 I think we're at a very exciting time for trauma-informed practice provincially and nationally. I think we're at a place where the understandings about trauma-informed practice from neuroscience are intersecting with indigenous understandings about trauma-informed practice in very exciting ways. And I think it's important for us to understand that the conversation about trauma-informed practice in Canada can also be part of our conversation about truth and reconciliation in Canada, because the reality is that the colonial history of Canada impacts all Canadians, whether they're indigenous or not, right? And this is a deep-seated history with very strong contemporary impacts that we all need to work on together. And regardless of our profession, trauma-informed practice provides us the tools to do that in a coordinated, interdisciplinary, and very effective way.