When it comes to reducing BPA exposure and some of these forever chemicals that you mentioned, seems like reducing fluid intake from plastic vessels is going to be number one. The primary source of BPA is in the lining of cans. So any drink, or soup, or anything that comes in a can. Any can, all cans? Any can, unless it's a high-end, you know, elite company that's made the change from BPA to an alternative lining, and they'll say that. So, and by the way, BPA has some bad relatives such as BPS and BPF. And maybe you'd be interested in this story. So when it came out that BPA was estrogenic, which is what it is. And by the way, it's kind of the evil twin of phthalates because phthalates are anti-androgenic and BPA is estrogenic, and phthalates make plastic soft and BPA makes plastic hard. You don't want either, okay. So when this came out that this was a bad thing, the manufacturer started selling things that say BPA-free. I'm sure you've seen that. The trick is that instead of BPA, they use BPS. Sneaky rats. And BPF. That's so sneaky. And these are chemicals, these are lookalikes, they're analogs, and they're just as harmful.