Yes. Your daughter had a perspective about baby gorillas. My younger daughter backing up, we sometimes when we had pediatrics, even when I was at Lincoln Park, you had a very accomplished nursery staff that could take care of whatever they needed in general. But when it got to be critical medical care, IVs, IV medications, that sort of stuff, they, you know, it, it was not something that you could, you could give to that staff. And, and in those selected cases, animals would come home. And the one that I’m thinking of is a infant gorilla that actually lived in our living room in an isolette, my wife and I, a alternated sleeping on alternate four hour shifts because he needed meds either down the stomach tube or in the IV every two hours. And so if we alternated those, we could, we could sleep four hours at a stretch. And as ti got a little, got a little more capable and, you know, was just taking regular nursery care and could be out of the isolette, you could sit within in a rocking chair like you would an infant. And I remember my younger daughter would sit with him in the rocking chair for long periods of time.