 I'll get a point here. Welcome to Sydney Harbour. So a lot of the things that bother you in Los Angeles or New York City or London they're not going to bother you once you get on the Sydney Harbour ferry, right? So a lot of the things you feel guilty about also depend upon where you are. So in America where abortion is such a hot-potten issue, right? People are going to feel guilty about having an abortion. But in Australia the cultural wars operated about 10% of the intensity that they do in the United States. So women have an abortion in Australia and they're not going to be racked by guilt about it. So why are there so many women in America who are racked by guilt over an abortion? Because it's become a hot-potten issue. It's not a hot-potten issue in Australia. So women don't feel racked by guilt about having an abortion. This guilt is socially constructed, right? A normal person, a regular person who drives on the Sabbath, is not going to feel guilty about it. But if you're an orthodox Jew who's never done it before then you're going to feel that God's going to strike you down. A orthodox Jew who's never turned on the light on Shabbat that God's going to strike you down if you break Jewish law that way. Any of the things that we feel, deepest wounds, deepest trauma, deepest guilt, are socially induced. That is just being out of the United States, out of Los Angeles, feeling changes. And there's something about being in nature to restore the proper sense of self. To kind of put you and your problems into perspective. It takes your breath away, this beauty. Fresh, clean sea air. You're more profound spiritual experience than getting to church or synagogue. Why? Because it puts things into proper perspective. It realigns you with nature. Contingent, they're socially constructed. When she recognizes social construction, you give her feelings and fears and dreams and hopes. You have the possibility of transcending. That's beautiful Sydney Harbor, up in the background. That's that biblical verse, how great are thy works to avoid, blessing for everything. It goes to the Grand Canyon of Sydney Harbor and says, oh, wow. And the Jew knows his blessings, you can say a blessing, process of evolution, active the evolutionary process. It was probably socially constructed. It's nothing that we think that we come up with on our own and take it from other people. And it's reinforced by those around us. So, we know that in Orthodox Judaism, if you depart from the community, you're much less likely to observe Torah. Like during the pandemic, up in the synagogue, they started dropping a lot of their automatic Jewish observance, and they never picked it up. Sydney made, strongly recommend the drive this to take about 30 minutes. And that's the CBD, that's the Central Business District right now.