 We have seen seedlings coming through the cracks of the walls, coming to the cracks of the roads, surrounded by stones. Look at that. They're just looking for the small cracks, small opportunity to come out. Look at the seed. The seed comes up and plant it from plant, but then from the seed, the attitude of the seed, you throw the seed into the darkness. You bury it into the ground. Does it want to remain the darkness forever? No. Does it want to remain, I mean, in the ground forever? No. It wants to see the light of the day. It wants to germinate. So it's really, it's really, you know, you must see its passion to come out of the soil. It had to break that hot shell, which has been protecting it all along. Waits for the two drops of the drain water, absorbs it, breaks the shell, pushes the soil apart, comes there, breaks the surface. Breaks the surface, comes out, sees the light of the day, becomes applied, grows to become a tree, further grows to become a brook, further grows to become a maha brook. What an attitude. What an attitude to the seed. It says to itself, my life is not the darkness. My life is not meant to be buried. It is meant to serve. I want to grow, branch out and serve. That is the attitude of the seed.