Look, I think office is a six letter curse word right now. And people just -- it's the new, the new thing to hate. If you go back, what, four years ago, it was strips centers. Everyone loves to hate office now and look and for good reason. But I think office is not one homogeneous bucket. And I think if people really dig into it, there are a lot of gradations to what you own in terms of office. If I had, you know, Class B multitenant, urban office, I would be swayed it, right, because I would have low vacancy high TI cost, and I would have properties that no one really wants. If I had Class A, major market, newer vintage office, I would be okay. Yes, you'll have some noise and things like that. But people that I think what I found and I think increasingly what I found is that like we have had a sort of seismic shift in how we think about Office, but I don't think office is obsolete. I think for me, I ran a company that has been sort of hybrid. We have our accounting staff works remotely. They've been remote since COVID. It works fine. They're certainly -- our accountants, they know what they need to do. They don't need to see some people every day and they communicate. The rest of us the real estate folks and the CFO and legal officer, we we've been in our office all the time. As we transition to Reno. Some of us got up here earlier, some of us are still coming. I found it hard. I think it's hard sometimes not to have people in office. So I think and you see increasing rhetoric, some of its, probably got some other motivations but ultimately, as a leader, it's hard to communicate with people sometimes with electronic devices and you want them to be little convenience, not every day, but often. So I think offices hole has some legs, I think it's going to shift. I think, if you go back just 20 years ago, McGuire properties was building a ton of stuff, because it was relatively new. And now we all hate it. And so it's -- I think there's a little bit of a fickleness in the market today. That being said, our office portfolio is very unique. We still have single tenant office buildings that were designed. So some of them are in market said, if you looked at it generically, like a multi-tenant office its they going back to no good, but it's germane to that tenant. Our walls are getting shorter. And that's partly for a couple of things. One is some of these people are not sure what they want to do, but to why they people go out and ask a tenant right now, to do a 20-year lease, they're going to rake you over the coals. So if I have three or four years left, I'll wait three or four years, because I think we're going to be in a better environment then. That said, I want to get rid of office, I didn't buy any of these office properties. I wouldn't buy office properties. I don't really like office properties. No offense to all the people who run them because they know how to do it. But it takes a real skill to run a multitenant office, a single tenant office doesn't. Historically REITs have just bought off the office because the yield play, it's a credit play, they never really thought about a lot of the other problems. So, our office assets in our OES lease is golden, I'm not in a rush to sell that I think we're going to -- I think that there's high property as the state will execute. Its purchase often. And then, that will be a self-liquidating vehicle, our Costco one, I don't even really think about it as an office, it was converted from flex to office to house Costco and Costco leads, we’re going to probably redevelop it, sell it or redevelop or JV with a redeveloper. I think there's upside there. But the rest of the stuff is not really super strategic to us. So we will get rid of it. I'd like to get rid of it. I can say its first, if I could. We're a cognizant of cap rates, I think you need to find the right buyers. We're seeing activity out there a little bit more than I would have thought it was dead in the fourth quarter. We didn't focus on it until now, it's because let's get the acquisitions done, let's get revenue generating properties in the door. And then we'll shift our focus. And there's only so many of us here who can do things, the Gap property that we've had under contract, it's an owner, occupant, owner user, they're getting SBA financing, it was taking a little bit longer for the banks, but they kept pony up money. So I mean, think about their $125,000 spent on this property, and it's not a big purchase price. So we're giving more time because what we're focused on acquisitions. They're willing to enter into a long term lease, but we just like it, let's just get it done and get it sold. We're now shifting our focus to these other assets, like I said, looking very creatively at ways to get it done. Confident we'll get it done. And, I'd like to be in a spot this time next year where we're not talking about office, leases, it relates to Modiv.