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Well, I never lived in a foxhole. I think Gus got everybody deep there, that's for sure. But the two, probably, yeah, two of the most smallest spaces I ever was on was I had a cubicle that was about six and a half feet long, two and a half feet wide, and two and a half feet high and a small two-inch pad. Then you can open up underneath the pad and that's where you catch your cracker jacks and utilities and stuff like that. It was underneath the water about 30 feet and it was cold as hell always and of course that's good if you were at a hot spot spot. But if you were in a, if you were in some ocean like the Bering Sea or something like that, that was bad. That was that was, that was pretty tight. I mean, there was no chairs in that thing. There's about 40 other people live there. We do. That's all you have. And then the only other thing I can think of is one of my first trucks that I was used when I got in the trucking. Hold a truck of course and it's bunkless I would say even smaller than that cubicle aboard ship. I was in that thing for almost two years and of course it moved every night at the new location you always get out and walk around you had all the beautiful scenery hopefully you know unless you were in New Jersey in New York City or something like that inside that was a tight spot to at least when you got on the ship you could get out you have some breathing room when you got out of your bunk in that truck when you got up you could barely get into the seat the driver's seat to do what you needed to do anyways great I'm gonna be done I got deliveries tonight so I'll catch you later everybody have a wonderful day They came to zero and they are.
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