 So, in terms of preparing oneself for lifelong learning, I think what you need to do is keep a sense of, you know, a desire to discover new things, obviously, things like that. But lifelong learning for me isn't studying all the time the same thing. It will be more that you are open to new technologies, resourceful, are able to find new things to help you grow and develop, and it might be soft skills at one point and hard skills at another one. Think for institutions to awaken that interest. They do that successfully with many people already today. I'm sure you're a lifelong learner, and I think we can draw from each of our experiences of having experienced great professors and things like that that helped us develop an interest in improving ourselves continuously. Okay, so, I guess in terms of students looking to become more globally competent and understanding the world a little bit better. You don't need to know 30 languages to become worldly, but I think it's difficult to know just one language and become worldly. So I would strongly encourage them to just learn one other one and try to navigate in another society using a foreign language. And you discover not just a lot about another society, but you discover a lot about yourself. And almost that self-awareness is what makes you worldly, recognizing that your lifestyle, your assumptions about how a family should be together aren't necessarily universal. And all of that makes you just an easier person to get along with when you're in a different culture. So I would say learn some other languages, things like that. But probably above all else, travel, see the world. I, for example, just in my personal life, did an extensive amount of traveling when I was a student. And I know rail passes aren't as cheap today as they were then, but I took the Trans-Siberian railway back in 1991 or something like that just after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Eye-opening, I could understand a whole, you know, that not everything was like the West and that kind of helps you think a little bit differently about the world.