. And if they say, oh, no, you don't need it. You know, what a why is that? And if they say Oh, actually, if you look at this right here, you can see that you've got less fat here. And I can, you know, estimate from from looking at this. And actually what I'm going to do is I'm going to press here so that the fat is pushed out pushed out the way. Yeah, so I'm definitely still going to, whenever I get an injection, say, Do I need a longer needle? Oh, no, you don't? Why is that?