OK. So, those are the five thinking traps: mind reading, me, them, catastrophizing, and helplessness and you heard them described, or in some ways kind of acted out by Shannon and Aaron, and I'm hoping as I said up front that you're starting to kind of hear maybe which traps you lean towards. For myself, as I mentioned, I can fall into that catastrophizing trap. Now not when I'm on my A-game. Not today, but, you know, it's been a couple of weeks of lots of work. I'm feeling stressed. I think I'm starting to get a little sick. This is sort of the direction my brain, kind of, leans towards. The other thing I've noticed about myself is that on the home front, and if Guy is watching, he'll attest to this: I can be a bit of a them thinker. So, when I get home, again if I'm tired, it's been a busy time at work, and my husband and I are having a conflict about something, my brain can pretty quickly go to Guy, my husband, as the sole cause of every problem. And I've learned this about myself. That's self-awareness. What we talk about as part of resilience. And so, I want you to have that same experience of really being able to diagnose. I don't mean that in a, in a technical sense, but really being able to hear which of these thinking traps you lean towards. So, we're going to give you some scenarios and we're going to ask you to try on each of those thinking traps for size. So, just like Shannon and Aaron role played for you each of the five thinking traps, we're going to have you do the same across a bunch of different scenarios so you can start to do your own pattern detection. Where does your brain lean when you're a little rundown, when you're a little depleted? Okay. So why don't you start by picking one of the scenarios from the list and then go ahead and try out each of those five thinking traps. Write a thought down that models each of the traps just like Shannon and Aaron did. This is going to help you get a feel for the thinking traps. It also, I hope, will help you to develop more empathy for other people. So, it's great for me to know what traps I fall into. It's also really helpful for my relationships, for me to be able to hear thinking traps in other people so that I can have empathy for the fact that right now what they're experiencing is being influenced by their old habit of thinking, their overly rigid pattern and thinking, and it's affecting them just like my thinking traps affect me.