It sounds minimal, but could you just maybe walk through that? Thanks. Look. There are, for the most part, on the big purchases, we are not seeing, I mean, it's like a point 5%, point 4%. And a big purchase is as an overall impact it doesn't have a huge impact. You know, T-shirts, we buy for our athletic events, which is, I mean, it's just these are de minimis numbers in terms of the Life Time's total revenue EBITDA. You are seeing some things, you know, coming in, like, 30, 40% higher. But those things don't just don't matter to us. And we're talking about buying, you know, $60,000, $200,000 worth of T-shirts. That we use for athletic events. So it's just not, we are not a company that is heavily impacted directly by these events. And there are all the type of things that we are doing on continuation of value in engineering, on how we designing our new prototypes that we have, a dozen of them, that we basically choose which one works in what market. We're continually working on having flexibility to be there use a steel or concrete when we build those. We have both types of plans. I mean, we are working to make sure we mitigate any of those impacts. And at this point, I can tell you we are super comfortable that we can bring in the new boxes in at or better prices than last year. Despite changes in that. Furthermore, this two-way street, if the economy does actually get a little more headwind, you hit recession, housing slows down, the contractors who basically before were like, this is the price, take it or leave it, I have too many jobs. They basically start begging for work. And then you can basically get them to do the work for 5% overhead and profit instead of 20% overhead and profit. So we can manage that. I don't believe we are in a position to worry about those type of things. And we just we are gonna continue to work on how to we basically mitigate any of those impacts. And as Erik said and I said, we have been anticipating for two years. We've been wrong. About the headwind. Sometimes we're gonna switch from tailwind to a headwind. And we've been preparing and preparing and preparing and preparing for what if we switch from sort of the tailwind economy to a tailwind economy? And our strategy is to win in either kind. Okay? And so based on our strong balance sheet, we just mentioned a $150 million of sale leaseback definite, you know, agreements to basically close by this year. But by this second quarter, by in the second quarter, debt levels are at a billion 5. Without that cash coming in, so our growth is going to be funded pretty much entirely with either proceeds for the taking the taking the money from sale leaseback and putting it right back into new builds. Or we just basically from the substantial free cash flow the company is generating on its own. So we feel like being in a super, super strong financial position allows us to basically negotiate better, get more deals, get better deals, you know, be the game changer for the residential buildings. So we feel like, you know, we are we are stacked correctly for any kind of a wind. Head or tail.