Happy New Year! Happy New Year! Actually, it's the day before the New Year, December 31st. Man, it's a, I don't know about you, but as I get older, I reflect a lot more. I reflect a sh*t ton more than I used to. In my 20s and 30s, I didn't really reflect too much. 40s, I started to reflect in the last three or four years I've reflected a lot. One of the things that I've reflected the most about is legacy, and legacy to me is multiple touches. One financial, two-family, and then three, this bigger than you think. Legacy to me is part of the fabric of your character, of your integrity. You know, in 50 years, like if this podcast still exists, nobody's going to be able to talk to me, because I'm probably going to be dead. What have I sewed? What did that sewing reap and what are the people that trusted me to provide for them? How did they, how did they accomplish this? If you look over the history of America, you have the families like the Vanderbilt railroad Titan that he was, you got the family, the Rockefellers that were banking and real estate, magnates. Like what was it that made them turn into this legacy-type family. Recently you think about the Bush family or political magnates, the Kennedy family, political, Trump, the Trump family, which primarily is real estate, but now also some, politics. Like what put them in that sphere of that family having that legacy, started with someone, having that conversation, not just setting resolutions for next year, but setting goals for your legacy. You see setting a goal for next year is great. And I mean, one of the biggest accomplishments for goals was my wife this past year, she set a goal in November of 2020, I'm losing f*cking weight. She didn't weigh that much but losing f*cking weight. She went from 147, I think she's down to like 115. What did she do? She changed her mindset. She focused on it. And she went after it. Think about if you did that from a lifestyle perspective or from a life perspective, I'm going to change the end result. I grew up poor. Sh*tting in an outhouse until I was like eight, didn't have running water. We had, from the time I was eight, till the time I was 16, we lived in a three-room house, one bathroom, I could go on and on and on. My dad didn't work for like five years, From the time I was in sixth grade to the 11th grade like we had no money. Our monthly rent was like 70 bucks a month, but he'd government cheese like sucked. Suck big time. So I was like 14 years old, I started working to make money so that I could have things. And you know, there were times during those years that I made more money than my parents did on a monthly basis because I want it to change the legacy. I wanted to change my mindset. I want it to change sh*t, and I, I took chances early on in life in my twenties. And some of those chances played out well, some of them didn't, but if you're not putting yourself in the game, you're not going to be able to change the legacy. I have to believe that all of those families that I've named the legacies that have occurred is because chances were taken at some point someplace, chances were taken. Look it wasn't Donald Trump that created the Trump family, it was Fred Trump or his dad who created the family or his grandpa. Same thing with George Bush. It wasn't George Bush or George Bush senior, it was the grandpa or the great-grandpa, Cornelius Vanderbilt like it was his father. The list goes on and on and on, but it had to start somewhere. So are you starting with you? Are you changing your legacy? Make your resolution for 2022 be, I'm going to change the narrative of my legacy, and here are the things I'm changing because folks resolutions are great, but changing the pursuit, changing the end goal, changing your legacy. That'll definitely DMN8 the day,