 Next question is from Kyle Grego, do you have any book recommendations for the quarantine? Oh, I definitely do. I don't recommend reading non-fiction necessarily unless it's, uh, you know, escape. So unless it's something you can read about historically that kind of takes you away from the current, you know, situation. I definitely don't think you should read books on viruses or, you know, how to like, you know, how to be, you know, or like revelation. Yeah, nothing scary. You know, you want to, books are really good at calming the mind and the soul if you use them properly. My favorite books when I'm stressed out are books that help me work on my spiritual self, on my sense of acceptance. One of my favorite books for this was by Eckhart Tolle, a new earth. Now Eckhart Tolle is, many people consider him a spiritual leader, but it's not religious. He doesn't talk about anything metaphysical in his books. He talks a lot about the ego and why the, why the, why the human consciousness creates the ego and how, you know, it causes a lot of pain and suffering in us. And he talks a lot about how to accept reality and how to be more present. And I read this book, or I read most of this book with Jessica, maybe a couple of years ago. So something she introduced me to, and it had a profound effect on me. You know, it was like two or three years ago. It was maybe a couple of years out of, you know, getting divorced and working through the whole dual custody thing with my kids. Very, very stressful, difficult time. And that book really, really helped me. And that's something that I could see, that I could pick up right now that would really help me in the current situation because the current situation is characterized by uncertainty. We don't know what's going on. We can put ourselves in a lot of pain just by thinking and imagining potential. What if, what if I lose my job? What if I lose my house? What if I get sick? What if my parents get sick? What if this thing explode? Oh my gosh. And that's us living outside of the present. And that tends to cause a lot of pain. And the book, A New Earth, is all about how to get out of that, how to exercise and practice getting out of that and give yourself a better sense of calm. Yeah, I've been going through a book actually with Courtney as well as fingerprints of the gods, you know, Graham Hancock. It's just, it's great because it gives you a lot of like ancient history and things that, you know, are somewhat on the fringe in terms of like being accepted as fact or, or, you know, the theory. And it's just, it's just kind of a fun way to kind of look back at history and see how they're trying to kind of put all the dots together. And it's, it's super fascinating to see how, you know, certain rituals were practiced, certain things like I didn't know about certain civilizations. And he has like a follow-up book too about like America before. So the Americas have a lot more history that's just being uncovered now that, that, that, you know, they're, they're finding all these different like his like sites that they're uncovering, you know, so it's just really fascinating to me is just to get into stuff like that. Like it, it sparks my curiosity. You don't got any of them? Yeah, nothing. Little blue truck. What's that? You've been reading yourself. That's what I was reading. Normally I have like lots of book recommendations. And normally when somebody messages me the, the response I normally have is like, what do you like to read first before I recommend a good read? Because it really matters. That matters to me. Like if you're not, like for example, I just recently finished a book that is probably made for sure my top 20, maybe even my top 10, which was, you know, how, how an, how an economy grows and why it dies. Oh, you talked about that. I think that was, that was like. Who wrote that? Peter Schiff. Is it Peter Schiff? Yeah, Peter Schiff, I believe, wrote that. And then I'm, I'm wrapping up right now Don Yeager's great teams. So I think it's the 16 things or 16 things that all great teams do. That one's cool. So the great, the great teams is a great one for leadership. So if you're in a leadership position and developing a team, a staff or you enjoy, and you love sports analogies, that one was, is a very entertaining read that I'm reading right now. And then the economy one by Peter Schiff. I mean, to me, that is, I will reread that book to my son when he gets to the age where he can understand economics, where we can have a discussion on that. And believe it or not, I could probably read that to, even though like you would think, oh, what kid wants to listen to economics, they tell it in a, like a kid's story, which is, it made it phenomenal. Like Katrina doesn't even like reading or learning about any of that stuff. She kind of leaves that in for me. And I got her to, to listen to that book after I read it. And she loved it because it's just very entertaining the way they tell the story. And I think it pertains to where we're at right now, because a lot of times when we're all freaked out right now, and everybody's scared to lose their job or have lost their job already. And, you know, we're a lot of people are excited that we have this trillion dollar bailout. It gives you a different perspective when you really understand how this economy was built originally, we forget about that sometimes. I think, especially us, we came so much later than- We're standing on the shoulders of giants. You're right. And sometimes the policies and the things that we roll out or the things that we think are great, we have no idea the rippling effect that it potentially could have on our economy. And when you have a really good understanding of how this economy was built from zero, like when nothing was being sold or traded or bought, and when you understand the history of it really well, it gives you a greater perspective of what we're currently going through and how we should be handling times like this. And it's done in a children's story. So I can't recommend that book enough. I think it's an important read right now for most people. It's a book I'll reread to my son for sure. There's a book I recommend for you for your kid. It's called Nobody Knows How to Make a Pizza. You told me that. I wrote that down. Yeah. That one's a really good one. It's by Julie Borowski. And it explains how no single person knows how to make a pizza when you consider all the things that go into it from who grows the tomatoes to who makes the equipment that gets the tomatoes to who makes the fertilizers to who grows the wheat. And you start to realize that there's millions of people that are involved in producing things that we take for granted. Yeah. I have a feeling it's going to be very similar to this one because their whole instead of a pizza, they use an island where the commodity is fish. This is before money existed. This is before anything. And the only way that you could live was you could catch a fish a day. And at that point in time, everybody had the capability to probably catch one fish a day. You didn't have a pole. You didn't have a net. You didn't have anything. It took all day long. You would catch one fish. And that's basically what it took for you to survive until innovation happened. Somebody then made a net. And then it talks about how the entire economy grew from that. And they use real characters today. But they give them fake names. So you'll know when they're talking about a politician or a policy. So they include that into the source. So it's very well done. And the way they give the analogies off of fishing and how that was a commodity and then how the economy grew from that. And then of course, there's challenges where at one point the net's been made and then other people on the island feel that they should have the right to use his net. And so yeah, they help you. And then at the end of every chapter, they actually summarize and work through the challenge and why it's important to decide to go this way or that way and the long-lasting effect. Yeah. You told me this a while ago. I still haven't looked at it. You definitely know how to eat a pizza. Yeah. You know how to eat one. It's interesting. I was watching a video by, I forgot, it might have been Bishop Barron. And he was talking about obviously his standpoint is from the Christian religion, but I consider him a very strong spiritual leader. And so I think there's a lot of wisdom in listening to someone like him and other spiritual leaders from maybe other practices. But he said something interesting. He said, God likes it when people feel weak and it makes a lot of sense. I think that's when people seek out spiritual guidance. Well, that's when growth happens. When you feel confident and nothing's bothering you and everything is great, that's when you tend to not try to meditate or tend to not pray or tend to not seek out spiritual growth. So other books that may be excellent to pick up during this period of time are books on spirituality. There's, of course, the great spiritual texts from the major religions, the Bible and Buddhist teachings. It's just a heavy read for the first time. Sure. But I think, or maybe books about spiritual, these spiritual books are right. It is heavy reading. Or a book about how to read it. Yeah. I think this might be a good opportunity if you're finding yourself like, oh, I need to get rid of this anxiety and stress and I need to read something. Spiritual growth is, I mean, you grow faster and stronger when you feel scared spiritually speaking than when you feel great and confident and everything is going great. So those might be some good options or books in that category. I recommended to Jessica, did you read, I know she did, right, Purpose Driven Life? No, I didn't read it, but she told me about it. And she said it. She's my cliff notes. Yeah. She liked it, right? She did. She loved it. Yeah, that's a phenomenal read for that along those lines.