Yeah, so jobs before I mean, now I joined happy home and school for the blind, my parents tried a couple of, you know, usual schools for me to nearby schools where my siblings were going, and why my suppose they started me with an English medium school where my sister and my brother were going. So they realized in a week's time that I wasn't looking at the blackboard, I wasn't really being able to read the blackboard, even sitting in the front row. And the teacher called my parents and said that, you know, he's not, he's not being able to concentrate, he's not being able to read the board. He's sleeping in class. So then my parents were very disheartened. And then they took me out of the school, and then they thought, maybe, you know, in the school, I'll be better off. I don't know what what sensibility they had, while they thought that, and then we started coming up with another neighbor of ours to her in the middle school. They're also in a week's time, the similar issues came up, and then my parents were called, and they were told, and then after that, they didn't know what to do. They tried Hindi medium, they tried English medium, they knew the Marathi medium school will be the same story. So they didn't even try. So after that, I was pretty much at home. And I remember I used to go with my neighbor, or we had a neighbor who used to be a very religious person. So she would take me to all the southern Iran puja and all the temple hopping that she would go to, she would take me and my mother was very happy to send me thinking that okay, at least, he will go out, we'll be able to do something, you know, if religious way is his way forward, so be it. So they didn't know anything, really. Because both my parents are not very educated. And because of that, they don't they and we're talking about 1980s, even if anyone was educated, there was very little to be educated about disability and politeness and possibilities. So and being an attorney, again, resources were not that many. So basically, the turning point in my life came and those are the times when, you know, my parents were constantly told at social gatherings of family, or when relatives would come home, that you know how, and they would say it very, very, you know, loudly and openly be sitting right there, telling them that you know, how, now your life is ruined. Now, you have to ensure that this boy passes before you do, because we will take care of him after you are gone, and so on. And so then they're like, whoa, you should have done your, you know, abortion in time considered that, because there was a situation where my mother knew, because of the she was, she was when she was expecting me she was she had fallen ill. And the injection that the doctor gave out also had impacted her. She had jaundice, basically. And that jaundice resulted in an infection, because the issue was wrongly misdiagnosed and treated, the doctor had informed that, you know, that may be some, you know, disability or difficult deformity that your child may have. And my father was the opinion that they reconsider. But my mother was very, very clear that whatever it is, I'm not going to do about I'm going to let it come, and we'll take it on from there. So my mother was also for that chastise that, you know, you should have listened to him or whatever, and all these things, you know, I'm listening and, and it's only like now when I reflect back when I talked about my life, really like I think, you know, how, how some of these things usually are, but you don't know how to react at that time because I was just four or five years six years old. So the turning point came in the last shot that my parents were giving off my operation says, operated at the Banerjee Eye Hospital in VT CST which has now become and there was a Parsi doctor, there were a group of three person I especially is specialist to operating on me and after two and a half hour long operation they did on my eye, they realize that this operation is not going to work because my retina was like, you know how you sort of scramble a piece of paper and throw it in the dustbin. Moroccan had pretty much become that so they tried to do something with it, but they did not succeed. So they called my dad and he said Mr. Singh. You know, I'm telling you that don't go to any Ojha, any Baba or any temple, I'm writing a name of a school, please take him there and get him admitted there. And don't do any hospital hopping, no temple hopping. And my father said okay, but then also my father sat on it thinking, you know, school, what will you do? And he told him that it's a residential school. So they had their reservations of me going to any other school to visit or how will I do my basic things, which, I mean, they did teach me those things, but they were still not sure. You know, so but then one fine day, I think my father decided that, you know, let me take him and give it a shot. And that's how we went to that school. And and that was the first time that my dad was also visiting that part of Bombay and Till then we never had gone there. So when he went there when he met when he saw the school running and when he met Mary Banerjee who was the principal then. So he felt that maybe this is my calling, and against my mother, who was very, very against it thinking, No, this is too far. What if something happens to him? How are we going to take care of that, and how we'll be able to make it so soon. But the principal then told my mother, you know that by taking extra care of him, you will spoil him more, then he will not, then then you'll have to take care of him even when he's 3040. But if you live in down here, he'll probably become someone who will take care of you when you're in 70s and 80s. I think that's what stayed with my parents, and they decided that they will put me and then she said, you know that if he drops a glass of water at home, first time, you won't scold him. Second time, you won't scold him the third time, you will feel irritated, because you have to clean but here we will teach them how not to do that which you will not be able to teach somebody is you know, very sound piece of advice, I would say that Melbourne RG then managed to give my give my parents and they took to it.