 Yeah. So the follow-up question, does everybody have a gift to bring to the world? Maybe some of us don't, or maybe some of us have important gifts, and some of us don't really have much of a gift. Einstein maybe had an important gift, but what if you're not that gifted? What if you're not that smart? So I would say, again, that we do not know how this world works. We do not know what choices, what actions on a 500-year time scale are going to have a big effect. You could be a magnificent inventor, a magnificent thinker, but it could be that your inventions are things whose time has come. And if you weren't going to invent them, somebody else would invent them. And from that perspective, are you really doing anything that special? Whereas another person could be doing something completely invisible. A stay-at-home mom maybe taking care of children with disabilities, or somebody working in a kindergarten for disabled children, or something like that. And maybe this woman is highly educated, but her gifts are going to very mundane things, you know, changing diapers and holding someone's hand and hugging them when they scrape their knee and things like that. And it doesn't seem that they're doing any kind of magnificent giving of a gift. But on a 500-year time scale, who knows what the effect of that gift will be. In a way, that's even a bigger gift because she's not getting recognition for it, or very much money for it. She's not being celebrated for it. So her gift is not only of her time, it's also of her ego. It's saying, yeah, I'm not going to be an important person, or a wealthy person in this lifetime, because what's calling to me is so immediate, and I have to do this thing. And so it's a trust. Ultimately, it comes down to this question, this almost like a forlorn question of, well, maybe I don't have an important gift. The resolution to that comes by stepping into trust in a coordinating intelligence that deploys each one of us exactly where we're needed as part of an inconceivably complex evolution. And maybe only looking back 500 years from now, could you say, yeah, I was in exactly the right place. I was put exactly where I was needed. And my heart called me to do exactly what had to be done in that moment. Short answer is everybody has a gift that is important. It just may not look important from the lens that we've inherited from a culture that celebrates scale and celebrates bigness.