Hey guys. Um, so I am a podcast listener and I'm always a day behind but um, you guys were talking about speech therapy and tongue ties yesterday, and I'm just going to tell you that I've I want to say like 3 out of my 4 kids had tongue ties clipped like right at Birth. Um, the pediatrician comes in like after the baby's born like the next day they take a look they feel around under the tongue and if there's a tongue tie, they just clip it right there and it does help a lot with breastfeeding. I breastfed all of my kids. Um, and my my first kid had like really bad ties. She had 1 under her tongue that was clipped at Birth, but then they found out later that she had like posterior and anterior tongue ties and like they were lip ties and cheek ties and there's all kinds of different. Um oral ties that you can have and it can cause all different kinds of problems with nursing and speech later on even with how your teeth come in when your grown-up teeth come in when you're like a teenager or like a like a 12 year old or whatever. Um, So so that's the thing. Um, and then with speech therapy my 5-year-old boys typically have they have certain sounds that come later for them like the r sound sometimes. Um, my 5-year-old is going to be starting speech at school, um in the fall when he starts K5, they're going to have a speech therapist right there at his school for him. Just like you talked about Sean like you had to do when you were a kid and I can already tell my 3-year-old. I think he's going to probably need it too when he's a little older but they typically won't start speech for kids until they're about 5 years or 5 or 6 years old, um for boys, so, yep, that's definitely still a thing big business.