 What is a human being for? Is it to survive and reproduce? Is it to maximize our self-interest and be as safe and secure and powerful as possible until what, until you die? Like what good does that do? Like why are we actually here? So another mythology would say, well, we're here to add something to the life and beauty of this world. We're here to give something to the world just as we have been given life, life for ourselves. So recognizing that life is in fact a gift, not something that I earned. I didn't earn my mother taking such good care of me when I was little. I didn't pay her for that ever. I didn't earn the sun. I didn't earn water. I didn't earn this body. I don't even know how it works very well, you know? Like the heart keeps beating in there and the liver keeps cranking out all kinds of things. I don't even know what they're called. You know, it works all by itself. It's a gift. I didn't earn it. And the recognition of that attunes us to our purpose, which is to give in turn, gratitude gives birth to generosity, the desire to give. So this is fundamental. And I understood that any accurate understanding of what economics can be has to incorporate this truth.