 The concept of Ertigaf, the concept of that spiritual seclusion, having that time alone with Allah and what I learned from Anzai Salsan was so beautiful. This concept of the pressure cooker, which is that we all, for anybody who's used the pressure cooker, Anzai would tell us that there is that valve that allows the steam to go out. And if you don't have the valve opened, what happens to the pressure cooker? It explodes. And I remember in my own grandmother's kitchen, there was this huge thing on the ceiling because once she had a pressure cooker that exploded, one of the old time ones, and she was terrified of it, would never use it again. And every time I would hear Anzai say the story, everything to myself, yes, if you don't have the valve to let the steam out, you too will explode regardless of how good or not good things have been, even good things cause you to be tired and fatigued. And that pressure cooker valve is the Ertigaf. It's the time you spend in isolation with Allah that you spend alone, that you beseech Him and call to Him and connect with Him. We don't have that many people who do this because I know in every time we've been in that conference hall and we've talked about Ertigaf and I've asked a room full of women just as much as this room and more, how many of you have made Ertigaf in your life? Now we're seeing, masha'Allah, more hands because this concept has become more well-known. But a woman, not just a man, should also be doing this Ertigaf, this kind of spiritual connectedness with Allah subhanahu wa ta'ala.