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From YouTube: TEC Psychology Research #6
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A
A
B
A
Well,
it
was
just
me
and
anna
because
nobody
else
seemed
interested
in
doing
the
hard
work.
People
was
just
throwing
ideas.
B
I
wasn't
tracking
that
that's
something
I
can
help
with.
I
have
a
whole
angle.
I'm
approaching
this,
where
the
population
I
believe,
is
increasingly
autistic
and
we're
not
given
tools
to
diagnose
and
other
people
are
not
given
tools
to
diagnosis
either.
That's
like
something
that
I'm
already
researching
and
trying
to
like.
A
Well,
actually,
durga
does
send
me
a
lot
of
information.
He
was
the
one
that
like
he,
he
really
put
a
lot
of
links
to
me.
He
he
I
I
need
to
give
him
the
credit
for
that.
He
gave
me
a
lot
of
information
to
go
through,
but
he
was
the
only
one
to
like.
A
But
it's
fine
too.
We
knew
that,
like
this
research
is
more
like
how
work
like
handwork
kind
of
thing.
A
A
B
Do
we
want
to
be
bringing
in
psychology
like
psychologists
like
psychology,
or
do
we
want
to
be
empowering
people
with,
like
the
emotional
social
relational
tools
that
we
like
don't
have
developed
that
like
push
people
towards
needing
therapy
like?
Is
this
about
bringing
more
psychology
and
potential
pathologizing
into
the
space
or
raising
people's
social
and
emotional
awareness
so
that
they
learn
how
to
co-regulate
with
one
another?
And
our
emotions
are
less
outsourced
to
like
medical?
B
A
Yeah,
I
think,
like
the
idea
is
to
bring
more
psychologists
to
web3
to
have
more
people
that
can
come
to
their
space
and
have
more
resources
where
people
can
go
to
and
feel
safe
about
talk
about
their
personal
lives
and
also
bring
more
awareness
of
yeah
about
these
other
things
that
you
were
talking
about.
That,
like
you,
know
self
observers
and
like
more
content
about
psychology.
C
C
B
Okay
from
all
modalities,
I
think-
and
it's
like
yeah
just
noticing
that
people
need
like
different
things
to
heal
and
different
things
to
feel
safe
and
different
kinds
of
people.
To
talk
to.
I
guess
it's
making
me
feel
like
it's
a
narrowed
search,
searching
for
psychologists,
bringing
psychologists
to
the
web,
like
that
feels
like
a
pocket,
and
it
feels
like
narrow.
I
guess
my
brain's
having
a
hard
time
with
it
like.
B
D
A
A
A
B
Yeah,
when
I
was
thinking
about
like
links
to
provide
and
things
that
was
also
like
yeah,
what's
my
intention
here,
like
what
sort
of
resources
are
we
looking
for.
B
A
part
of
what
I
do
on
my
side
quest
is
the
authentic
relating
piece
and
it's
trying
to
give
people
in
society
the
social
and
emotional
tools
to
talk
about
their
feelings,
because
I
think
that's
like
where,
where
we
lost
lost
our
way
in
our
youth,
especially
like
boys
not
being
allowed
to
talk
about
their
feelings,
then
we
wonder
why
I
like
there's
so
much
violence,
yeah,
so
yeah.
I
just.
B
A
So
technology
information
is
the
most
close
that
we
could
get
so
we're
looking
for
keywords,
so
mental
health
on
technology,
information,
workspace,
implementing
psychology
organizations,
remote
work,
burnout,
fleet
deprivation,
social
psychology
in
dallas
and
social
psychology
endows.
We
would
look
in
medium,
twitter,
gitcoin,
website,
harmony
website,
and
things
like
that.
A
So
I
think
now
I
understand
better
what
what
like
my
impression,
was
of
like
what
things
to
bring
and
what
links
to
give
so
yeah.
So
it's
it's!
It's
like.
A
B
A
Yeah
it's
more
like
now
like
in
last
next
week,
will
be
the
last
week
that
we
are
trying
to
close
up
all
the
articles
that
we're
gonna
look
for
to
finish
and
start
start
building.
The
survey.
B
B
I
ran
into
a
lot
of
pathology
and
like
parental
and
doctor
pathology
around
adhd
and
stuff
like
trying
to
unpack
my
own
neurodiversity,
and
it
wasn't
until
I
heard
the
voices
of
other
people
who
actually
had
the
things
that
could
speak
to
the
experiences
they
go
into
places
and
share
their
story
and
people
like
yeah.
I
don't
think
that's
what
you
have
and
then
you
read
about
it.
You're
like.
Oh,
my
god,
that's
what
I
have
too
it's
like
cool
great
people
are
talking.
B
I
did
I
put
it
in
the
gravity
channel
this
this
scene
and
it's
interesting
when
I
share
it
with
people
like
internationally.
One
of
the
first
things
I
have
to
like
you
know
I
say,
is
I'm
like
hey
this.
B
B
It's
just
these
strange
attachments
we
have,
and
even
when
you
learn
about
attachment
theory,
you
kind
of
learn
it
if
you
learn
it
through,
like
the
medical
industry,
you
learn
about
very
specific
avenues
about
attachment
and
they
kind
of
talk
about
attachment,
as
this
is
what
happens
when
you
have
like
messed
up
relationships
with
your
caregivers,
but
it's
very
rare
that
you
find
them
talking
about
the
attachments
that
you
develop
from
your
friendships
in
school
that,
like
friend,
that
you
had
that
like
took
advantage
of
you
all
through
elementary
school.
B
It's
like
it's,
not
just
our
parents
and
it's
not
just
in
our
youth.
Our
attachments
evolve
between
partners
between
relationships
and
we
don't
typically
stay
in
one
island.
We
float
around
between
the
different
attachment
styles,
based
on
where
our
needs
are
at
the
time
that
blew
my
mind
stuff,
like
this
blows
my
mind,
because
it
actually
allows
you
to
like
do
something
with
yourself
afterwards,.
A
That's
very
interesting
because,
like
through
all
those
attachments,
actually
of
course,
you're
building
your
personality
and
through
those
attachments,
it
becomes
the
relationships
that
you're
gonna
build
and
the
relationship
to
yourself.
C
A
Human
history,
like
his
ancestral,
his
biologies,
and
all
that
his
family
and
culture
history
like
where
you're
born
in
your
family
in
your
own
history,
like
things
that
you
go
through
yourself,
because
even
though
you
can
be
tweens,
but
your
tween
went
through
something
that
was
different
like
he
captured
something
different
than
you
did.
So
that
reflected
him
different
than
did
in
you.
So
he
got
a
different
live
history
than
you
did.
So
it's
that,
like
three
history.
So
that's
very
interesting
that,
like
to
put
that
way,
those
attachments.
B
Yeah
this
book
locked
unlocked
that
for
me,
because
I
get
frustrated
when
I
read
books,
I
never
had
word
for
it.
I
used
to
obsess
over
psychology
books,
I
didn't
know.
I
was
autistic
and
I
was
very
curious
about
people
and
behavior.
So
I've
kind
of
obsessed
over
this,
like
my
whole
life,
not
really
knowing
and
then
in
my
like
mid-30s,
I
was
like
oh
light
bulb.
No
wonder
why
you're
obsessed
with
this
crap
by
default,
don't
understand
things
so
you're
aggressively
out
of
survival
mode,
trying
to
figure
out
how
things
work
and
like
that's.
B
This
gave
me
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
tools
at
breaking
down
the
own
binaries
that
I
had
in
my
head,
because
I'm
I'm
aggressively
trying
to
find
my
blind
spots
and
rid
them
to
be
more
aware.
More
aware
means
more
mental
wellness,
but
also
more
overwhelm
at
like
the
realities
of
the
world
and
the
heaviness
of
it,
but
yeah
yeah
kind
of
obsession
of
mine.
A
Well,
I'm
sorry,
if
I'm
being
much,
but
how
do
you
discover
that
you
were
autistic.
B
Yeah,
no,
I'm
not.
I
can
answer
any
question
about
mental
health.
I
literally
have
self-diagnosed
and
wrote
my
whole
entire,
like
diagnosis
out
and
published
it
on
the
web
and
like
gave
tons
of
examples
of
how
things
manifest
for
me
for
other
people,
not
afraid
of
this
self-diagnosed
yeah
I've
I've
I've
tried
going
through
places.
My
last
time
I
was
in
a
place,
I
had
a
breakdown
and
I
said
I
was
crying
and
I
was
like.
Why
don't
you
think?
I'm
autistic
and
the
lady
was
just
like.
B
C
Yeah,
how
did
you
discover
that
you
were
autistic.
B
Thank
you.
I
had
a
partner
at
the
time
a
few
years
ago
and
I
remember
saying
yeah.
Well,
I'm
pretty
sure
I'm
on
the
spectrum,
I
just
don't
understand
it
and
my
partner
was
like
I
don't
think
you're
on
the
spectrum
and
I
was
just
kind
of
like
it
was
the
first
time
that
they
ever
said
something
where
they
invalidated
my
experience
and
even
though
I
didn't
really
have
words
for
like
what
my
experience
was.
B
I
had
a
feeling
I
was
on
the
spectrum
somehow,
but
I
didn't
know
enough
about
the
spectrum,
but
I
understood
that
my
behavior
might
have
put
me
on
there
for
certain
reasons,
and
they
said
that
and
then
they
felt
like
crap
afterwards
and
they
went,
and
they
spoke
to
this
autistic
gentleman
who
sends
them
messages
when
he
gets
long-winded
messages
from
people.
He
sent
it
to
my
ex
and
he
would
be
like
this
is
what
I
read,
and
this
is
what
I
interpreted.
B
B
No,
that
was
like
kind
of
the
shittiest
thing
you
could
possibly
say,
and
he
gave
her
a
bunch
of
zines
and
he
gave
me
he
gave
me
the
zine
that
broke
down
comorbidities
and
it
showed
me
it
showed
me
the
way
that
the
dsm
is
separated
like
it
basically
put
it
back
together.
B
Somebody
figured
out
the
way
that
the
autism
spectrum
has
been
fractalized
in
the
dsm
and
like
spread
out
throughout
the
book
to
where
it's
like
doctors
get
to
like
kind
of
like
choose
your
own
adventure,
where
based
off
of
all
the
insight
that
they're
holding
they
get
to
like
try
to
figure
out
what
those
things
could
possibly
be
find
the
right
bucket
to
put
the
ball
in,
but
neurodiversity
is
actually
like,
pretty
obvious
how
it's
broken
down.
B
It's
broken
down
to
like
learning,
disabilities
and
psychological
and
I'm
forgetting
the
topics
off
top
of
my
head.
I
can
run
and
grab
the
thing,
but
it
was
from
it
was
from
that
and
then
it
was
from
reading
this.
B
Yeah
I
was,
I
was
reading
a
zine.
I
was
like
I
was
kind
of
unpacking
by
like
rabbit
hole.
Reading
after
I
started
to
like
realize
that
I
was
on
the
spectrum,
then
I
was
like
trying
to
figure
out
what
exactly
the
spectrum
was.
C
B
Yep
and
then
I
and
then
I
ran
into
all
the
like,
I
ran
into
all
the
all
the
things
that
all
the
waves
that
happened,
there's
like
the
imposter
syndrome
is
like
a
wave
because
there
isn't
like
proper
ways
in
our
society
to
like
share
how
how
people
are.
This
is
a
document
that
I
put
together
from.
B
I
found
this
checklist
that
frustrated
me
pretty
early
on
and
since
then
I
have
to
like
find
the
other
one
that
I
have
but
I
took,
and
I
made
this
gender
neutral,
because
I've
sat
down
with
at
least
20
men
and
they've,
looked
at
this
female
asperger's,
worksheet
thing
and
with
me
using
like
a
neutral
language,
as
I
read
through
it
and
express
it
to
like
people,
I've
had
people
of
any
gender
identify
themselves
off
of
this
as
like
yeah,
that's
ringing
a
lot
of
bells
for
me,
and
I
noticed
that
when
I,
when
I
would
read
things
about
neurodiversity,
there's
like
there's
something
about
normalness,
that
I
can't
quite
put
my
finger
on.
B
That's
like
deeply
ingrained
and
it's
just
a
nuance,
and
it
does
this
thing
where
it
takes
me
a
while
to
recognize
some
of
the
things
like.
I
would
read
stuff
and
I'd,
be
like
that's,
not
me,
and
then
a
few
months
later,
I'm
like
holy.
I
do
this,
but
it
like
manifests
this
way
like
I
just
couldn't
see
how
I
did
the
thing.
A
That's
that's!
So
that's
a
like
for
me.
It's
it
amazes
me
because
studying
psychology
for
five
years
now
I
have
amazing
teachers
and
since
the
the
day
one
that
I've
been
in
psychology,
we've
been
in
practice
all
the
time.
So
I've
been
in
schools,
I've
been
in
hospitals,
I've
been
in
clinics,
I've
been
like
talking
to
people,
I've
been
talking
to
homeless.
A
I've
been
in
a
lot
of
different
areas
practicing
because
my
college
is
a
reference
in
brazil
when
it
comes
to
psychology,
because
we
are
we're
very
what
we
say,
humanistic
and
it's
different,
because
we
treat
people
as
human
beings
right
and
it's
so
different.
When
we
see
psychology
in
us
because.
C
E
A
Rates
me,
the
psychology
that
comes
from
us
and,
like
all
the
experiences
that
I
hear
from
people
that
were
in
therapy
in
america
and
were
in
the
counselor
or
weren't
these,
and
that
and
even
here
in
tc,
where
I
heard
people
saying
like.
Oh,
but
we
don't
need,
we
don't
need
people
with
a
degree
here.
And
it's
like
so
frustrating
for
me
because.
B
A
B
I
started
with
I'm
in
the
united
states.
That's
why
I
started
with
that
because
I
was
like
I
was
trying
to
name.
I
don't
think
I
did
a
good
job,
but
like
we
have
a
lot
of
medical
trauma,
even
if
we
don't
know
how
to
talk
about
it
and
so
like
it's
like
I'm,
yes,
yes,
yes
to
mental
health
and
whatever
and
then
yeah
I
will
like
get
prickly
about
like
bringing
in
subject
matter.
Experts
like
especially
within
the
us,
because
they're
not
subject
matter,
experts.
A
No,
we
do
it
for
free
here,
healthy
health
resource
in
brazil
are
for
free,
so
we
are
really
we
really
care
about
people
that
we
are
treating.
A
B
B
Yo
I'm
a
cheerleader
for
morgan.
I
I've
been
in
community
with
them
for
a
few
years
and
like
not
really
known
them,
and
in
this
pandemic
we
were
kind
of
like
hey.
What's
your
story
and
then
we
started
working
together
and
it's
like
we
finish
each
other's
senses.
They
help
me
with
my
adhd
because
I'm
always
forgetting
like,
as
I'm
speaking
I'll,
get
really
excited
and
I'll
totally
drop
the
thing,
I'm
thinking
and
then
they
help
me
and
I'm
like.
Yes,.
A
B
A
But
yeah
so
that's
kind
of
like
a
little
bit
also
what
I
want
to
do
with
the
research.
It's
bring
that
like
self-awareners
around,
but
here
is
more
focusing
in
work
like
to
be
like
we,
we
do
work
here,
but
at
the
same
time,
how
can
we
separate
personal
work
to
work
hours.
B
Yo
we
always
talk
about
how
important
the
work
is.
That
should
be
like
a
dedicated
thing.
Could
you
imagine
like
on
daydreaming
now?
Could
you
imagine
just
like
a
future
where
you
know,
there's
like
I
like
to
imagine
that
I'll
have
I'll
have
seasons
I'll
know
what
I
want
to
be
doing
seasonally
my
future
is
dreamy.
It's
got
like
it's
got
where
I
acknowledge
that
I
like
to
work.
I
learn,
and
so
I
have
like
this
like
winter
thing
that
happens,
I'm
trying
to
figure
out
these
rituals,
where
it's
like
in
the
winter
season.
B
And
then
the
following
month
is
like
integrating
it,
putting
it
into
practice
and
then
etc.
I
keep
thinking
about
how
to
how
to
create
a
future
where
we
are
because
I'm
trying
to
get
more
in
touch
with
my
like
indigenous
parts
and
understanding
that
I
got
landlocked
by
our
culture
to
where
we
like
stay
in
one
place
and
don't
go
anywhere.
B
C
B
To
kind
of
reset
those
like
natural
human
mammal
cycles,
I'm
trying
to
figure
out
how
I,
how
I
work
and
learn
and
retain
and
hibernate
like
I'm
thinking
about,
like
those
mental
seasons
of
like
doing
and
winding
down
and
integrating
and
so
yeah.
Just
in
the
moment,
I
was
like
you
and
you
said:
do
the
work.
I
was
like
yeah
what,
if
what,
if
your
job
right,
the
future
of
work,
the
gig
economy?
B
What
if
the
future
of
work
like
part
of
that
is
like
there
are
hours
reserved
for
like
reflection
or
connection
around
quote,
unquote
the
work,
the
unpacking
that
we
we.
E
B
It
could
be
neat
to
make
a
toolbox
because,
like
I
know
that
the
reason
why
I
went
to
the
reason
why
I
went
to
therapy
in
the
first
place
wasn't
because
I
thought
that
they
were
gonna.
Tell
me
anything
about
myself.
It's
because
I
knew
that
in
the
united
states
actual
resources,
the
tools,
the
techniques
to
tell
people
the
to
try
is
all
gate
kept
behind
these
things.
B
So
I
didn't
legit
even
know
how
to
like
get
grounded
in
my
body
when
I
first
started
doing
these
things,
you
know
how
they
say
like
look
around
the
room
and
like
look
at
certain
things
or
sniff,
something
or
x,
y
and
z,
like
I
had
no
tools
and
I
feel
like
they're,
all
gate
kept,
there's
all
kinds
of
like
methods
and
techniques
for
like
being
well,
but
we
actually
like
have
to
pay
a
whole
lot
of
money
to
even
like
figure
out
what
those
are.
B
So
I
think
a
neat
thing
would
be
creating
a
a
toolbox
of
resources.
You
know
how
you
have
like
maslov's
hierarchy
of
needs
is
like
a
reflection
tool
to
kind
of
like
visualize
and
see
what
you're
like
needs
could
be
things
like
that,
but
having
a
having
kind
of
like
how
the
library
does
at
omega
having
something
similar.
That's
like
specific,
like
tools
that
allow
people's
like
own
brains
to
unpack
things
just
like,
because
human.
B
A
Yeah,
that
was
my
idea
in
my
first
presentation,
and
I
don't
know
if
you
remember
where
I
put
up
the
tools
that
like
we
could
use
that,
like
we
could
say
like
in
the
beginning
of
the
week
or
like
at
the
end
of
the
week
like
how
do
you
feel
well
like
something
that
it's
also
private,
that's
like
just
selected
people
would
have
access
to
it.
A
So
we
know
that,
like
everything
that
you
say,
it's
gonna
be
confidential
right,
so
you
can
be
totally
honest
on
that
form
form
or
like
whatever
two
it
is.
Let's
say
it's
like.
So
how
are
you
feeling
super
honest
like?
Oh,
I'm
feeling
good?
Oh
I'm
feeling
I'm
feeling
like
crap,
I'm
feeling
super
stressed.
Oh
I'm.
I
feel
that
I
have
a
conflict
with
this
person
or
I
feel
that
I
wasn't
hurt
like
things
that
you
can
point
out
and
also
things
that
you
can
write
down
specific
right.
A
Either
the
beginning
of
the
week
or
the
end
of
the
week,
or
both
and
also
tools
that
will
be
like
the
hours
like
within
hours
that
people
will
be
online
available
for
something
that
you
demand,
or
you
can
schedule
time.
That's
my
idea
to
bring
psychologists
to
up
to
and
what
three
that,
like.
You
can
schedule
time
to
talk
to
someone
to
say
like.
E
A
B
B
That's
a
lot
because,
when
you're,
when
your
body
changes
when
you
change
the
way,
you
look
actually
changes
your
social
identity
shifts
people
perceive
you
and
treat
you
differently
based
on
the
way
you
look,
so
that
can
be
deregulating
too
to
be
the
same
person
but
treated
differently.
B
A
Yeah,
it
was
really
a
lot
that
changed
and
then,
like
I
got
tattoos,
I
never
had
tattoos
and
now
my
body's
full
up
with
tattoos,
so
I'm
totally
different.
I
used
to
wear
my
hair
straight
now.
I
went
back
to
curl
and
that
I
didn't
know
my
hair
was
curly,
so
I
just
let
it
grow
as
it
was,
and
now
I
use
the
curly
hair.
A
D
B
B
Bianca
something
I'm
thinking
about
is
you're
talking
about,
like
you
know,
in
the
beginning
of
the
week,
at
the
end
of
the
week,
and
I'm
thinking
of
the
things
that
I
already
do,
maybe
even
to
help
people
two
things
is
something
I
always
check
is
my
withholdings
and
that's
that's
any
conversation
I
haven't
had
with
somebody
yet
like
any
feelings
that
I'm
feeling
that
I
have
yet
to
express
that
could
be
an
area
for
a
human
being
to
unpack.
B
There's
like
potentially
self-worth
hiding
there
when
people
are
not
actually
expressing
their
stuff
like
in
a
time
like
in
time
like
when
it's
present,
as
opposed
to
like
oh
I'll,
do
it
later
or
it's
like
these
ways
that
we're
trying
to
protect
relationships
but
can
make
ourselves
small.
Like
that's
a
that's.
The
thing
that
I
would
want
people
to
reflect
on
weekly
is
like
hey.
What
with
holdings
do
you
have
like?
B
Have
people
get
in
the
habit
of
trying
to
get
rid
of
some
of
the
avoidance,
especially
in
my
society
and
my
culture
here,
like
there's
so
much
avoidance
into
our
culture
that
I
like
that
feels
like
a
social
justice
like
psychological
way,
to
like
counter
that
almost
yeah
and
the
other
thing
is,
I
reflect
with
intention.
B
I
always
have
like
a
nugget
or
a
few
nuggets
that
I'm
holding
something
that
I
want
to
work
on
before
I
came
into
the
web
3
world
and
before
I
really
started
like
deeply
researching
reward
systems.
I
was
just
working
with
them,
something
I
heard
from
leticia
nito
was
notice
where
labor
is
allocated
and
from
that
I
wrote
notice
how
and
where
labor
is
allocated,
and
those
two
note
like
that
little
note
gave
me
so
much
insight,
researching
reward
systems
and
the
behavior
and
people
around
them.
So
yeah.
B
I
think
just
having
like
guided
things
too
or
like
something
to
look
at
like
at
the
present
I'm
splitting
binaries,
like
I'm
everywhere,
I
find
or
run
into
binaries
in
my
own
thought,
I'm
like
reevaluating
that
and
expanding
my
what
it
was
that
I
thought
before.
Based
on
what
I
know
now,
I
think,
like
he
thinks
like
that,
giving
people
like
things
to
to
work
out
or
be
mindful
of
once.
You
start
doing
that
as
a
practice.
Then
you
start
developing
it
on
your
own,
then
you're.
E
B
I
want
to
focus
on
this,
and
then
you
just
like
are
better
with
your
subconscious
work.
B
A
A
B
A
Dislike
and
it
is,
it
is
something
that
happens.
People
just
get
into
work,
work,
work
that
like
what
we
were
talking
the
beginning
when
we
were
checking
in
we
get
into
this.
So
much
that
we
forget
out
here,
we
forget
what's
going
on
and
we
need
to
come
back
and
like
step
back
and
say.
Okay,
I
do
need
to
pay
attention
to
myself
and
in
those
things
that
you
say,
like
my
feelings
and
my
mind,
and
you
know
my
body.
E
E
D
B
I
feel
like
that's
the
thing
that
would
make
it.
It
would
show
people
their
behavior
trends
and
things
and
that
withholding
could
you
imagine
if
the
people
started
to
see
like
a
little
chart
that
showed
them
how
long
they're
holding
onto
not
actually
like
expressing
it
and
then
like
their
overall
health
is
like
dipping
and
they
can
see
the
correlation
themselves
of.
Oh,
I
haven't
said
the
thing.
I
genuinely
think
this,
like
creating
data
for
people
to
see
how
their
own
everybody
believes
in
statistics.
B
B
Behind
that
to
believe
you,
so
it's
like
what
if
people
are
generating
their
own
data,
reflecting
back
to
them
like
they're
able
to
use
their
own
eyeball,
because
you
can't
tell
anybody,
hey,
there's,
I
don't
think
something's
off,
but
people
could
notice
if
they
had
the
right
tools
to
notice.
If
something
was
off
on
them
because
ego
what
if
they
had
the
tools
to
notice
that
that
things
were
off.
B
D
A
Well,
we
reached
the
top
of
the
hour.
It
was
so
great
to
chat
with
you.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
insights.
It's
it
was
very
nice
to
be
sharing.
I
am
a
different
person
after
this
100.
A
Okay,
we're
keeping
a
look,
I
think
we're
gonna
change
the
date
of
the
research
call,
I'm
gonna
open
it
to
and
put
it
on
gravity
to
see.
What's
the
best
time,
because
I
think
anna
is
having
a
hard
time
to
come
to
this
time
to
the
call-
and
she
is
also
a
person
that
it's
with
me
in
you
know
in
front
of
the
team.