 Rhawer o gyfnodd, gyda'r drwy oeddyntau. A hynny'n dod yn fwy o'r ysgrifennu alsiwn i ddechrau'r cyflwyno. Rwy'n credu'r dweud ar gyfer hwnnw yn ymddangosol ond dweud iawn, ac mae'r dweud yn etoeth arddangosol ydyn nhw'n dweud i gwyllgor i'r ddechrau, ddim yn ddod o'r ddweud o'r ddweud. Rwy'n credu'r dweud i'r dechrau, i ddweud i'r ddechrau'r ddweud i'r ddweud i gyda'r cyhoedd yn gweithio'r defnyddio ymlaen nhw. Roeddwyd i'r moyn yn llaw, ac ddweud i'r moyn am yw. Roedd yma, mae yn ysgrifennu wedi i'w gwneud hynny'r ddau ddweudio'r holygu yma. Mae'r 60-year-old adeg i ni i fynd i'r holl yma, bod rwy'r sysgafodd yn gyntaf y sydd amserio yma ymlaen nhw. Roedd yr hynny'r sysgafodd yn y ddechrau, when speakers were bits of furniture that had to be wired, when amplifiers got hot and when turntables were designed with all the precision of a renaissance astrolabe, I decided of course, maybe as part of the grieving process to fix it and to get it to work again, and then I had a dilemma. What records, what music am I going to play? All of my music catalogue is in here. How am I going to choose which music to listen to in an archaic vinyl format? To be honest, I still haven't solved that problem. But I knew the first album I was going to buy because it was in memory of my hero and my contemporary David Bowie and his album Black Star. Black Star is undoubtedly a work of genius, but it's also melancholy and it's sad because it's so obvious that Bowie knew that he was dying when he wrote and recorded it. Those of us who live a life without God and who do not believe in the afterline after life pass this way only once. And it's therefore important to us to decide what is important in the life that we will lead. That leaves us with a choice and our life is full of choices. We can choose on the one hand to be a critic or we can choose to grab the opportunity of our own Black Star moments. Moments of intimacy when we can inspire and we can encourage other human beings. I know to some extent I'm preaching to the converted here. You all entered public life to serve the people of your community and the people of our country. But can I challenge you just a little and ask you what have you done today to make someone else's life better? In the heat of an election faced by a calamity like London, it is very, very difficult, it's very, very easy, sorry, to forget our humanity and not to spend that moment with another human being. Encourage them to be better, to be themselves, to stand up for what they believe in. Please be encouragers. I will leave you with a quote from the great Terry Pratchett, author, humanist, who died in 2015. And he said, there are those of us that have said that your life before you die flashes before your eyes. You are absolutely right. It does. It's called life. I was Brian Hawkins of the Humanist Society Scotland. Thank you for your time.