Yeah. I'm not trying to just, like, you what's the word? Like, polish this or a silver lining on it. But, like, the setbacks were also very informative, like, learning points to gain a lot of information. So I knew them some of my setbacks, but more as learning opportunities and forward progress on them. Just to recap, like, you know, we submitted our combined license application the first time around for a one and a half megawatt plan out of the Idaho site. This is 2020. Right? Pre this boom in AI data centers, all these customer dynamics, and much more focused on kind of a smaller incremental piece of reactor development and deployment. Our long-term road map was always to work our way up into the sizes we're at now. Just wanna start as small as we could to reduce the total amount of capital to get built and still have a viable market. Which really works well. We've thought at that time, at that size, well, the market evolved and moved, which was good, and it's nice because we would you know, it would have been would have been the best thing for us to build a one and a half megawatt plan given where the market is today had that license progressed. But also, we took a very forward-leaning licensing approach. And, you know, she had worked with us in pre-application for four years leading up to submitting that application, including us piloting an application with them. That was very novel instruction. Structure in 2018. And that was pretty important because we wanted to try to set up a new framework and a new approach on sort of what a license application would look like. I think the tendency in if we try to license these new reactor types like large conventional light water reactors, it just doesn't really make sense. A lot of square peg round hole there's a lot of ways you need to do things differently. And so we lean into that pretty heavily, and if you lean back into that heavily, and the after they did it around of audits on our applicator, you know, pilot application in 2018 and 2019, they gave us a clear feedback there's clear feedback that they could review an application that looked like that. They gave some feedback about how to approach framing and scoping it and also took it to okay. You know, more or less, if you come in or something like that, we could find a password to do that. And just to put the numbers on it, we went in with an application that was very, very forward-leaning. Right? Very innovative. It was like, seven major sections rather than the nineteen typical chapters. It was only less than six hundred pages compared to ten of thousands, like, ten to twenty thousand pages. Very different, much more lightweight approach. In parallel to that, the NRC was doing some new things that was pretty cool. And so we were pretty excited about what they were doing. In terms of highlighting a very audit-heavy review focus rather than kind of a written question and answer approach. I mean, they're gonna do both, but do a lot more on the audits, which are much more intensive, by the way, but they move faster. Much more productive for us and for the regulators. Additionally, and that was all based on in-person audits. Right? Then additionally, they wanted to move forward just kind of doing some cool, like, you know, core team, cross-functional review team that was working together in person not in the sort of departmental technical silos that they typically would sit in. Where an application would come in and get shotgunned out, whether they would all be together across different subject matters and working together to kind of develop out their independent safety analysis review and move forward. On top of that, you know, we told them, hey. We're gonna come in, you know, very forward-leaning. We're gonna come in with a we think is a justifiable and defensible approach, but it's going to inherently be different than what we've seen before. So a very, you know, I would say optimized safety footprint and how we classified what things were safety-related and not. So it was, you know, it's very modern frankly. All that I think was great, going in 2019 and early 2020, and, unfortunately, for much bigger reasons than our application, but obviously, the world changed very substantially in March of 2020, which is when we submitted the application, literally on the day the pandemic was declared. And that completely shifted the review dynamic that we were no longer doing these in-person things. We weren't doing the same approach that we built our application for. You know, as far as we knew and we were told by the NRC at that time, we submitted the first application that had ever been submitted online. Know, and we never verified and validated that through the whole change, but I think that's pretty true. And that was in 2020. Right? It just shows you that we were really doing some new things, and they were really responding to. Ultimately, think it was all too much during an era of COVID. And that's where we got setback considerably on, I think, sort of the, okay. We can't review the application that's submitted. Given all these things. So they denied it in January two, you know, two thousand twenty-two. After, you know, a couple of months later, we're able to engage again in person with them, immediately got back into pre-application. Obviously, we updated the design to be bigger because the market had moved on us that way. We already been talking about that with the NRC, and so that gave us the platform to do that. Move fully into that, and then take an approach that allowed us to focus on sort of resolving an the open items that the NRC wanted, which mostly turned into, hey. How did you do this? What was your methodology? And then bridging our approach and how we did it sort of what they're used to seeing and, you know, what they were comfortable with. What we found was a little more time on that, you gotta burn a lot more sort of comfortable with the different approaches being taken and saying, oh, actually, you did things. It was just done in a way we're different from seeing it. But now spending time together, we see that it's done in a way that we're kinda used to. Maybe some extra, you know, then, you know, approaches on, like, if you can help answer questions that we have in these areas, that will help us progress a review, for example. You have many, many meetings that then happen from April 2022 through now sort of converge on this, to put draft out content of theapplication together, to submit different technical reports, and have meetings and have reviews on that or white papers, I should say, and then also have the topical reports coming out and then moving into readiness assessment. It gives us the chance to then move forward on all these things in time. Since when we first submitted through now and time is looking at these things, as well as how we're using them and implementing them, has actually grown a lot more convergence on the doability of some of the things we were intending to do. Obviously, there's some updates into modernization, but the lessons learned have been massive because we spent time to actually now go through those things and try to do them. A key thing that was different for us compared to other companies is we leaned into that opportunity back at the very beginning of our engagement with NRC to try to do things in an efficient way as we could see possible. And we got some bumps and bruises and scratches and all of that and black eyes accordingly. But guess what? Look at how things have progressed accordingly. And a lot of that stuff and then they're not gonna mix, but builds off of some of the things we forward. Like, some stuff we tried and put forward, maybe a bit too different or too much, so it's kinda changed. But a lot of things are finding a lot of footing in the different things the NRC has done. The last, frankly, right, almost nine years since we started working with them. Not because it's like, oh, we did all these things with our credit is. It's more, hey. We're trying to do something differently, and then others are echoing that with some time in it. And we were obviously ahead of the pack. And so as others start kind of digging in and developing their own plans in the space, then they actually look at it. It kind of all comes together in a constructive way to say, okay. Yeah. We could do something in this way more efficient and right-sized. Then you couple that with the current environment that's gone from several administrations excessively of trying to drive forward a more modernized regulatory framework and approach, to reflect these kinds of capabilities and these changes. You know, it's pretty exciting, honestly. So at the end of the day, like, you know, we've applied a lot of lessons learned. We've done a lot. Obviously, we've grown the team, hired a lot of good folks to come in and help us do this. But a lot of the things that we put forward are also finding kind of footing with some updates and tweaks with iterations on them that can, you know, can come together over the last couple of years. These things don't move super quickly, but we've invested the longest amount of time of anybody to get to the state. So we're in a really good position to go forward into seeing and the next steps thereafter. So, you know, obviously, there's a lot more work to do. But, you know, we've been very excited about how the NRC has done things. How we've been doing things. The feedback we've done has been helpful and constructive here. You know, there's some things we've kind of evolved our course on. There's things that I think NRC has as well, but at the end of the day, it's coming together to set the stage for review unless they have license and issued things for other advanced reactor types. Which are pretty important. Granted, the construction permits, or design certifications, and those aren't the same as a COLA, but all that builds on itself so that when we go in with the COL application, there's a lot that we get to stand on, and they get to stand off from a success perspective. So that's my really long answer, but it's been a journey and one that I will continue to.