 This world is backwards and upside down so it is learned and the faster we come to the point we realize we have to unlearn it. Hallelujah! I was in university for 10 years and it's like reverse, quickly reverse, reverse. But it's a great insight and then because the lessons seem to come so much faster when you see it's about letting go, it's about not trying to hold on and maintain anything. It's like a dismantling happening and undoing happening. So for me, when A Course in Miracles says learning, right away I think unlearning. I even laugh, I say, ha ha ha. Of course in miracles, you know, ha ha ha. Unlearn everything, empty your mind with everything you think you know. And then it's almost like there's a rejoicing that comes even when you have a stuck point where you find you're invested in something because you go, ha ha! I discovered another investment, you know, which is a good thing too. And so I find it turns around in a positive way. And what seemed to be life, the previous life, it does seem kind of like nonsense. You know, like there was no point to it. It's the opposite of psychotherapy, a lot of times where you're supposed to go back and dig in the past and find out these key events, what happened and all of that. You know, you start to realize none of that doesn't matter as anyway. If you're upset, it's because you're making a decision to be upset and you need to get a touch with the block, with the false identification taking place. So I always laugh when I hear Shakespeare much ado about nothing because it's like a nonsense world. He's a real nowhere man, living in his nowhere land making all his nowhere plans for nobody. That's it, no? And to not look on that in a dark way, but thank God that I'm not going to try to keep up appearances, try to hold onto concepts. I remember I became aware that ambition was actually a detriment. It wasn't a positive thing at all. And therefore I started to give myself more and more permission to just let it all go. Kind of like John Lennon is watching the wheels. After all those years of beetles and all this success and fame and all these things he comes out with, I'm sitting here watching the wheels go round and round. I really love to watch them roll, no longer riding on the merry-go-round. I just had to let it go. It's a total point of surrender. All that is maturity. I thought, oh, when I first heard it, I could see, oh my gosh, it's a letting go. That's the key to everything. So now I've tracked a bunch of people. I live with people who have no ambition at all. And it's really interesting to live in a household with zero ambition. It's really fun for a poster child. But it's also freaking because the ambition never ends. How good is good enough? How much attainment? How much achievement? It's like a wheel that just spins and spins. You never arrive when you're really following the wheel of ambition. It is kind of funny in this culture because this is such an ambition-based culture. But actually it starts to be silly. You start to see this whole silly.