 Is anybody here had the pleasure and the joy of meeting the Luckets, the initial teachings? My God! My God! My first trip out around the country in 1991, I stopped in Sedona, and there were these two people sitting up front, with a big crowd doing a garden party, wearing baseball caps. He was retired, military. And then I listened in, and I was like, wow, thank you Holy Spirit, this is great to hear these people. They're really experiential, I really like that. And then they all took off, and I thought I'll just follow along. I just happened upon the whole gather, I didn't even know I was there. And I followed them down towards the creek beds of Sedona. They were baptizing people. This is a course of America students. It took the course all over the world, all over the world. I was dope places, Australia. They say the Luckets were here 15 years ago, 20 years ago at the same beach. So I'm walking down, I'm just following. At the time I didn't know they were going to take people to the creek beds to baptize them. That stretched pretty far out. But I was following along with the crowd. I was in this woman, I think she was all dressed in purple, and she had the baseball cap, and she came swirling around me, and she planted the biggest kiss on my cheek. And it was Yulele. What an expression of joy. Actually the Luckets were Bill Thedford's teachers. He literally had gone through studying it and practicing it. And when he left Northern California he said, I have to find joy, I have to find fun. He was really diligent with it, but he needed to find the fun factor. And the Luckets were that fun factor. And I spent some time with them in Hawaii. They're still alive. They put them in the 80s, and I had lunch with them one time. A friend of mine, Jason, was like saying, how do you practice the course nowadays? What are you doing? They said we still sleep. We switch opposite sides of the beds every night because we don't want to get too associated to one side of the bed. Practicing a course in your 80s, living it, loving it. We don't want to get too accustomed to having our own side of the bed. No ownership, no possession. Let go of familiarity. Let go of everything you think you know. Everything you think you think. I love it. I had such appreciation. Those were, again, I was taking a group of people around me. I called it the Legends Tour. Stopping a visit, Jerry Gempalski, the Luckets. Carol Howe, Judy Witt, all of them. Bob. You know, it's a great tradition. It's a great reflection because there's a lot of devotion in that first generation. And every spiritual tradition has the elders. In the Native American tradition, the elders are important, the elders of the tribe. All traditions have the elders. There's an honoring of that reflection. And that's what I feel in my experiences with them is just being with them, I feel an honoring and a thank you. And that same thank you just rings out across the whole world. It just grows in your heart and it spreads to everyone that you meet.