 Yeah, it truly is. In some sense, if we say forgiving yourself, it's forgiving what you thought you did, which means releasing what you thought you did. It's letting go of all concepts of the self. In other words, if the capital self is just a vast experience of love and light, then all concepts of self are just almost like a mosaic that's kind of pieced together, like the tiles that are put together to cover over that light. So I feel like part of the process of forgiveness, while it seems to be a process, is one of exposure of just noticing self-identities, which is really noticing concepts and attachments, and you're really praying for those to come up, for those to be brought into awareness. That's really the core of it. What you're doing is you're really doing that. So forgiveness is, you might think of it as a letting go while you believe in something other than God. That's what seems to be the process, is the process of letting go. In the end, it's not really, because you can't really let go of something that you never had in the first place. So I've described it more as you really open to the correction. It's more just a total unequivocal acceptance of the correction, or I would say it's more in the end, it's like an integration. It's not really a falling apart or a letting go at all. It's described in egoic terms as like a dismantling. But then once you actually see it for what it is, you get past that turn, you see, oh, it's more of an integration than anything else, because it's coming to see oneself as whole and complete. And I'm talking more at the mind level, of course, not at the personal level. It's this idea of personal integration is just another stepping stone idea too. But you can, when you hear people saying, I feel more integrated now, I feel more whole, I want to be a whole person, really underneath it. They're calling out for wholeness, and that's just using the terms that they know. I want to be a whole person.