Yeah. I think Carlo, thanks for the question. That's probably the question on everybody's mind. My guess is we're gonna get that question 30 iterations of that question today. But hopefully, I'll do a job of answering it. I have lived through a lot of cycles. I've been doing this for a long time. Approaching forty years. So we've lived through a lot of good times, lots of not so good times, and, you know, seeing lots of black swan events, you know, normal recessionary downturns and the like. And they're all sort of unique. I think what is going on today, you lift way above it, and again, I'm not trying to be a polyester. You asked me a question. I'm giving you my personal opinion. Which may or may not be right in the end. You good news is you'll get to judge me, you know, as every quarter plays out, but Right now, there's just so much going on, I live in DC. I live inside the Beltway, I'm talking to a lot of people on the hill and in the administration you know, to get a you know, as best I can a sense of what's going on. And I think it's fair to say there is a lot going on. And as a result, you it in the market reaction across both the equity markets, the bond markets and everything else. Consumer sentiment. There's just a fair amount of uncertainty. I would say based on lots of discussions and years of experience doing this that I think at the moment, did the risk in the marketplace is weighted too heavily to the downside. If I look at what's going on in our business, certainly, we have seen a modest step back in demand patterns, the moment, those seem to be relatively stable, which is why we gave the guidance and sort of suggested what we did at the midpoint, which is sort of what the midpoint is an expectation of things that the patterns we're seeing right now continue. I think, you know, there's a lot of seismic change that this, you know, administration here in The United States is trying to accomplish. You can't have you know, move that much cheese, so to speak, without rattling a lot of cages. That doesn't mean it necessarily you know, doesn't end up in a good place. My own view is when in the process of doing it, though, again, I think I think the market is sort of asymmetrically risk via take the risk of downside. I think it's a much more equally weighted risk. I'm an optimist by nature, so I'll fully declare. I would actually say I think the risk over intermediate to longer term is probably should be more weighted on the upside, but, you know, but let's just say, I think, you know, to be conservative, it's a much more equally weighted risk than what everybody is thinking and talking about today. Why do I think that? Again, I could be wrong, but I think if you really lift up and look at what's going on, you have you know, real progress being made. It's choppy, and it's there's a lot of noise, but, you know, the legislative process is grinding through. I think there is a very good probability that sometime this summer, you're going to see one big bill get done that's going to deal with a lot of the regulatory reform, energy, releasing the shackles from the energy industry, and for making permanent, you know, the 2017 tax cuts and also incrementally adding for certain folks, you know, no tax on tips, Social Security, you know, for the elderly, and a whole bunch of other things that are gonna be positive. I think there's a reasonable probability all that gets done. Obviously, what's rattled the markets, and I'm not an economist, so I can pontificate, and you guys on the call can judge for yourself. Know, what you know, there's lots of ways of doing things. This is the way they've chosen to do it. I think the desire is to ultimately end up with a fair deal with our biggest trading partners around the world. My own belief is that as the next as you're getting the legislative process done on, you know, the on the tax and regulatory and energy, you're going to see a bunch of these deals with some of our biggest trading partners come to fruition. Which is going to create maybe not perfect stability, a lot more stability, a lot more certainty of what the deals look like, what the future is. And I think that's not it's not crazy to think that all that starts to come together this summer. As a result, when you get to the second half of the year, you could be in a very different place. If you look underneath it all in terms of, like, what's really going on in employment, wage growth, and corporate America's balance sheet and profit, all of the underlying economy is still really strong. What's going on right now is this asymmetrical risk to the downside because of a high degree of uncertainty. My own belief is you will see some of that if not a lot of that uncertainty wane over the next couple of quarters. And that will allow the underlying strength of the economy to shine through again. That's why I know a lot of companies have not pulled guidance, and I'm not being critical when we talked about it, my view was very simple. We know more about our business than anybody else. I hope we do. And think we do. And I feel like we have an obligation even in uncertain times to give you a sense of the various outcomes that we think based on assumptions, which is why we gave you a range of zero to two and gave you the basis of assumptions. I believe that we've tried to be as scientific as we can. I feel very good about how we thought that. And the good news is we report every quarter, and we'll have next time we report, we'll have a quarter behind us, we'll have much better sight lines into how the second half of the year is developing. And we'll update you. But that's a long-winded way of saying having been around doing this a long time, anytime you have seismic change, I don't care what it is, like, whether it's black swan events of, nine eleven or the great recession, or COVID, obviously, is nothing like any of those, there's a reaction. My own experience says there's an overreaction. Right now, there's a lot of uncertainty. Think there's a bit of an overreaction to it, Again, I would say sort of reasonably conservatively, I think that it should be much more equally weighted than what we're experiencing today.