 the conversation into this one thing that I love to do with all the guests that we have on political hope is also to kind of do a little bit of planting a seed of what is Charles doing and what is Charles up to if it's the glass ceiling. So in the next three years, where do you see yourself and in the context of also building political hope in the world and what is the best that could happen in the next few years that you imagine the best. What would you be a part of? What would you be facilitating? Would you be... Yeah, you know, I'm getting a little bit weary of what I'm doing. I've been writing about this kind of stuff for a long time. And you know, I put stuff out there that's really a call for peace, for truth and peace. And I'm getting all kinds of attacks, you know. And like, it's kind of getting to me, you know. I'm not doing this to gain approval or popularity. I don't care that much about the size of my audience, but sometimes I get the feeling that I need to do something else and direct the bulk of my energy to something else. And maybe it's you know, I have an idea for a screenplay. I have this, I've been doing more and more kind of like behind the scenes stuff and advising. I think I can be really useful there. And then there's something I want to build that it's kind of a temple, but mostly outdoors. I haven't, this is the first time I've mentioned this in any kind of public way, but it's kind of a outpost of the future into the present that where people would go and receive an activation. Not necessarily or probably not at all from me, but from the place itself. I guess I want to exercise powers beyond merely, you know, persuasion and logic, even though I don't think that's mostly what I do already. You know, I'm not, I'm not only speaking from the head, but I don't know, like I feel, you mentioned glass ceiling. I feel like there's, there is kind of a glass ceiling that I don't have. Here's another thing like I don't have actually a really clear idea of what lies on the other side of my impatience and dissatisfaction and feeling of limitation with what I'm doing right now. And sometimes you have to go through an in-between territory. You don't necessarily step right on to the new thing when you let go of the old thing. There's usually a period of turbulence, of uncertainty, of unknowing, of inactivity sometimes, of dissent, you know. Other cultures have room for this or had room for this. You know, maybe at a certain point in your life you go on a walkabout. So maybe I need to go on a walkabout now and then what is mine to do becomes more clear. Yeah, and where I come from in India, we call it Udasi, where you go on like a walking disco, like a thorough, thorough walk. How long do those usually last? I mean, some of the guys who did it, they did it, they would go for like several years. Some of them, some of them go for like a month or two. Right. Depends on, depends on how you, what you can finagle, you know, with your commitment and responsibility. Right. Yeah, like that appeals to me. And then like, there's part of me that's like, you can't afford to do that now, you know. Things are so intense, you know. You've got to be in action, but that's always true. You know, but then at the same time, you've got people like Sapkudu who just like traveled all across like Europe and Africa and Middle East and kept going also with what he was, you know, his purposes. So who's making the rules, Charles? Who's making the rules?