 He says, whenever I go out amongst men, I return home less of one. Indeed, indeed. You know the passage then. Yes, I do. I did. And that, in fact, is a quote from the Roman philosopher Seneca. Oh, okay. So, can I stole it from him? And he really emphasizes the importance of solitude and of the dangers of keeping company. Now, we shouldn't interpret this as meaning, no, you should be a complete loader and avoid people at all costs, but rather the fact that we need to moderate these things and to preserve solitude. And Thomas A. Kempis is one of the reasons that he appeals so strongly is he encourages the very moderate approach. So it's not a kind of excessive asceticism or refusal to deal with the world, but it's keeping it in balance, keeping it in the right perspective. You know, and to recognize the dangers of being in company that, yeah, I think most people can experience that, that you sometimes are in company in a situation and you do something or say something or witness something which you normally wouldn't want to be associated with at all. And it's particularly for young people, of course. So yes, this cultivation of solitude, yeah. I'll tell you what, even as a dad of a bunch of little kids, my kids are great. But I'm telling you what, they go spend that at a friend's house, they go to their grandparents' house and get spoiled. They come back 24 hours later and they're resistant to doing their chores and everything. And it's like, they come back, I have to reprogram them just even after one night away. So it's a little child version of, yeah, when we go out in the world, we come back all messed up.