 The neurological system in the body, if we have a way of monitoring that, killing the pain completely at certain moments when we want to, just by touching certain parts of the body. Well, let me pose you a question, Sagarra. So, we can perhaps work as individuals to… now that I know I take away wakefulness and not consciousness, right? To move towards consciousness. And that's an individual's decision to maybe train in this particular way. So, is there some way that we can harness these insights like you have, harness these, this understanding, and use it as anesthesiologist to take care of patients? Because if we can reduce it to, or if we can adapt it, I should say reduce it, we can adapt it in that way. You know, that would be very, very helpful because we would be using the powers in a way that would control… half use the word, the brain in a way that would be perhaps more physiologic. I'm not the expert in the subject, but because you are asking me the question and say something, but you are the expert in anesthesiology, is it? Yes. I'm sorry. I, in my simple understanding anesthesia as a process has come into being in this world or is existing right now because there is pain. Pain when it happens to us is a bad thing, nobody wants pain. But at the same time, if there was no pain, most people would not even know how to preserve their own body. See, wherever there is no pain in how many ways they've cut it. Suppose there was no pain in your nose, they would have cut it in various shapes, this part of the fashion. There's no pain at all, believe me, they would have pulled out intestines and swing it on the street and go. You have any doubt about that? None whatsoever. So, essentially because there is pain in the body and pain is a protective mechanism because most human beings still don't have the necessary intelligence even to preserve themselves. If there was no pain, even if a bicycle comes, people step back, don't think this is out of civilization, consequence of pain. If there was no pain, even if a truck comes, they would just walk. Just they would. So, because of pain, so pain is essentially a protective mechanism for us. Without it, people wouldn't know how to stay alive, how to stay in one piece, they would have cut themselves into pieces. So, but sometimes, as what is called in surgery is in some way cutting people up. So you… it has become a necessity to cut someone, how to cut them with minimum amount of disturbance to the system. That's the whole effort. So in this effort, as you said, essentially you're disengaging different parts of the brain. I don't know if it's an exact science or it's generally getting disengaged, whichever way. Is it getting effectively disengaged that people go through surgeries without even knowing what happened when something major was done to them, their ribs were opened up, rib cage was opened up, heart was opened up, brain was opened up, they don't even know what happened. Very innocently, they wake up after a day or so, whatever the amount of time. So this is anesthesia. How could we use… See, one dimension, because when you… when we were speaking in the room, when you said, essentially, if I'm wrong, please correct me, you're monitoring the physiological systems of heartbeat, blood pressure, and temperature and brainwaves, whatever else, the physiological factors. If… I don't know if it's even a possibility, but if… if you find a way to monitor the neurological system, ignoring the physiological system completely, see, the concern may be the moment you put somebody on the table and start opening the body, the concern of a doctor or a surgeon may be that you don't want him dead on the table. So you're watching his heartbeat, you're watching his pulse and you're watching his all the other parameters. I understand and appreciate that concern, but instead of, okay, let's leave the physiological monitoring as it is, but if we have a way… I don't know if there is a way in the medical science, if we monitor the neurological system, not just the brain, the neurological system in the body, if we have a way of monitoring that, I think the entire art of anesthesia could raise to a different level at a very minimum interference, it could happen, because why I'm saying this is, there is something called as marma in yoga and also in what is called as khalari in South India, it's a certain form of martial art. Marma is a way of creating… killing the pain completely at certain moments when we want to, just by touching certain parts of the body, handling body in a certain way. So essentially what we are doing is the neurological system, we're shutting it off and there is no pain at all. We can go ahead and do what we have to do and only when we release it the pain will come back. So using that as a basis I'm saying, if medical science has a way of monitoring the neurological impulse as it's happening and if there is some way to introduce, introduce anesthetics in whatever form that you use, I don't know all the cocktails that are used, but if it is done properly, probably… I'm just guessing, I'm not an expert on this, probably with two percent or three percent of your medicine, you could still have the same effect on the patient. Because how you use any medicine on the body and how you use it on the neurological system, I would say one percent of what you use on the muscle, if you use it on the nerve, it would produce equal effect. But it's interesting because I think what you're saying has contact also with the work that we do in the recovery phase and there are people now looking very carefully at cardiac and brain interactions and they do signal some of these changes and it's suggestive, I mean that maybe more of the body could be engaged in the way we think and measure and that makes a lot of sense to me actually.