 I experienced a war in Japan and the war means the food becomes so important, especially if you have a garden you can always, you know, you can have a food, share with the friends they are. What do you feel people that are just starting to get into local peace economy? What would you give as an advice for them? Just grow their own food first, it takes a lot of patience and diligence. Do the gardening and feel it. It's directly, it comes to you and it nourishes. If you eat your own food that grown in your garden, it's so satisfying. It makes me happy. In terms of spirituality in a garden, it's connecting to the earth, right? Also things grow from seed to the plant or the tree. You learn so much, you know, so much. And the process teaches a kind of patience, yeah. It teaches a divine patience. Right, right. You can't say, hey seed, grow, grow, you cannot say that. Do you find that it's something that has fed you beyond the food? Yeah, yeah, my heart. Your heart. And community too. Yeah, it makes me feel good about my garden can feed so many people. It's beautiful. It is beautiful. What's your favorite part about the garden? Things grow. If you pay attention, they're very faithful. Look at that, you know, palm. And we had a, today in the lunch, we had water from living, you know, palm right next to you. And you drink this healing water, water from palm. It's really coconut, really is very healing. It's a medicine.