at this stage, and I'm just going to pull out some quotes very quickly. And this is. So again, looking at this, and so this is a review of what we've got so far, in regards to experiences. Now, something to think about what this stuff is. When was the one with the paid people interviewed? Who were they interviewed by? Because like, so if they're interviewed, and we've got this information in the study, right, we've got this information, okay. And most of the people are being interviewed eight months, one to five years, 18 months, 12 months, two to five years, five to six years, two to nine years. So the longest hair we have is 10 years and so there was a study here which was psychosocial social experiences following gastric bypass and it was C six months to 10 years out, and that was of 33 people, how many of those were 10? years out? Was it just one people? Was it all 33? People? You know, we we don't we don't have that right there, we could look into each study to find out. But you know, just like an overview, most of the people in this is looking at the all of the studies that this paper is looking at, are people who are short term. Also, who is doing the interviews, what methods are they using, because because of everything that we just spoke about the shame of, of the realities of living after surgery, if it's people from the team that did the procedure, I guess it would be more likely that they say, yeah, no, everything's great. Yeah, it's good, because good, versus a non, someone who's not biased in that way. So that's something to think about as well. The the quotes from this article, there's two things that two things that I've noticed is I've got medical issues now and it sucks. And the other one is, I'm thin now. And therefore, I'm in a privileged group. And life is easier because of that. So there's a lot of people who are not a lot this like, you know, don't want like 10 different quotes of people who say, I'm happy now, because people will talk to me, because I can get a day because people were not stigmatizing me because of my size. Which is, is that I mean, and that's great for that. That's great, right? We don't want anyone to have to experience those things. Is the solution to living in a fat phobic world to have surgery? Or is it to tackle the problem at the root of the problem? But here's the other thing. When is that going to happen? You know, you know, what is like changing people's belief systems and society and all the different ways that manufactured fatphobia manifests in the world that's going to take there's going to be beyond our lifetimes, right? And so are we saying to people, the best way to go about it is to change society not to go and have surgery. And some people are like, I, I can't wait for that to happen, because my life is shit right now. And I'm going to do anything I can to not to make it not shit. And that's valid. You know, what? I mean? Would you want to be waiting around your whole life for society to change, and, you know, society is going to change in our lifetimes. But you know, all the systemic things of, of, you know, when we look at things like, oh, women are going to be paid equally within the next 100 years. It's just those things. systemic things take a longer time. But the way that, you know, we think about, you know, sexism, even the way that we think about and we talk about women and gender roles, and patriarchy in the last 10 years is night and day, right. And so, there will be a lot of changes, then we have seen a lot of changes already