 The last experience that I missed was a conversation I had with David Gray. David Gray is a biologist. He has a PhD, stuff like that. He has lots of knowledge about the Inuit up north and about the animals that live there. He said that the animals have different migration patterns from, say, about 100-200 years ago. For me to say that, or for me to hear that, I just have a couple things to say. One of them being is we have to look at our planet as a whole and try to fix global warming, try to fix pollution, try to make things reusable. And so I just thrown it out, thrown it away. Because up north, the Inuit faces many different challenges. Since the hunting patterns have changed, they rely on importing goods on, say, a can of Pepsi. Pepsi here is about a dollar in Ontario. Up north in Inuit, Resolute Bay, Arctic Bay, it's about $12 for one. So it's pretty hard to survive up there with the different migration patterns and the animals don't really know what to do. So I was just thinking that if people could start reusing stuff, stop using gases and try to live with no pollution or anything, then the planet could actually survive. Because right now we have about 18 months before sea levels start rising rapidly, as opposed to about 70 years, like remote scientists thought. So is there any kind of specifically one thing he said in that interview that really stuck with you and just really fits the theme of what you're saying with understanding sea levels are going to be rising and the animal migration patterns are changing, right? Is there any one thing he said that really stuck with you from the interview? I would say the level of education, the level of poverty of north in Inuit, that's what stuck me the most, because if we go on a scale, an average Canadian's up here and then Mi'kmaq are out here, but then we go up north and Inuit are down here. So that's what pretty much stuck with me. The education system up there is not the best. There are shelters and not the greatest. Getting food and water is really hard for them. However, it should change within the next year, because I personally went to Trudeau and he signed a land agreement. I want a few other things. So the Inuit will have full control over their waters, but they would just say, no, this oil refinery is not going here or this mine is not going here. So if you can do me a favor, just kind of describe to me how doing this interview and being able to talk with your interview subjects how it just kind of affected you to take personal action. It helped me take personal action, because upon seeing it for myself, if you hear about something, you don't think much of it, but if you actually see it for your own eyes, it has a bigger impact on you. So it makes you want to help other people. So for me, there was a child's home for children who have left, like got abandoned. So they grow up there. They get basic education. They get food, clothes, water, except the problem is getting the money there, because most people go there for the attraction, which is trying to climb up the big mountain, but they don't really stop by. So for me, I stopped by and I donated about 200 U.S. to a child's home, and that's worth a fortune up there. So just getting to experience yourself will have a bigger impact, and if more people are able to pass on what they've seen to other people, I believe it could make a huge impact on the world.