 And now, to top it off, we're watching probably one of the greatest comedic movies of recent times, Elvis and Nixon. Because I knew, when I first saw this movie trailer, I thought, oh my God, I am not going to be able to handle this one. I'm going to be laughing. And so I'm on the runway, they're getting ready on the runway and I got bumped up from economy to first class tickets. So I'm in my first class that I got bumped up into at the last second. And then I'm there looking at the movies and I'm like, oh my God, it's Jesus. No, it's Jesus doing it and it's Elvis and Nixon. And I thought, I'm going to lose it. They're going to throw me off the plane. And it was just as funny as I thought because it's like people pleasing to the max. Power, fame, money, prestige. The king of rock and roll wanting to go to the White House. At the end of the movie, you see Nixon, an actual photo of Nixon and Elvis there. But the king wanting to go to the White House because he wants to get this bed. He wants to go undercover as an agent to help the young people of the world with drugs and narcotics. And he's going to Richard Nixon, the only president in the United States that resigned from office because of Watergate and the pride. And then, oh my God, one of my favorite actors, Kevin Spacey plays Nixon. It is a totally serious role. What was the movie where the paper plastic bag that blows around? American Beauty. He was so good in that. And in that banding, that was so good. And then he plays Nixon. And I've never seen, I mean, he's playing a straight, serious Nixon. And then Elvis, oh my gosh, he's the king. Every woman that goes near him, you know, it's like the Beatles had the impact on the teenagers. In this movie, Elvis goes to an airport to fly on his first flight by himself. So Priscilla and the Colonel back at the, back at the estate. And so he's going and she asked for his ID finally and he's got one of these. He likes to carry guns and he's into guns and stuff like that. He's got a pistol in his leg, stuff that you don't know about Elvis, but he's got that. And then he goes there and he's got this badge, like some locality gave him a badge. And he's going to watch this movie. Yeah, we're going to watch it now. And he, it's so funny. He's got no ID. He's got no ID. He's got no driver's license passport. And he's got this badge. And she's finally like, okay, like she says, airlines take the badge, but it gets better. Oh my God, the Eminem scene, I just lost it. Because Nixon, the president likes these Eminems, but only he's allowed to eat the Eminems. They're in the Oval Office and the King, Elvis likes the Eminems. And you see him go over by the couch and then all you see is Nixon as they're having this chat. And then you, you can see it's the King reaching into the bowl and spilling, spilling the Eminems and grabbing Nixon's, Nixon's Eminems. I couldn't believe it. I thought they were going to throw me off the plane, because it was so funny, because I'm going to do a little setup for this. Maybe it'll make the movie watcher's guide in mind, but this is Jesus having fun. It's not a metaphysical movie, but it's, it's a great undoing movie. There's so much pride when these two come together that, and they both, they don't, you know, they both have resistances. And Nixon doesn't even want to meet with them, but it's amazing. You'll see how the spirit pulls that one off. And then, you know, whoever thought of this movie, I bet they just left all the way, because they knew that Nixon and the King did go to visit Nixon. And so they made this movie and I could only imagine that some of the stuff probably went down like this, because of the pride and, you know, the King can get away with just about anything. And Nixon's the President of the United States, so nobody, his whole staff is trying to cater to him. And then there's another theme underneath it, which is this very sincere man who, his wife, he's promised his wife something, and now the King is using all of his influence and money to try to placate him by, so it's a total unearthing, exposing of people pleasing and why you shouldn't pursue anything in the world. It basically gives you a perfect reason. So anyway, that's what's coming up. But I will say that that's a comedy for us. A comedy is an undoing movie. And in one sense, you know, the undoing is always occurring, but it gets especially funny when it's extreme, like the things that the world says are the biggest strains and tragedies. There's just a light, sense of humor behind everything, because it's just images and the interpretations of the ego aren't true. So that's why it's funny. It's not that the characters themselves are funny, but the undoing has a lightness to it. And so what I like about this is whoever thought up about making this movie must have been laughing before they started because to have Elvis Presley, the King, first he's going to go out to Los Angeles and then he's to get his buddy, a friend of his, to come on this mission with him to go to Washington D.C. so he can go undercover as an agent because he's concerned about, you know, this is the 70s and the Vietnam War and all kinds of tumult is happening in the world and the young people, you know, his heart goes out to wanting to help the young people. There's a lot of young people that follow him, but there's a lot of, I mean, basically his Nixon's advisers will say the whole southern part of the United States loves Elvis, the grandparents love Elvis, the people love Elvis. He's so well-loved, he's such an icon. It's a little bit like, they used to say, like with Marilyn Monroe she became such a phenomenon that they would say even the president of the United States is lusting after Marilyn Monroe because she became so big of an icon. Elvis, the nickname The King, not King Hussein or the King of Jordan or whatever or a king in this world, but The King. You know, that was his nickname was The King is like the one and only. And so he's so big in terms of rock and roll in the United States and he's so well-known and yet he's, most people think, well, he's not connected at all with politics, but you'll see that he does have political values, aspirations and he does want to be helpful. And so this is him going to Washington D.C. to try to get a federal badge. He wants a federal badge because he's been just getting local badges done in Tennessee and with police departments or whatever where he probably goes to them and just says, I want to be of help. He also went into the Army, some of you might know. A lot of the ones, Muhammad Ali had been into the Army and Frank Sinatra and, you know, famous, famous people. And so Elvis was one of them. That was quite a big story, Elvis, when he went to the Army. But he's got, he's kind of got a patriotic side to him, which is another concept. And of course, the president, you know, is very much involved with leading the nation and the politics. When you have these two figures and icons come together, it just reminds me of the line in the course, truth does not fight against illusions, nor do illusions fight against the truth. Illusions battle only with themselves. So there's some pride and friction underneath there coming together, which makes it all the more juicy because of their status and everything like this. But also, there's the humor of it being used to undo. Because they both have, you could say, their own kind of entourage. As Nixon has the White House and like a giant political entourage and the King is so well known that anywhere he goes, it's going to bring up a stir. And it's really funny things like that. The idea of him getting like a badge to be like a narcotics undercover agent, to do good, it's coming from like a sense of a desire to be helpful, to help the young people who are caught up in alcohol and drugs and influences. And then even with the resistance, there seems to be two coming together, mostly on Nixon's part, because the King is wanting to go there. Then as they get more into it, you know, you find these two where they're... It happens a lot where they try to find a common ground, but it's still based on their beliefs. And then you start to see them go from this Nixon not even wanting to meet him, to their trying to find areas of agreement. But underneath it, it's just hilarious that there's a little bit of one-upmanship going on for Nixon and for Elvis, which is one-upsmanship is like ego game-playing, you know, to try to say, you know who you're dealing with here. And that's kind of funny with those two coming together, because it's all showing the humor of the ego, especially obviously the ego is not real. So all of this is, you know, you can start to transfer it to areas in your life or maybe you don't have to deal with it in such an extreme case, but it still is going to come up in more subtle ways. So I just have a feeling that this is also a nice breather for us. We're always so devoted to God and Spirit, and then to see a good undoing movie with the President of the United States and the King, that's kind of a treat. That's why I laughed. I mean, I just started off laughing, and I just laughed all the way on the flight from LA to Salt Lake City, so. Okay, are you ready? Yes. President of the King. Even the title, though, notice Elvis comes first. Elvis and Nixon. It's just little things like that that I laugh at. Even the title just cracks me up. He can go, he can get out of anything with his fame. There's nothing that he can't get out of with his fame. His buddy, his little buddy says that he's got kids, because he knows he can get the photos gone and is not going to be serious. He's so famous that he can just pull the fame card anytime he wants. So now he's come and he's tried to check in on an airline his first time wearing two pistols. And his friend's like, yes, they got kids. So this is what we call people pleasing. Look at the like sheriff guy. See his cheeks out. One minute he's being interrogated. The next minute it's Elvis. And he is scot-free because of just the fame, which is going to come in to play when we see with Nixon. There's this great fame and popularity, and Nixon's not that popular, but he's elected the president of the United States. So he's got all this electoral power and all this mystique. It's all an illusion, but that's the fun part of this movie. You get to see the illusion bumping up against itself. And to me, this is fantastic. But now the spirit can use you this way, too, in the sense we've had all had miracles where things just, just when you think you're in a quote pickle, then that's when Jesus... JC Central! This is JC Central for Elvis. You know, he's being interrogated by the police. Now look what happens. That's JC Central. The guy smiling up there, too. Look at the other two. Look at the faces. They are no longer antagonistic police officers. Thank you so much, Mr. President. Tell him, can you sit here? I was doing that kind of movie stuff. So here's our story. The guy on the left, Elvis's friend, Elvis called upon for this special favor and got him to come out. He was part of Elvis's entourage and gang. And now, at some point, he's thinking, I'm too messed up in all this fame and this and this. I just need to clear my head and everything. So he's got his partner out there in LA. He's let go of the Bonneville. He's let go of going on these parties, riding with Bonnevils and motorcycles and everything with Elvis and everything. The swirl of it all, the fame. And he's really searching for his integrity, for his purpose. And you've got to admire that. Even, I think, with our friend Kristen Marko. She was here young. She joined with Diana. I think we were at Boston and then came here, poured herself into it and just was wondering, is there anything else I'm missing out on? I'm young. And this all seems powerful and everything, but there may be some things that I still need to check out. This guy has been involved with Elvis and everything and so he really is working on his integrity. And you might say, that's what's good about this. This is like a subplot in the movie, is he's trying his best to let go of the people pleasing. Elvis is trying to buy him this and buy him that and buy him anything so that he'll just be working for Elvis. And he's literally, he quit his job at Paramount Studios and he's come as a favor. He quit his job and Elvis said, I can get you a studio, we can do this, you can ride with me. He'll buy him, he's got so much money he doesn't even know what to do with it. But this is, I really like this plot in here, this guy on the left, this is one who is still working with Elvis. He brought the present for the president, especially wrapped up from Graceland. And now this guy is, he's our one that's soul searching. He's trying to let go of the people pleasing. And that's a big theme I think in the movie because the people's pleasing is super thick everywhere and he's trying to discern and to make decisions that really are helpful and beneficial and find his own calling and integrity. And then you'll see it later on as it unfolds with his relationship with this woman in California. You know, she's going to be like, where are you? She's seen him go off with Elvis. Very much like, it was very much like the movie we just watched where Snowden is like, he's got his girlfriend but he keeps being drawn in by work, his intelligence work and then he pulls back and then he's drawn in and he's pulled back. That's what this guy, he's kind of like Snowden except instead of it being the government it's Elvis, he's drawn into Elvis and he's trying to wonder about that. You know, is this really what I'm supposed to be doing with my life? So that's a great subplot. We're doing more of the editing. I was glamorous, but I actually just didn't fit on like this. One thing, one thing. We're the only two people who know where he is. He's asleep. Hey! It's to be like, Jeffrey losing Kirsten. They've got one responsibility. Just make sure that the body doesn't roll down the hill or something like this and all they've got to do is do one thing and he's gone. So now they've got to really find him. Did you look at the drawing? Two more maple bars please. They're trying to get him out but you don't tell the king what to do. He just says two more maple bars so they immediately move forward and sit down. You don't mess with the king. And these are like two loyal devotees. So this is like the king and his entourage. Of course Nixon has his entourage and that's where it gets funny when the entourage has come together. There's a lot of people pleasing and a lot of power and fame and all kinds of things going on there. But he just gave him a look like two more maple bars. And he even put the original My S look back. He doesn't miss a thing. Even the lady in the back is throwing a little remark and he weaves it right into the dialogue. He's tuned in here. Yeah. You're sure it's him? I know it sounds crazy but he literally just walked up to the gate. Look, just out of curiosity, what is a federal agent at large? Actually sir, I looked into it. There is such a thing. No such thing. There's something else that you can give him. The government's got a federal agent at large. There is such a thing. Elvis is like, he wants to help. And so he's coming right into the top. Which he figures, why not? But even Elvis has a backup plan. Plan B should his going to the top not work. Which is fantastic too. He's prepared for everything. The public saw that President Nixon has a relationship with V. Come here. Come here. Nothing. He gets the eye in me. Everybody looks at it because it's like, there but then when he started to be a little bit condescending with Elvis, like you can get by a badge and everything. He doesn't like that even with the Colonel or with anybody that tells him how to spend his money or anything like that. He feels it's condescending. If I earn my money I should be able to spend it. If I want to help. He was really trying to go directly there. But then the guy with said, we'll get Mary Ann to take you out and buy a badge on the street or something. It was like, so there goes his plan B. His plan B. Now he's going to try to, he's still waiting for that call from Nixon. About two years ago, probably now, from my father. And Mr. Schoen, do you think it'll be possible for us to get a picture with Mr. Kressen? Okay, stop it. Who the fuck shot this? See, you can be 90% sure. You can set everything up, but then you've got to go get one last yes. That's the way it works in the White House. It works around here. It's the way it works with JC Central. You can pray, do whatever you want, as much as you want, and then you've got to go for the big yes to get it from JC Central. Now in the White House, they do whatever they do and da-da-da-da-da. Now this is a meeting with Nixon, so now they eventually have to go and bring the letter in and present it to him. And they're saying it's a 90% chance. But Nixon, he's not impressed. You see, again, this is his attitude here. Actually, he did, sir. Mr. Kressen made an unscheduled appearance. Mr. Kressen, Jules on point. Jules. I don't get him up. The only thing that gets him up. He's very old fashioned, very traditional. Jules on the line. Seeing him squirm to get up from his newspaper. This is people pleasing to the max. This is how you motivate the president. Family. My Julie. Sweet one. Wow. Hello, Mr. Kressen. It's funny, you can't say honor to Nixon. Because Nixon doesn't have an honorable, he's the only president to resign after a scandal in the history of the United States from the Watergate. And so he's looking in the mirror and he's trying to see what will come out and honor won't come out. So this is kind of interesting. You know, you have to be authentic. He's got to be authentic. He can't. People please. He himself is going through all the things, the people pleasing Tennessee's, but he's like, I don't know, I don't know. So he's kind of rinsing out the people pleasing. So it can glide in there and be himself. Which is so important, so important. Did you know I had a twin brother? Mr. President? I don't know. Now you don't mind. So you see the games that are going on. The compliments come in for the president. And he's like, it takes two to make a good looking baby scene. The compliments, compliments, and then now he's told his guy to come in and to take him out of there that he doesn't want to be taken out. He wants a photograph with Elvis. And where does Elvis go? No pictures today. You know, just like, this is how it works in the world between countries, between spouses, Angelina Jolie filed for divorce today from Brad. Yes. She wants custody of all six children. And Brad wants the children some too. So you see, this is how it goes in the whole world. It's just images, images, images. That's what the conflict of images, whenever there's a conflict, there's an identification with an image. Jesus says, whenever you feel the need to become defensive about anything, you have identified yourself with an illusion. And so that's what, you can see the subtleties playing out here between the king and the president, but that's, it happens with every day, any moment when there's an identification with the ego, that's where the upset arises, the defensiveness, the conflict, the awkwardness, whatever. It always is coming down from that. And this is just playing it out, but you can just see the little nuances. You know, he sends him away. No, again, no, no, no to this, the guy who came to get him in now. And this guy, look what he's saying as he's going out. Like, he's already told the king, like, the doctor pepper is only for the president, the M&M's are only for the president, he walks away, now he's come and it's gone out of control. And then, and then the king turns around and says, no pictures, not today. So it's just beautiful for popping the self-concept. It's a classic. Is that a control music gun? Right, he didn't get this pistol, I hit right. Okay, here we go. Now here, this guy's recalling he's supposed to be meeting his girlfriend's father for dinner. So he's in the middle of this whole Elvis thing and he's getting a prompt, an integrity prompt on this very day right there in the White House, which is great, because that's the subplot of this whole thing, which is really the main plot, that's the way it will work. Even in the middle of a big swirl where the ego tries to make things seem all important in the world, what's more important than integrity? Really? Could there be anything more important and he's like, I'm supposed to be meeting my girlfriend's father for dinner. And that's on the west coast. She's out in L.A. where he used to work. Paramount. And she was testing him on the phone like, you know, you're going back. You're going back to this addiction where Elvis buys you out and you don't keep your word. It was the same thing in Snowden. Snowden's girlfriend really had to, Lindsay kept coming to him like, wait a minute, what are you saying? It's top secret, it's top secret. Elvis is using some of those same words. Top secret, top secret. Just leave him with the president. It would just be you and I and J. Edgar Hoover, the only ones that know this top secret thing. So really, this is like, that's what's been saying, this is the year of the exposure to mass exposure this year. And this is great because here in the movie, this is the guy that he's going to... And so then, and Elvis has a friendship and a love of him, so then Elvis is going to even have to make some decisions in terms of what he's going to do to deal with this guy's prompt for keeping his integrity. So it really gets very interesting here. You're meeting my girlfriend's father for dinner. Yeah, I guess the thing that strikes me the most is that when you see that it's in such an extreme, extreme way, then you can start to see that how that's all that this world is. It's just made to distract the mind away from being truly helpful, from truly stepping into whatever role or, you might say, part that the spirit gives. Because if the mind's sound asleep and it's addicted to dreaming, then the only way that it can move towards seeing that it's dreaming is to be so fully given over to the spirit to use however the spirit would use it because that's how the mind comes into this awareness of the divine order of things working perfectly. Without giving yourself really over to the spirit, then those just are just words in the course. But when you kind of say, okay, I'll do anything, I'll go anywhere, like that prayer in the workbook, what would you have me say? Where would you have me go? You know, it's like, that's like a prayer that's really saying, like I give to you, I give back my mind to use as you would decide, and then the spirit takes it from there and then it's like a loosening that occurs. And whatever relief did not have to play all those games. Like they really acted them out. All the schmoozing up, and I'll do this for you and the bargains and do this and what about this, and then this, you know, it just keeps going on and on and on. It's very tiring to play those eco-games and all that one-upsmanship and all that the bargaining, you know, it's what the whole world is. It's everything's a bargain. Everything's an agreement that holds the mind into personhood. So, yeah, that was funny. That was funny. Not overtly metaphysical, but then when you see how it can be used, you can get stuck in it and it's like you start to say, okay, I don't want that. I don't want to be going through the motions. And that's what we also felt was great with the Beatles movie, Eight Days a Week. There came a point where they were touring and touring and touring. And there came a point where they just felt like they were going through the motions. And that took a correction. You were mentioning the adjustment bureau. It was like we're living out our own adjustment bureau, but instead of the chairman, it's the Holy Spirit. And instead of it involving personal motives, the Holy Spirit doesn't have a personal motive. It's a memory of the Christ, a memory of true identity. So it's using the mind to rinse the mind. It's quite amazing to think that everything in this world is only part of a rinse to free the mind from all beliefs and limitations, the constant rinse going on. If you can do your book, I'm married a mystic where I was going to South America and what a rinse that was. But it's like it was a given kind of thing to first get rings and then have very simple bows and then to go down. And all that got flushed up in Argentina and my friend Maria, her husband going through divorce and him leaving for another woman and so forth and how sad Maria's voice was. But Holy Spirit just used the symbols and said, Oh, we're coming. We've already bought our tickets. Oh, it's not good. It's a terrible time. Don't come. No, no, it's... We got our tickets. Oh, no, please, David. It's just terrible. It's terrible. We're on our honeymoon. Oh. Well, okay then. That was the word that opened the door for Maria. And then when we got down there, the more you had all the thoughts and the things building up underneath, even the honeymoon word contrasted with your version of a honeymoon. But that was all part of a popping, too. It was a big burp, big pop. But to think that that's what the Spirit's using everything for. Nothing ever happens to you. Everything is always happening for you. Nothing has ever happened to you. Because JC Central's been behind everything, without exception, and everything in your entire life happened for your mind. For the sleeping mind that needs to wake up. It was all for the good. There was never any loss or betrayal. There was never any real darkness. It was just interpreted. The ego was reading all these false meanings, the things. And then it just, finally, it just keeps rinsing, rinsing, rinsing. Rinsing the mind into salvation. I do not know the thing I am, what I'm doing, where I'm going, or how to look upon myself or upon the world. That's salvation. You give yourself over. You get right in the middle of the rinse and you go, whoa, this is pretty full on. No, not over yet. More rinsing. You've got to become completely clueless. Partial cluelessness is frustrating. It's complete cluelessness. Peter Sellers being there is cluelessness. That pops the cork. You have to, just like Chauncey Gardener, reach a state of mind where you can honestly say, I like to watch. Honestly. That's all you do. You're a watcher of the world. What's your role? What part do you play? I like to watch. That's the key. Or in the wise words of the angels through rest of Burnham, there's no need to moan and boo-hoo. Laugh, laugh. Remember to laugh. Remember it's only a dream. Ego smigo. Wake up, amigo. Stop crying and have a good laugh. Wow, what lyrics. I haven't heard that song for a few, quite a few years. I guess it came out in Holland. It's good to have a comedy. And undoing the self-conscious of comedy. What did it say there at the end? Was it saying something about the most requested image, photograph from the National Archives of the history of the United States? The most requested image, Elvis and Nixon. We're curious. There is something funny David about the way that almost like the spirit can use a symbol like Elvis or something. There is some grace in the way it's used. It is like love at that time of the people in the traces, the White House or something. It's funny the symbol because my dad was very famous and going around was like going around like that when I was a very small child. People felt blessed. They felt absolutely blessed. And a bit like the Elvis had this ability to just answer whatever it was. I would see that that would be given and it wasn't coming from my father. It's more like watching us on tour. There's something the spirit's like coming through. Something's been given. I don't know whether it's just all that love that's been poured out from the mind is reflected back in a way that it can be accepted. I don't know what it is. I think it's interesting how the ego builds up the fame and builds up all kinds of things. You can look out throughout history like Elvis had there was a humbleness and an equality that flowed through him that he could connect. He wasn't afraid of connecting with the fans or anyone but the humbleness was still there underneath. He could feel how easy it was to get lost in the object. The Beatles went through that. We just watched that amazing eight days a week where they could feel the Beatles and Beatlemania got blown away out of proportion but they were searching for that comradery, that love, that fellowship that was always there. They always felt it and this other thing kind of blew up and then they finally sometimes tried to feed the other thing and then they felt they were going through the motions and they felt terrible. It was George Harrison, the first one, that said, when are we stopping this touring? Then John joined him and then eventually they would have to all feel it. They all felt to stop with the touring. It was too much and they were going through the motions. The first film was great but then already the second film was a bit of going through the motions. Everything came so fast. Then of course there's stories like Lady Di. She was so put into prominence by marrying Prince William but that school teachers and that simplicity and that big-hearted openness and connecting with the everyday people shone through the whole symbol seemed to ruffle the whole royalty. She was like out of the box and in some ways Elvis would go out of the box from the kernel and, you know, he was aware too. He was even going his Enneagram sign, I think, 8, to play as an impact on the greater stage but knowing that it could have more of a fatalistic turn and that's exactly how it went for him. Or Gandhi, for example, he had this deep love and non-violence and equality and so on and so forth and never held a single political position or role but was highly impactful in a huge scale and yet he himself was aware even though he never held a political role when Walker, the journalist from the America had asked him, said he was quite an ambitious fellow and he said, I hope not and then somebody said to him one time some member of the press, are you a saint trying to become a politician? Gandhi said, oh no, I'm a politician trying to become a saint. He was aware of his own thoughts, his own identification with India, his own desire to see India freed from the British. He knew even though he never held a political role he was dealing with a political concept in his mind so he turned it around and he said, oh no, I'm not a saint trying to become a politician. I'm a politician trying to become a saint trying to open up to self-realization. So, yeah, it's very subtle but it is beautiful the way the symbols and images can be used. Even Jesus had to deal with some degree of notoriety in his day by the end, you know, because he's quite infamous to some and important to others but he really wasn't who he was, who he is, but it is a good reminder that no matter how it goes you can always have humbleness and grace and, yeah, that was his home in Tennessee, Graceland. It would be nice that the king is humble or on the road to humility. He certainly had his own struggles with a lot of things. And Priscilla too, yeah, marrying the king. Yeah, there's been movies made about that. She said I went from just being a woman to the most hated woman in America just by marrying the king because of the idea of possession and all those things. I feel like that's kind of, this is a year, like Francis was saying, a year of exposure, but I think what comes with that too is just what we talked about on the show this morning that you start to come into the experience that there is no external world and with that experience you let go of all need to react and respond to the world. You know, you get little opportunities every day to see if you'll give a rise or give a reaction to something when there's really nothing actually to react to. It's just that all the reactions are generated in the mind. It's interesting when Diana went back to visit her mother and, you know, for a pretty good stretch of time. So how's your life? How's it going? Do you have your own money? Do you have, you know, like, do you have the things that a young woman should have? And so it was like a little test, is there anything there to react to? Yeah, I have everything I need. I've got the latest iPhone. I've got an iMac. I've got a purpose, a function. What more could I need? Do you have a partner? Do you have this? Do you, you know, all the questions of the world? Are you meeting up with standards of the world? And then you have to go inside to realize that you don't and never will relate to the standards of the world. There is nothing there really to relate to, so. And then you let the spirit graciously answer the questions, which is part of shining the light, you know. Whatever, it's kind of fun to see what words will be given, if any, and what words will pop out because that's part of the grace. It's part of the grace of it all, the mind training.