 I feel like my life is music, like my life is a song now and I'm just living that song and noticing just like a song has different melodies and different parts to it. I'm experiencing the flow of life that way so it feels like my life is a song. So this is very natural for me to come to a conference, a festival, a celebration that has all of that and again that's just the state of mind. That's the best I can say. It does, like music just strikes that chord. It's fun to hear about singers who go on the stage and then don't perform a piece of music but that they literally channel it in the moment. And so that spontaneous, it's never been heard before so it can't be performed. Unless it's recorded, it oftentimes is just gone because it's not been captured in any way. But there's the joy in the being of it. I think of Abraham Maslow talking about this pyramid of hierarchy of needs and as you approach the very tippy-toped self-realization in which means and ends are one. So it's in the being and the expressing is where the joy is found. It's not in seeing it as something towards something else in the future. So that still is linear time involved in it and who we are doesn't have linear time involved in it. And the song of gratitude and the song of heaven, the father and son's thing eternally, is no time involved in it. So that's a nice context to remember. And we've had that in our strawberry fields festivals where you don't feel it's a performance. You feel totally merged with it and with everything. And that's where the joy and the gratitude is. You're not doing it for anything in the future. There's no concern, there's no thought of the future.