 When I first was traveling, I had a connotation of travel. I wasn't so thrilled with always being on the road. But then that began to be used more and more as I gave it over to the spirit. And then it turned into an adventure. So what was before boring or mundane? Are we there yet? And when are we going to get there? There was the childhood experience turned into this huge, glorious, miraculous adventure that was being used constantly by the spirit because of my purpose. And so I wasn't out really for sightseeing. And I wasn't out to see the world. I was out there to experience the calling of my heart and to be shown another world and a whole different perception of the world. And that unified field has come about through a devotion to let everything be used for one thing. And the field is worthy of that devotion, pointing your mind in that direction and teaching what you would learn, practicing the presence, immersing over and over and over. Even watching the documentary of Mother Teresa and seeing the love that she put into filling a pitcher of water and then going and pouring that water for each of the beloveds that she would go around to in her little charity house. And you could feel the care and the love that was being put into the pouring of the water. It was a meditation watching that documentary. It wasn't rushed. It wasn't for anything in the world. She wasn't trying to achieve something or accomplish something. It was her heart pouring out, really, along with the water. And it was very felt. So the key is to just apply that to everything, to not segment and fragment and partition the mind or your life on Earth into parts. And then to keep judging, oh, I like those parts better than these parts. And I can't wait to get done with this part so I can get to that part. It makes life a drag. It makes life heavy when we're perceiving from that egoic lens of being separate, of a separate individual. And I know you love the jam sessions. Some of the best times you had is when you just get a group of musicians together and are just there together and see what happens. And that's, again, very spontaneous. It's not like going into a studio to record a song and lay down tracks. Even that can get into a bit of a profession or a bit of organization and structure that can get heavy at times. And you start to feel responsible for completing a song or completing it by a certain time. And the spirit is so playful. It's like a flower. We have these beautiful flowers. They just offer their shiny colors and their brightness and their sometimes fragrances freely without any concern for what will come of it. It's just there in the moment. And they're stationary, too, these flowers. You know, they're symbols of contentment. Trees, flowers, just their shining, sharing, nowhere to go, no place to be, just fully extending. And that's a good metaphor for human doings that are do, do, do, do. What do I do next? All those questions about the future. And one moment of surrender of just letting go of all thoughts of the future takes you immediately into the field with no clue of the future, no clue whatsoever.