 When all is said and done, I would love it if someone sat down with you and made maybe a book of all the things that Cuss taught you. I don't know. All those things that Cuss taught me would, nowadays, would not be cool. In what way? I don't know. Cuss was born in 1908, and 1908 they had a different opinion of people having opinions like women and stuff like that. And Cuss, Cuss believing that he cared for the downtrodden people and this and that for the blacks and Latinos and Irish people who were being abused by the Irish people at that time, which is crazy, he really was that guy. He was the guy that fought for the people that didn't have anyone to fight for them. He was just that guy. He wanted to be that person. He wanted to be a person that people looked up to and he was a boss and stuff. He was, yes, wanted to be a person. And when I read his book and I found out about him, he was successful his whole life. He was always the guy in the neighborhood that people came through to settle beef and talk things over with and loan people stuff and help people out, and he liked being in that position of being able to teach people something, what he believed was teaching them something. But he knew so much about the human mind. Well, when he died, this is very interesting. When he died, Camille lived with him and Camille and when I saw in his room, I saw all books about psychiatry and the mind and everything and mystic stuff and all that stuff. And I said, this is what he was really about. He was a mystic believer as well, he believed in Zen and all of archery and all of those books. He was a believer in more than what we saw. He was more than what we could physically articulate going on with us as human beings or what we are called. When you sit back and you think about your career and how fortunate you were to run into that guy, how much did that play a part in your mind? When you knocked out Trevor Burbock, became the youngest ever heavyweight champion, when you're thinking about that, did you ever stop and think like, man, how lucky am I that I ran into that man? No, no. He said he summons me. He summoned you. Whoa. Makes sense. I mean, you think about a man whose life work involved psychiatry, involved the mind, boxing, hypnosis, training all these boxers, Floyd Patterson, how do these great fighters? And then he wants one great one before it's over and he summoned you. No, no. He wants an animal. An animal. He summoned you. Wouldn't that feel like for you? Does it make sense? No, I believe what he told me. Yeah. I mean, I don't know if I believe you could summon someone, but goddamn, that seems like it's real. Yeah. That seems like it's real. I don't know. I think you could do whatever you believe you can do if you really believe it. Yeah. Well, that was what I got out of all the things that I read about you and him together and being able to talk to you about you and him is that he gave you these tools to understand the way your mind worked and you just ran with him. I'm an extreme kind of person. Yeah. So I get carried away. If you're confident in that at a delusional perspective, you have the right confidence. Yeah. You get so amped up, Mike. Even he's sitting here talking to you about these things, I could see it in you. You get amped up, even just talking about achieving things, talking about success, talking about the mind. You know, I could see it inside of you. You get very fired up about these things. Yeah. I have to be serious about anything that I want to accomplish. Yeah. That intensity is what made you special. I mean, that ...