 I think, I think place has so much to do with how you orient yourself in the world. There was a really touching and very, I just caught this line in the film that, when I watched the full-length film, that really impacted me and my heart. And it was this woman who said, when she had been relocated, she woke up in the morning and the sun was rising on the wrong side. And of course the sun was still rising in the east, but it was the wrong side of the building from where she had been used to the sun rising in her home. And it really touched me because how we orient ourselves in place and space, when we enter a building or we enter a courtyard or a plaza or some kind of space, we immediately orient ourselves. We use multiple senses, not just our eyes, but and when we're navigating through streets and when we're orienting ourselves in a new city and trying to figure out where we are and where does the sun rise in the city and oh, there's this mountain, so I know that that's west. And when we don't have those orientation points, we feel very out of sorts and I think, you know, our phones offer us a little bit of an orientation point now. And I think actually just as an aside, having the map in your pocket is actually really good for planners because now people are so much more oriented to place in a mappy kind of way. But it has everything to do with your health and everything to do with your sense of security and your sense of stability to walk into a place, whether it be an entire landscape or a building, and be able to orient yourself. And if you can't do that or if it's so new and you're so not used to it, then you feel destabilized and I think that has an impact. It could have a short term stress impact, but if it's over the long term, that stress is going, that chronic stress is going to have an impact on your health.