Yep. Great question. And, obviously, probably what's the number one thing on everybody's mind. So a lot of this I covered on our last call and as I've talked to individual investors, you know, have shared these thoughts. But you know, if you think back about what I said, you know, on the third quarter call, I was reasonably optimistic about '25, you know, being a decent year, but '26 and, frankly, beyond, you know, at least for the next couple years. Being better. And my underpinning of that, which you know, I still believe is that you have some macro forces and some micro forces that are converging in a really positive way. Number one, being, you know, inflation does structurally continue to come down. If you really factored for the lag effect of the housing input, is over 30% of the contribution to the inflation numbers and you factor for what it is real time, would argue it's actually lower than, you know, than is being reported. So that's a good trend. What does that mean? That means expectation which I believe that rates will continue to come down, which will be stimulative and positive in a bunch of ways. You see it this week and broadly, you know, you're in, you know, a very big deregulatory environment under, you know, in The United States under this administration, which is obviously I think, real positive in a bunch of different ways, whether that's financial services, energy, AI, you know, basic and infrastructure, reshoring, you know, there is a massive amount of that is going on. You have fixed tax policy that got done last year that is just you know, that is super business favorable and investment favorable and, you know, you expect to see that start to benefit. And then a massive investment cycle, the obvious being like the AI complex, just the major tech companies in the last two weeks alone, I think, when I finished adding it up, they are going to spend this year $700 billion. So let's just say there's gonna be a lot more than a trillion dollars spent on that. In you know, by that complex all of the energy that goes along with it, all you know, everything around the AI complex, I think, is huge. But then the other things going on more quietly are reshoring, whether that's in rare earth minerals and pharma, chips, all of that stuff is going on. I mean, the chips act that got passed during the Biden administration, very little of that money has been spent. And then you have core infrastructure where we approve, you know, congress approved $1.6 trillion when you add up all the pieces. Again, a very small part of which has been invested at this point. When I talked in the third quarter, I said like, intellectually, it's really hard for me not to be you know, when I lift up above the noise of day to day politics to not feel like those things are gonna be really good for the economy and it's undeniable. But at the same time, I said, you know, I don't know exactly when it's gonna come, And at that point, we were not seeing a whole lot of evidence that that that was sort of seeping into the economy. Although I was very confident, as you remember, that that it would. By the way, the other thing going on is we're at the beginning of one of the greatest productivity booms in American history with the, you know, the whole AI Once those investments get done and over the next several years of adoption, you have massive opportunities on productivity. My belief then and now was that we will have economic growth picking up, and most importantly, because it impacts our business, that it would be broader based economic growth. It would not be as much this K economy where the very high end, the very wealthy keep doing well, and the middle class and below continue to struggle to pay for groceries and gas and their utilities. But that you would start to ultimately because the middle class has to be involved to make all this happen, particularly the investment side that you would start to enter a world where you would see middle class real wage growth. By the way, I think right now, you're starting to see the first prints of middle class real wage growth. That means people have more disposable income, and they will be spending more money including on our products. When you really get down to it, the bulk of our system, I think everybody's system is more concentrated because the middle class is the biggest percentage of the population in the mid market. And so, That's what I thought last quarter That's what I think now. The only difference I would say, is that we're starting to see it. Now I'm gonna be really honest. That and it's obvious, so I should be honest, is the data set that I'm looking at are not you know, months and months, quarters and quarters. What I'm really looking at as I said a little bit, when we talked about December is the end of the year got got a lot better than we thought. Even with the storms, the beginning of this year has been better. And it's been better in the ways we'd want to see it. What does that mean? That means midscale, upper mid scale, You know, it means midweek, it needs it means business transient to your question, Shaun, we're seeing a meaningful change from what we were seeing earlier in the fourth quarter and certainly in the third quarter. Whether that's sustainable or not, I don't know. But it feels to me if all the other macro conditions that I was talking about, if those continue to develop it sort of has to be the beginning of a trend. By the way, the other thing it's not macro, it's micro, but I said micros, we have a bunch of like, benefits this year, which you guys are aware of. Number one, the comps is said, are easier because I mean, you could have other things happen, but liberation day was a pretty big deal and the biggest government shutdown in American history was a pretty big deal. You hopefully don't repeat those at that, you know, at that scale. And we have a bunch of unique events, which you're well aware of, with the World Cup, America's 250, that are really stimulative to travel at the same time all these other things are going on. And so you know, I you know, yes, I have you know, we're at the beginning, I think of a trend. We have to get more data, you know, and, like, see it really sort of continue. But I I like what I'm seeing right now. And and as a result, you saw in our guidance that we think that 26%, as I had thought last quarter, will be a lot better than than 25. And I think we have very solid underpinnings to back that up. In the first quarter, by the way, in the guidance we're giving, super solid. At this point, we're halfway through the quarter. We have very very good sight lines into the rest of February and even into March, and it feels that it feels good in all the ways I just described. So that's the reason for my increased optimism is data. That I'm actually able to see data that says what I hoped and thought would happen is starting to happen and hopefully is sustainable.