UCLA Dr Duong Psychiatry Anti Defamation Transcript 07162025

6:10PM Jul 16, 2025

Speakers:

Keywords:

psychiatry

emergency room

UCLA

medication

sleep

anxiety

TMS

legal cases

hypomania

financial management

TBI

neuro regeneration

antioxidants

appetite

medical recommendations

How often do you see the doctor? It's usually like every month, but recently it's more like every two weeks. Yeah, and then so I got to the emergency room and got checked in by all these crazy people around me, not their fault. Of course, I'm not blaming them. I'm describing the situation of the emergency room at Ronald Reagan psychiatry emergency visit clinic and everyone, all UCLA providers, very kind and very bewildered by why NIH funded professor of CSUN is here on Friday night, completely lucid and talking and about science and giving them organized medication lists with dosages and frequency.

Mm, so what is this?

That was

June 13, and then I take a nap on this uncomfortable hospital bed for like one hour, drool on the bed, and then still waiting, no and they put me in this room with an intern, like a resident, typing on a computer, and a security guard was also looking on the computer, and there's nothing going on. It's like 11pm and then the security guard is on YouTube. He's watching. He's a watch guy. He's into watches. How do I know he's into watches? Because he's on watch subreddit. Let me show you watch subreddit, Reddit, watches like see our watches he was scrolling this subway subreddit, or watches Rolexes. Yeah, I'm not blaming him, I'm saying I'm magnifying the absurdity of the watcher watching watches on Reddit. And then he got bored of Reddit, and then he went on YouTube to watch videos on Rolexes. So the watcher was now watching watch his watches on YouTube, and everything was just absurdist and Kafka esque and fine. And then, after one hour nap, another psychiatrist came in and said and did me this 15 minute interview, and asked me all the questions about, do you see things that other people don't see? Do you hear voices? And I was like, no, no, no. I just I got emails from CSUN and a retired retaliated against me and I and that's it. All the emails are real. They're not voices. And then they're like, they're very beholder, and they're like, well, we don't have enough beds. So unless you want to turn this into an involuntary emergency, hold, if I 515, low, where's danger to yourself or others, or you want to transfer to another hospital, we can't really keep you here. So the final it's not in the of course, they would never document that in writing, but I documented it. Of course, the final reason for my discharge was lack of beds. So once again, institutional failure mapped across the system by Me see

we're on time. We're ready. We're prepared. Wow.

Yeah, it's fine. It's totally fine, okay?

And I just sent a message, you know, talking about when you in terms of the incidents, and it feels to me like things are not really safe right now.

I mean, yeah, it's not about me. It's just like the streets are unsafe, yeah, yeah. I Uber to TMS every day, and all my appointments, I don't really walk around anymore because, like, even, even the streets of sortel is criminals.

Yeah. Have you been able to sleep? Okay? Yeah, yeah.

But you know, like the COVID pension reduces my IQ by 15 points in the morning. So like, today I'm dumber than normal, but tomorrow I'll be okay again. Yeah.

How many hours are you sleeping at night? Like,

789, 10, if I can, but like, I'm too busy to sleep, like, two more than that, like, so I still need to recover more for like, a month, but from last month, but like, I'm fine for now.

Yeah, do you feel like your thoughts are racing a little bit more or that things are just a little more anxiety

provoking? No, I think I'm a picture of health. Like, you know, like, like, night, like, what is it? 40% of the US population is obese, and I'm like, I'm ripped, I'm strong, I'm athletic. Like, like, I'm publishing. I got it. I got a new acceptance on July 4.

That's wonderful. So glad. Thanks. One thing, because I got a chance to also speak with your parents yesterday, Timothy, and I'm talking with Carla as while you're a therapist, I'm so glad that you've been so consistent going to therapy, going to TMS.

Yeah, I make all my appointments, not not only with the USA Network. I, as I told you, I have daily leading TBI experts. I'm flying to issue Texas in all. It's for Charles shelofsky, president of the neuro vision Association, yeah.

In terms of the medications, well, which ones have you been taking every day

only? Lexapro. I hate taking the medications. It makes me dumb.

Okay, so did you get a chance to pick up the Seroquel?

Yeah, I did. I did, yeah, and it did help me sleep. Yeah. Did

it help me sleep? How many days have you been taking that long? I

only took it, like, once or twice. I don't want to take it

every day. Yeah, okay. Did it make you

feel? Not so great. Otherwise, I can't really tell, but I'm trying to manage my medication risk profile. Like, if it's not necessary, I won't take it.

Yeah? I see So, yeah, you know, I'm having a little bit of a concern now, Timothy, in terms of just how different things are in the past few weeks, yeah, because when I saw you a few weeks ago, you know, you've been a little bit more stressed out about what's going on with the legal cases, and actually have been more depressed as I'm seeing you today. I feel like things are kind of swinging in the opposite direction, a little bit more. Okay, yeah, I'm much

more stabilized now. Like before, I was completely depressed because I was, like, getting gas lighted by all these institutions. But now I know the truth, and I have documentation, and my name is, like, clear. It's just a matter of time until it's done. Like, all my forms are federally filed, and it's above the senators. Now it's beyond the level of the government, it's the level of the market. So it's no longer like smoke screens and emails. It's real money and securities. So now I'm real, and nobody can deny this.

Well, I'm glad that you're not feeling as depressed or stressed out anymore, but I'm no concern that because things are swinging over on the other end, a little too rapidly, that we're actually entering a little bit more of a hypomanic state of mind.

Well, I mean, it's if you could say hypomanic, but I'm just high cognition. I'm totally stable. I can, like, chill, like this, for an hour. I can watch Rick and Morty. I've been watching Rick and Morty this season, season eight. I can tell you what happened every episode.

Yeah, I hear that, but I think some of the insights of hypomania does decrease, right? So it becomes really much more difficult for you to be able to also point out things that has been shifting or different. So, you know, previously, we talked about being inpatient in the hospital in order to help with kind of getting things back on track?

Yeah, I don't think that's going to be very efficient now, because my like, okay, so, so one is Dr Sean Joseph at visual processing Optometry. He's like, a, he's the treatment arm of my visual edge, and then my flight to contact us with Charles is to do my vision expert for my case. So it's like, it's like bifurcation of protocols for expert and treatment retention. So that's one thing, and I need I see him every week. I have a one year plan to improve my vision, and I have multiple Bucha glasses, like I've been telling Carla about these. These are really fantastic, like they can help me read and use screens better. I need to see him every week, at least one hour. I'm not going to give that up for UCLA, daily psychiatric treatment that doesn't target my brain specifically, and then another one, another weekly treatment, BBz, physical therapy with Dr Ishaan Washington, a quantified expert. He straps a polar H 10, HRV strapped to my body while we do cognition and balance training exercises, and it is quantifiable biometric data that supports my recovery process. This is also a one year plan paid for already by my retained lawyer, and that's also something that I'm not going to give up to just go do psychiatric treatment at UCLA. Also, I'm seeing Dr Isabel Alliance every week for acupuncture and trigger point injections, and that's also very important for my physical and somatic and integrated Holistic Health.

Yeah. The plan I'm thinking about would not necessarily be, you know, long term, but actually just three or four days. So I'm not sure if that will get

in the way of, yeah, yeah. So, I mean, what's the point of just three or four days? Things? Last time I tried to go and they discharged me because of lack of bed. So I think we're done with that. Like that ship has sailed. I took your advice, I went. I mapped the failure of the system once more, and I'm back home here where I have a comfortable bed, Eight Sleep mattress costs $5,000 temperature controlled. I rates my HRV and how many breaths I take per night. I have five years of sleep data backing up how good my or bad my sleep is. And I've told you that I wake up every three hours, and unless I take the gabapentin, which extends my sleep time to five hours without still having to wake up and I bounce to sleep. And this is backed up by my five years of biometric sleep data with my expensive ass sleep Eight Sleep mattress, which is recommended by biohackers and people like Dr Andrew Huberman of Stanford and the Huberman lab podcast, yeah, I found that last time, that's helpful. It's not your fault. It's the institutional failure, right? If there were, there were crazy people on drugs around me, homeless, it's fine. It's not their fault, like I was. There that physicians were weirded out. But why is this NIH funded professor talking normally, coming into the emergency room with his backpack and UCLA hoodie, like with clothes packed ready for three days and they sent me home after I drool on the uncomfortable medical bed for one hour nap while the security guard watches YouTube videos of watches for an hour and the medical residents typing on the computer. It was fine. Nothing bad happened. There was no breach of medical care. It's just that I didn't really warrant the medical resources of getting an extra bed when they're already full of beds. Yeah, yeah,

so I did talk to them and we would be able to make the bed

available for today. Yeah. I've napped on those beds before. It's uncomfortable. I like my own 5k bed better.

With my concern, we have two options, I think, either you know, considering going in and taking that available bed that you know, I figured out they have. The other thing is,

yeah, but another thing is, like, I'm managing active financial positions. Like, I need my phone. I know in inpatient, you don't mean to have your phone and digital connections, right? So I need to, like, manage my finances personally. Like it's active trades. These are short term and long term options, to rid of derivative positions, they need to be active, actively managed.

Yeah? So again, it's only a few days. But what about an option where

you're, yeah, three trading days, the market can change so much, three trading days that could be 100k

Yeah. What about every day like somebody's able to check in on you? Because I don't

mind with that, yeah, that's cool. Cool. Yeah, I do that anyway. I'm going to TMS anyway. I check in with multiple UCLA advanced neuroscience scientists and researchers every day. And today, I'm also going to see Dr Cho at integrative wellness at Century City. She's like a premium peptide doctor, like, she's like a celebrity doctor. Oh, are you going in person to see Yeah, I'm going in person to see Dr Jessica Cho. You might know her. Okay, is she with the UCLA system? No, she's above the UCLA system. She's, like, with celebrities and CEOs I see.

Okay, if you can share her contact with me, I would love to get that, because I think that could be helpful.

Yeah, let me paste you the full thread right now. I mean, I can email it, but, you know, the UCLA portal is like, full, like, I can't send you messages was because my messages are too much. Sign, yeah, I'm putting it right here. See, I'm telling you, Dr Dolan, like you've known me for two years, like I do everything like this in real time. And even this, my message goes over the length by whatever, 100 characters, right? Like my cognition and rate and everything is above what the system allows, literally, and you're interpreting this as mania, like, come on. Okay,

great. I got that number in there. I'm gonna just see if I can contact her. But yeah, Tim at the I think from my perspective, like you said, because I've known you for a while now, I do see this is a departure. It's a bit of a difference from before. Difference

from before. I mean, it's a departure, because, like, I try and maintain professional composure and respect with you in all of our interactions, our 15 minute like, mandatory update, medication calls and everything, the context has changed now. So now I have to, like, actually show you who I am and how I think and how I talk. So this

is maybe your baseline. Of

course, this is my baseline. How do you think I produced 20 papers in two years and out produced the entire CSU faculty? I completed the CSU tenure benchmark to full professor in one year. That's meant to take 10 years under their whatever section 600 official CSU guidelines for my department, the tenure benchmark is one publication within seven years before tenure. In my first year, I had seven publications by the end of year, two at 11. That is still a decrease in the rate showing my cognitive deterioration and decrease in scientific federally funded output over time. This is not mania. This is just how I think in this moment, and how I pasted you the I found the email while talking to you, searched it, paste it, separate it into two sections while discussing like, this is not mania. This is my baseline function while under TBI, while under TPD, TB PTSD, while under Gabapentin. Do you understand what I'm saying. Are you getting a signal, or do I need to terminate my relationship with you because you don't understand my clinical situation? I'm not

sure if that will be helpful. Exactly. Yeah. When you are inside the house, do you feel safe?

Yeah, of course, nobody can come in. I even, I even have a code lock on my door. It's not a normal door lock. It's a fingerprint biometric lock with a code as well. I'll show you. I'll show you right now. Like these are the measures I took in 2020 when the world was collapsing around me and it was on. Think there were riots in Santa Monica. So what did I do? I protected myself. This is my this is my door. You see this? It even, it even has a Chinese red thread for like lessons and good luck and protection and the way that my door is outside. Here I have a Chinese feng shui mirror to reflect away bad energy. And this is my door. This is the biometric locked door. This is like, where you put your finger here, yeah, and it opens. Obviously it won't open because the door is open, right? Here is the fingerprint part. And then here's the code part. If your fingerprint doesn't work because you're sweaty, you just put your coat in. And I don't need to remember my face as well. It's another TBI inefficiencies in advantage. Yeah, so my door is fortified. That's literally the extent that I go to to protect my life. So I'm not suicidal. I'm not trying to hurt anyone. I'm literally fortifying the facade of my building, my personal entrance. I'm glad,

I'm glad, I'm glad that you're saving

Do you understand me now? Where do you like

to see things moving forward at this point will be the most ideal for you.

Just the original baseline plan I complete TMS and transition to the like, not so intensive, like UCLA psychiatric program, while continuing my TBA expert care. We gone over this like five times with Carla as well. Nothing has changed, except for, when do you see Carla next yesterday, I had to like, reschedule, because it was like TMS at the same time. And I also had a like call with Dr Taylor Kuhn. Yeah, you can ask Dr Taylor coon. We had a high cognition call yesterday, like, or like the day before Monday at 215 at 2pm I had just post. I responded to CSUN retaliation, and you might know dr Gottlieb as well, right? I'm in contact with Dr Gottlieb's clinic and his Lumina and architects functions. These things are military DARPA DoD funded research projects that military veterans use for enhancing their cognition in ptbi contacts beyond the normal medical care, which I've mapped, and as you've seen, I've used it all, and nothing has fixed me. So I'm now in contact with like military level officials and researchers. You just look up who Dr Taylor Kuhn is. He's one of the leading research neuroscientists with neuromodulation, and I explained my entire case history to him within 1015, minutes. And he was pretty shocked. He didn't say it, but his silences and pause implied the magnitude of the situation, and we're going to follow up soon. Dr Taylor Coon is on the board of Lumina, which is the creator of Mind Gym, which is what the US Navy Seals and our Air Force used for recovery and training. He's a board member of a DARPA affiliated business. I am in direct contact with him. He can rectify and Aaron slam, have you talked to him recently? I don't even know who that is.

That's the one in charge of your TMS at UCLA.

Oh, no. I mean, I see multiple doctors every day at TMS. There's like, Dr Krantz, there's Dr oogley, there's so many. So every day is every doctor. So I don't know exactly who you're talking about, but I mean, I messaged my TMS doctors too. Like this paper trail going back months. Like there's nothing that that anybody, even UCLA, can hold against me, even you, you're so

connected. To all of us here, and I think that's the one thing that's so,

yeah, I know it's an institutional threat, right? You think that UCLA is becoming exposed and liable because my case is becoming too visible, it's not a thing. UCLA has always supported me. I'm wearing my UCLA Bruin shirt right now to talk to you. I'm a triple Bruin like I'm not trying to disparage a UCLA image. UCLA is publicly on video lauding me, congratulating me with the dean of associate academic dean of UCLA fielding School of Public Health, Dr Yifan zu congratulating me for completing my PhD in three years and getting my tenure track assistant professor position at Northridge without a postdoc, after publishing 12 papers within my PhD, nine first author and your

parents visiting you at this week.

I mean, I was happy about it, but yesterday, after that, the the illegal immigrant attacked me, and my dad and my mom didn't care and thought we should just have lunch, and I had to go home. Like, that's, that's a rupture, right? I don't understand, like, why is my trauma so minimized or non existent or invisible? Just because I'm smart or what? Not? Not at the moment, I ran away from the restaurant. Are you at home? I normal

I see and then, so are they staying in a separate place, or are they staying with

you while they're visiting? They're staying somewhere else?

Well, they're staying somewhere else, okay? And you're just at home most of the time.

No, I told you I'm going out every day, like for multiple TBI appointments. I'm going to Westfield Mall after this. I. Is I rescheduled my appointment by phone before we talked while, while I was emailing you extra messages and telling you about my trading wins and rescheduled to 1pm so I could make my 2:15pm with chill. Yeah, let me show you like. So I have to be hyper efficient with how I do food as well. So I usually order or get something on the way back. But like, Have I showed you this before? Like, I mean, I showed Carla, right? This is my system, right? I got my air fryer right here, and it takes 10 minutes to put the steak in the air fryer. Can you see? Oh, yeah, that's my air fryer. And then I have a fridge full of steak and vegetables and ice cream. That's stuff that you can efficiently, quickly eat this nutrient dense and no minimum processed food, all organic. And then here's my fridge with like apples and like stuff like that. And also you can see all my crazy supplements and gut bio antibiotics, biotics, not antibiotics. And like different supplements here, and like sauces and condiments and protein shake and apples and eggs, and I have everything ready, I just don't have that much time to make a massive meal for myself. And I'm not super rich to have a personal chef every day. So I do what I can and cook my steak for 1010, minutes, and then add some salt, and then make my protein shake and survive until I'm not defamed anymore. And no, people are not thinking I'm crazy, and my doctor thinks I'm not no longer manic. So one

of the things Tim, I think, since you don't want to go to the inpatient thing, also let them know that, but you want to connect the team that

they could be able to see you every day or check in with you every day. I mean, yeah, we do that anyway, right? Like, I speed through this the TMS compliance checks. It's so funny now, like, I know you have to do that. There's no side effects. I'm doing a good thing. But like, I think they clocked it too. Like, I speed rush them through it, because I'm just here to get in and get out and go to my next medical appointment. Yeah,

is it a lot to manage for you with all of these different

appointments? Yeah, obviously, I'm, like, doing the work of multiple law firms by myself, while brain damaged, I don't have a secretary or assistant. You know, I'm not super rich, I told you.

And that's the part where I think there's a lot

of really, I don't think so. I think so. I think this is going to put extra pressure and calls and emails on me, like, it's just trying to swap me an extra institutional facade denial, like, if they're actually going to help, let them help, right? I'm ready. I respond to emails in two seconds, but I can't respond to calls because I have acupuncture needles in my arms. Yeah? So like, you know it's on you. I'm open. I'm always being cooperative with your medical guidance. I've always tried to use your referrals and everything in medication pickups, even if it's a bit late because I'm so busy. Like, go for it. I'm I'm always cooperative. Like, I'm ready to take whatever extra treatment is offered. I've always asked for extra treatment. I've done 36 rounds of TMS last year, 36k charge human insurance. This is this year's another 36k charged you insurance. Yeah. So if not, the case of the fastest,

again, to take that then, because they have a lot of social workers who actually can help with the legal aspect. Once you're there, they can

help. No, I don't think so. This legal, this legal thing, has been rejected by 50 plus forums. They're publicly listed on my Google Drive, like there's a folder called law firm rejections. There's 50 plus leading Ada and civil rights firms, the National Disability Rights Council, California Disability Advocates, blah, blah, blah, every single ADA related disability and legal thing has been mapped and put as a rejection in my folder like a random social worker is not gonna do shit compared to them, I know more about the law than them at this point. Well, that's not my recommendation. Yeah, yeah, I understand that, but that's like a legal recommendation rather than a medical recommendation. So you're not qualified to do that exactly right? So it's up, it's up to it's He Said, She Said, so I accept and respect your recommendation, but I will not take it at this time.

Okay, my medical recommendation is to still, you know, take the

medicine. Okay, yeah, I'm

gonna refer the Omni help. They're gonna give you a call because they're gonna be able to check in with you daily.

Yeah, yeah, it's perfect. I can do that, yeah? But if it's gonna be a call, like, why can't it just be a text or email? Why do I have to waste my cognition on a call waiting for them to, like, update me when I when I already, like, parse the entire conversation 10 times?

It's a call to just get to know you, but then you're gonna go in and just

see them. Okay, okay, okay, whatever. Yeah, sure, checking in on you more

regularly at this point, I know with my scheduling, I probably can't name the aspect, but I'm gonna

talk. I would never ask that of you. Dr, John, this is not worth your time. Like, oh

no, this is important to me because I'm concerned. You have better

things to do. You have more patients that need your like, help. Like, I'm fine.

Well, you are my focus right now because I'm being given. The feedback that we have, and it's still my medical recommendation to go to the Ronald Reagan emergency room. So if you change

your mind, I'm still okay, okay. I mean,

so that way it's not a long wait. Okay, so you've got all of today, tomorrow, even this week. Yeah, tell them to hold that bed, because

that's our plan, yeah? But I don't I, like, you know, I did it last time because we didn't

prepare this way. We did

though, like, we prepared five days in advance. I told my TMS team, like, you can't really say that, man, like, come

on, like we were talking about it, but we didn't prepare a bed, right? So,

okay, okay. I mean, the very specific aspect of preparing a bed was not included in our five day meeting in June 9, June 13, sure, but like this time, you've included the reserved bed for me, right? But explicitly, but okay, that's very kind of you to reserve the bed for me, but I'm saying that within good faith, right? Like someone else probably needs that bed more than

me. Wow. And then, from my perspective, I think the last approach is okay, but the circle is probably more helpful with sleep

maintenance. And again, yeah, I think so, yeah, yeah. I mean on that, I agree. I'm grateful for your prescription of Seroquel, and I'll be using that carefully, yeah, okay, and you can

actually use it on a higher dose, because lower is more sedating. And I don't want you to sleep too long. I think going up higher to the 300 milligram dose is probably better at this point, because then it becomes a little bit more stabilizing overall.

Okay, yeah, that's cool. Yeah, I'll try that. Thank you.

Yeah. So you have 50 tabs, but if you take, or sorry, 50 milligram tab, six of that to actually

get the 300 that's quite a lot, but I can take I can take posts, as you've seen, a lot of supplements I can do in one ago. Yeah,

take that, or I can send you just the clear 300 tab, milligram performance,

honestly, that's easier. So yeah, every one piece of efficiency is very important to me. Because of my brain damage ATP, I have to minimize the loss of ATP, especially in calls. Yeah,

so how about I do that? How about I just meant something where it's just one simple task?

Yeah, that's cool. Yeah, I appreciate that. Yeah, thanks. Dr John, yeah, remind

me again. Have you been on anything else of all the same category of circle before, in the

past, or, I mean, I mean, like, maybe we should, I mean, the first ever doctor, like that, scam doctor, defense doctor, like Jonathan Eskenazi. He gave me nortriptyline, right? And that was useless. It made me, made me dry a mouth, like, all night, like,

yeah, yeah. That's probably not how.

That's so stupid. Why did he describe a first generation like antidepressant or TBI? Yeah, you're really

concerned too about free radical damage, which I am as well. And I'm thinking, yeah, what's the best option? That's, like you said, most efficient that we can get to the brain and help with.

So that's exactly why I'm seeing Dr Jessica show, right? So you might know a bit about these advanced peptide therapies. So these peptides are going to be part of this neuro regeneration protocol where we can manage and reduce some of the neuro inflammation, maybe, like, turn down some of the microglia that are going crazy. Do some epigenetic reprogramming with Fox 04, DRI, stuff like that. Do some telemere activation, lengthening stuff like that. Yeah.

Have you been able to have a good appetite, by the way, with everything going

on? No, like yesterday, I was so ready for lunch, but then I got attacked, so I wasn't hungry anymore.

I see, okay, so that's the part that I think it takes away the ability of the antioxidants through, like, really natural good food, right? Yeah. So I'm thinking that actually the syrup, well may not ultimately help with that aspect, but I think a different type of medication helps more with the appetite in the food, which helps to bring in the antioxidants again, and then it works with the plan with Dr Jones, so I do want to connect with him for that awesome Yeah, but I'm going to send the one that I think is ultimately more helpful in terms of being neuroprotective at this point, nice, nice. Have you ever been up on Zyprexa before? What is that it's similar to cerebral, but cerebral is more sedating, whereas Zyprexa is a little bit more simpler dosing. So they're cousins in the same category, but Zyprexa actually helps with your appetite, so that you don't lose it easily, okay, and that ultimately helps with you, our body's ability to bring in these antioxidants in a helpful way to protect your brain. And so you can take it at nighttime design practice. Now it's a much more similar dosing, and the dosing range is actually more straightforward. So we can start with just the five milligram cool, and if you like the medication, you can actually go up to five twice a day. I'll put that at the pharmacy for today, and then I'll still stick with my guns about my medical recommendations, but I'll talk with Dr Chau. Thank you for

this number. Yeah.

I'll stay in contact with you today. And if there's anything that your parents have, or if you need to reach out to me, I'll stay in contact with them as well.

Yeah, yeah. And I'm heading to TMS right after this. Okay, sounds good, so I'll let

Dr Aaron slam know about that, but

best of luck with that. Yeah, and, you know, I'm just being transparent and clear and in good faith, right? I mean, there was no disrespect, Dr Duong, I'm just like, being very, very honest to you, like, You've known me a long time. You've helped me a lot. Like, I'm not against you in any way.

I appreciate that. So hopefully that you'll take some of the recommendations I have here in terms of just the switch in the

medication, yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm definitely taking that. Yeah, thank you. I mean, I can go to the pharmacy after TMS, Okay,

sounds good. And hopefully your parents will keep you accountable

with that. I mean, you can see my event and episodic and temporal sequencing. I just like, added, like, an extra medical pickup between all my between between TMS and between you TMS and Dr.

Cho, yeah, that's a lot to manage so, but I'm doing,

I've been doing work for four years. So, like, what? So what, it's just Wednesday. Is this Wednesday for me, I'm

just gonna have to

schedule something that fits in your calendar

and I'll check back in with you next week. Yeah, yeah.

So I'll let you go and I'll be in contact. Okay? Thanks. Thank you very much. Thank you. So we have a short

follow up. Now. It's been very helpful when it's a good time for people,

and I'll try to make them Oh, yeah, I totally forgot we even have lunch with my PhD advisor as well. But it's because it's not a medical context. I just forgot to mention it.

Yeah, human contact is good for opportunity. Sounds

good. Thank you. Hi, please. Thank you. Thank you. You see what I have to deal with every day. You have to call out every medical trap they set. I think he's trying hard. Yeah, he is trying hard, and I'm trying hard too. That's cool.