And without wanting to sound like I'm just listening to the sound of my own voice. Something that is also very interesting. I think it's interesting to me, I hope it's interesting to you, is that there's a new sort of phenomenon starting within medicine that we call social prescribing. And you know, Doctors have been prescribing medications for years and we prescribe blood pressure tablets, we prescribe diabetes medicine, we prescribe this and that. So doctors, you know, we prescribe medication. But there's more and more things now in terms of we prescribe something like something like a social activity. And this sort of happened a bit through COVID people talking about this lack of interaction. And so, I mean, one of the sort of more accessible things that people have heard about this is, so everyone's sort of heard of this thing called Park Run. People on Saturday morning, get together and they go running together. And if you ask me, I couldn't think of anything worse, like who wants to get together and go running? What an awful idea, but it's terribly good for your cardiovascular system. I didn't say that as a doctor, but it just sounds like an awful idea anyway, but the social prescribing is saying look, people who are feeling isolated and they're feeling depressed and this, that and the other. Social prescribing is saying, Well, maybe not. Let's not launch into saying let's give you some Zoloft. Well maybe let's say, why don't we try and say, let's connect you in with the local park run group. And let's try and connect it to this pathway and not just say, Oh, look, go and do it actually connect you to a pathway that says go and do this. And this can have almost as good outcomes, sometimes just as good outcomes ad saying here's a script, go get it, take it, see you in a month. So trying to connect through these kind of pathways. And I guess, trying to get in that kind of vein is saying, Well, why don't we connect people with saying, Well, if you're not really keen on taking pills, and you say, that's not what you really want, what you're all about. And maybe you don't even need them? Maybe it's not the best thing for you? Why don't we try to connect you in with some music therapy? You know, students can actually go to university get a degree in music therapy, why don't we try to connect you in with tapping? Particularly with people who are creative and who've kind of abandoned that part of their life, typically, because that might be their depression has sort of shut them off from that, why don't we try to connect them with it? Why don't we try to help them to tap into that part that's kind of been blunted off by that sort of mood disorder? Why don't we link them in with that, for some people that, you know, it's not for everyone, but for some people, reconnecting with that music, with that art, with that creative part of their body, their brain, for some people that might be just as effective, or it might be at least the part that starts the ball rolling and getting them towards that little bit of sunlight peering through the dark cloud. And so I guess I know I've talked for a bit, but I hope that's something about just helping people understand. Humans need music, it is not an optional extra. And I hope that many people sometimes feel that specialist teachers in primary schools, even in high schools, as music teachers, kind of like well look, reading, writing and arithmetic is the important stuff, and you guys are just an added on. And I've always, I've always liked the line in Mr. Holland's Opus. And when they eventually cut the music program, and he says, Well, you know, if there's no music, pretty soon, they'll have nothing to read and write about and that sort of thing. Well, that's not a bad way of putting it.