 And it's not that only rich people do it or only affluent people who have taken care of all their needs. No, like, in fact, I see it more in people whose existence is precarious. They're more generous. There's even academic research on this. The more money you have, the less generous you are on average. Wow. Wealthy people give a smaller percentage of their wealth to charity than poor people do. One of my programs, this man from a favela in Brazil tells the story of his uncle who, like, you know, dirt poor, like, literally dirt poor, no floor, like, poor. And anytime he came into any money, what would he do with it? If it was beyond his immediate needs, which happens sometimes, you know, like, you get some job for what, he would buy musical instruments and give them to the kids in the favela. It's not like he had his investment portfolio all set so that he could take the excess and do that with it. That came first. And when you hear that story, you recognize something that has been lost from our modern context. And you ask, what does he know? What kind of wealth is he in possession of that he can do that? The wealth is the freedom to be generous, because I'm fine. I know I'm fine. Most people with a lot of financial wealth and a lot of money, they are not actually wealthy, because they're not free. They're afraid.