 It seems as if the separation and the fragmentation, though, has carried on to different planes. You know, like maybe, if you think of it in one ear sensor within the metaphor that after we die, there's a sense of separation somewhere else that maybe the dream is happier or something like that. You know, I'm trying to kind of put these near-death experience folks that I've read in the context. And so, you know, and then so these experiences are a corded reality. You know, after, you know, the experience that we have after the body is ceased to function. There may still be experiences of separation or whatever. Kind of like what it's still like. The assumption is almost like there is an afterlife. Right. And what I'm getting from the course is like, this isn't life. This never was life. That there isn't anything that comes after this because this isn't. You know, it's a weird, but it's like the mind still wants to kind of say, you know, this is life and I want to know what, as my grandma always say, well what happens when you die, you know? And it's kind of like the course is throwing it, leaving it out of that perspective. But it seems as if, you know, from writings that we have and things like that, that there are experiences that seem after death, that are part of the overall fragmentation experience. And these are a corded reality and talked about as if, you know, this is what happens after you die. But it's still right. Yeah, it's all still part of the same illusion. You know, the astral plane and the causal plane. There's different planes, you know, which one's a little better than the other. And getting away from the idea that there is a collective world out there, you know, outside my mind, or even collective egos. Because then, suddenly, it still offers another way to pun it off a little bit.