lives on our streets, it lives in our communities, and we bring that valuable experience to that whole rosc, recovery-oriented systems of care, equation. and so that systems advocacy and that public education are still really vital and really, really important. in philadelphia we have, with the department of mental health, we have taking recovery to the streets, where a person in recovery actually goes out to a recovery house. you know, they may go out to a recovery program, a day program, and talk about how a program has assisted them through their recovery process. that way, kind of people can see a face and kind of afterwards ask questions, you know, that they may not ask, you know, a counselor because they feel more comfortable with someone that just has that lived experience. but having a person being able to go through a program and share their life experiences, you know, about programs, you know, how they got through programs, what, you know, they thought was good for them, because they're all really talking about them keeping it on the "i" because, you know, each program is not goin