 So speaking as a Métis person, I would say the most ideal place for me to work in or be in as a youth that's trauma-informed would be working on the land. Being culturally sound, understanding that there's different ways that we can teach our youth how to release their traumas through something as simple as take them out and to do plant identification. You give them all the tools they need to identify different plants in their communities. They go out into, say, a community garden and learn about how they can take that trauma and release it to Mother Earth. They plant that. They release their stresses and that overwhelming traumatic feeling and put it into the plant. It's not theirs to own anymore. And it's a different way of looking at it because I feel like we're constantly taught to go to psychologists, do this, take this medication when really that's looking at a holistic perspective. That's not a way to help kids. You need to get them grass root, get them out on the land, teach them about their culture. Even youth who aren't indigenous, taking them out on the land is huge. Getting that oxygen, learning about plants, learning about the different animals, learning about how they can project their anger, their frustrations back into Mother Earth so it'll be safe and away from them.