Yes, I think that when you are in such a low place in your life, sometimes you cannot see the way out. You know that it's almost impossible. You know the statistic that so little portion of the addicts can get can get clean, and you know that you suffer from such a big, such a severe anxiety and panic attacks. So I think that when he sees this movie, this video of Uri Geller. It's like a rope for him, a rope to get out of his situation in some kind of a miracle way. He thinks that, you know, Uri Geller was, by the way, he was a paratrooper in the army, and he was in the 70s, I think, the only mentalist in the world back then, or the most famous one, and org girl and Geller, Our protagonist is seeing a very old movie video in one of his teammates phone, and he downloads it, and then he has a fixation of some kind of obsessive thinking that is in such a deep shit that the only way to get out of it would be if he will be able to bend spoons like Uri Geller, because then he will be some kind of half god. And when you are half god, you can overcome your you know, overcome your addiction. You can overcome your illness. So I was very fascinated by this. So the way I write my my novels in the past, and the novels I'm writing, and the new novel that that we are working on now that will be also published in New York in 2000 in 26 the way I write my novels is that actually they take they They take over a little bit. They control me. Okay, so I was asked why I use suspense in the book. Okay, that always the reader want to know why, who is the murderer or why? What will happen with Doris and Geller? What happened if Doris comes to visit Geller, and will she be safe, etc, so, and I said that I'm not using a technique of suspense, but I'm really suspend myself. I'm I'm asking the question, you know, I'm intrigued by the question of what will happen with the character. And when I'm when I thought about Geller, I thought, you know, what can happen with Geller? What can help? What can really help Geller? And for a second, I thought, you know, maybe you would bend the spoon. Okay, maybe it will happen, and he will and and when I'm when I'm writing a novel, so I'm, I'm asking, like the character are asking me the questions, and I'm asking myself, Okay, let's try to see where, where you know, despite the character, want to know what happened, so I'll try to and I want to know it myself. So I think picking up Uri Geller was some kind of something that was in triggering for myself. And will Geller, the protagonist, really be able to overcome his PTSD by bending a spoon at the end. I won't tell the readers, but you know, so it was something that I thought was very special way of giving Geller some hope, although we all know that in reality, you need to climb the mountain step by step, and it's very hard and not always very successful. It was very important for me to give Geller another character that would move the plot and that would symbolize a lot of things. And I think a dog was, it was very organically in my head, because dogs are being, you know, we precept them as as people's best friends. And, you know, they use some dogs in the army as well. So it was, I think, something very natural for me. And later dog became I added more and more layers to his character and to and actually was splitted to the dog in Gaza and to the dog which Geller meets.