 Another question I hear often is, what if I don't have any spiritual leaning at all? And I'm not religious. Oftentimes people put religion and spirituality together, and I don't see that they go together really. And I can see why it is that we put them together. It's just not really a fully accurate way of looking at either of them. Religiosity involves dogma. It involves belief systems. And it's nothing wrong with them so long as they agree with you. Where we get out of sorts, or we may even outgrow a certain belief system, we may find that we're actually building resistances because this is something that we were told as a truth. So I was raised in the Catholic Church, and I didn't go to Catholic school, but I was raised in that environment, and have a great affinity and understanding of what it means to actually have the beliefs that are steeped in church. But that actually doesn't say who you are or what you are. And we don't necessarily need a church or somebody else's dogma to answer those types of questions. The spiritual questions are, who are we? What do we hear for? What is this journey about? That is very different than just a religious belief. So whether or not you have a spiritual leaning really doesn't matter. I'm ordained as a minister in the church of all faiths and spirituality and health, and my background is a master's in theology, not because we need to be theologians, but because, as the Greek said, it's really the opportunity to know thyself. And it's the study of the self that ultimately brings us to an inner peace.