I really appreciate that question, actually. I mean, I can't get them all, but this one yes. I do. Because you noticed something that as we kind of looked at investor day and things like sometimes things just happen as you go through it and you don't quite notice them, and this is one of them. And, so here's my thought. First, the core logic was not we are going to like, we have leg 1, and now we're going to have leg 2. That sort of thing. It was that acquiring the CDB business at scale gave us the opportunity to grow our HSA business in 2 ways. One, by playing on more fields and two, by, that we weren't able to play on before and two, of course, by giving us clients to cross sell to. And all evidence is that that happened. And the easiest way to see that is that when you look at HSA at either gross HSA openings or net adds, whatever you want to look at, right, when you look at our sales numbers. Notwithstanding the fact that the HSA market is still growing by the same amount year-over-year instead of capturing roughly 20% of that growth as we were pre-wage. Right now we're capturing, and we'll see. I noticed that Devenir put out there. We're going to have our market announcement, like, 5 minutes before this earnings call. So, I'm guessing maybe they listen to the earnings call and they use some of this information and then in a couple of weeks, they have their thing. But they're wonderful people, and I shouldn't tease them that way. But let's say, from an account perspective, we're capturing a third of the market and maybe in the aggregate 30%. And so it works. That having been said, I think, what I would have did say at the time of transaction having at least some amount of expertise in that business was that the CDB business itself was extraordinarily steady. And it turned out it wasn't. And it wasn't primarily as a result of and I don't want to be cheeky about it. I mean, it's primarily as a result of I don't want to adopt responsibility, but it's primarily as a result of pandemic. And even at the outset of the pandemic, as you'll recall, we didn't anticipate the level of unsteadiness of that business. And so, obviously, there's a commuter component that people talk about. But in addition to that, there's the fact that the dependent care, which is part of the FSA piece, when you know, kind of disappeared for a while and is still well below its prior levels. And then, thanks to, some of the recovery legislation, we got this sort of brief, blip in COBRA that then went away. And then in addition to that, we've got the fact that the ACA marketplaces are subsidized and that subsidy appears like it's going to continue. And so actual COBRA uptake relative to which is a portion of COBRA revenues kind of came down. And so like that's a lot of movement that we were not anticipating having to deal with. And so as we look at it going forward, what we want to be doing, as I said in earlier answers, we want to be growing the CDB business. We want to be taking market share. And since the business as a whole is, I'm going to put commuter aside, whatever. Let's assume it's kind of where it is. But broadly speaking, it's only going to grow at the rate of workforce, which is like what percent. When we want to be growing at a crooked number, that means we're taking market share, right? And I think we're well positioned to do that. We have more scale than anyone else. We're actually investing in the product, because as a result of all of our investments, 2 examples being, we have and these are not future examples. They already happen. We are rolling out, we're in the mixed of rolling out what have been through, our chip cards and, like, people say, chip card, what's the big deal? Well, let's, so far, no one else has done something where we have a staff card that is also a chip card that will actually also be available on mobile wallet. What does that mean? It means that you can have 2 or 3 of our products on the same card, and there doesn't even have to be a card, right? Now it's also not easy, because it turns out that unlike regular chip cards, there's not as much standardization as the Mastercard and Visa people think there is out there in the retail world, and so there's some there's some bumpiness there. But it's a great product. Second example is through the use of AI. We've got to a place where you can take, as you saw at investor day, take a picture of a receipt from publics. You can have whatever on there. We can tell you what it is, and we can approve it right then. And that's the biggest pain point with the largest of the CDB products, which is the FSA. So, I think it's reasonable to believe that we can get to a place where we're at single-digit growth in that product. And so that's the plan. We'll also look, Stephanie, we will continue to look carefully at, what do we need to own, what do we not need to own. But it's always going to be in the context, at least as far as I'm concerned. It's going to be in the context of strengthening our core business. Everything we talked about at Investor Day in terms of new product, the health payment account product we talked about, which is a form of smoothing deductible costs for people who don't who do, but also don't have the benefits of HSAs. It's always going to be in service of two things. One is our core product, which is our custodial accounts and the second is the mission of helping people, helping empower consumers and in doing so and saving really saving and improving lives when we listen to what people say. So that being the case, that's how we, that's kind of the framework through which we look at it, and think that's a reasonable view of what you should be expecting from us over time. I would very much have expected to and like to have gotten to that place quicker than we have. It's easy for me to blame the pandemic, but we have some responsibility for that too, including myself.