thanks, chief dudley jonathan kearsley from nine australia. you've mentioned the impact on the families, the impact on the crews involved, but i'd like to know from you personally, how are you coping through all of this? how do you deal with what you're seeing, hearing from the families? and colonel, this tragedy obviously involves members of the military family, too. how do you contend with and deal with that as a military unit yourselves? similar to colonel, go first. so i think that in the military, we're grieving the same way that the communities and everyone else is grieving. right. we're, you know there's obviously a tragic loss for each one of those individual families, for everyone that wears this uniform and serves, they go into that knowing that there's a level of risk in the type of work that they do. every one of those crew members understood that just the very nature of the work that they do encourage some level of risk. right to. but that alone is probably not enough to kind of overcome really the grief that this this this tragic