 Another part of it is what's called role entrapment. That is a sense that the role you've gotten into of being a certain kind of a person starts to entrap you. My father told me a story some years ago about a tailor in a Middle Eastern European country. There was a Jewish man who wanted to show that he had done well, so he went to the best tailor in town whose name was Zumbak. And he said, Zumbak, I want your best suit. So Zumbak made a suit and the man came in to try on the suit, and he put it on and it was beautiful material, no doubt about it. But when he put it on, this sleeve was about two inches longer than this sleeve. And he said, Zumbak, he said, I don't mean to complain, but he said, this sleeve is two inches longer than this sleeve. Zumbak took a front. Zumbak says, there's nothing wrong with a suit, it's the way you're standing, stand like this. And he pushes his shoulder down and the suit then fits perfectly, you see. And the man looks in the mirror and he sees this big bunched up material back here and he says, Zumbak, would you mind taking that material? My wife hates it when there's that extra bunch of material there. Zumbak says, there's nothing wrong with a suit, it's the way you're standing and he pushes his head down like this. So finally the suit is fitting perfectly. And the man leaves with his new suit on, he's afraid to breathe, fear it won't fit. And he's been completely cowed by Zumbak and he gets on the bus, and he's standing on the bus and somebody comes up and says, what a beautiful suit. I bet Zumbak to Taylor made that suit. And the fella said, how did you know? He said, because only somebody as skilled as Zumbak could fit somebody as crippled as you. Now, the feeling often of raw entrapment is that you have gotten into a suit and everybody's saying, what a beautiful suit, what a beautiful suit, except your spine is out of whack and you're feeling inside not the same, not as good. In my...