 And I remember that we were playing So What, one of Miles' compositions from the late fifties, I guess. And Tony Williams was playing drums, Ron Carter bass, Wayne Shorter saxophone. And it was a really hot night. The music was tight, it was powerful, it was innovative, and fun. We were having a lot of fun and it was, the music was on. Tony Williams was burning on his drums. And so right in the middle of Miles' solo, when he was playing one of his amazing solos. And I'm trying, you know, I'm in there and I'm playing. Right in the middle of his solo, I played the wrong chord. A chord that was, it just sounded completely wrong. It sounded like a big mistake. And I did this and I went, oh, like this. And I put my hands around my ears. And Miles paused for a second and then he played some notes that made my chord right. He made it correct, which astounded me. I was, I couldn't believe what I heard. Miles was able to make something that was wrong into something that was right. With the power of his, of the choice of notes that he made and the feeling that he had. And so I couldn't play for about a minute. I couldn't even touch the piano. You know, but what I realize now is that Miles didn't hear it as a mistake. He heard it as something that happened, just an event. And so that was part of the reality of what was happening at that moment. And he dealt with it. He found something that, since he didn't hear it as a mistake, he felt it was his responsibility to find something that fit. And he was able to do that. That taught me a very big lesson about not only music, but about life. You know, we can look for the world to be as, we would like it to be as individuals. You know, make it easy for me, that idea. We can look for that. But I think the important thing is that we grow. And the only way we can grow is to have a mind that's open enough to be able to accept situations, to be able to experience situations as they are and turn them into medicine, turn poison into medicine. Take whatever situation you have and make something constructive happen with it. That's what I learned from that situation with Miles.