 Al Pacino, Keanu Reeves, Shirley Theron movie, The Devil's Advocate. Anybody ever seen The Devil's Advocate? Quite a movie, quite an intense movie. But in the movie there's all these temptations. Al Pacino plays the devil quite well. All the things that Jesus talks about in the Course in Genius and all these things. Al Pacino really is an amazing performance. And Keanu Reeves and Shirley Theron are in a relationship. They go through enormous temptations for everything. Greed, power, pleasure, status, the whole deal. And winning in the courtroom, not losing a case, competition. It's got the whole thing in there. And basically there's just enormous temptations that they seem to go through. At the very end it's like they're talking in the restroom and there's this other lawyer talking to him. And he's kind of come back full circle to where he was at the beginning. And then the other lawyer just morphs into Al Pacino. And Al Pacino says vanity. Get some every time. That's like the eighth pride in the vanity. That self-recognition that, you know, look at me or look at what I've done or, you know, putting an emphasis onto something on the timeline. Even a story or something that's supposed to, you know, have you stand out a little bit more than the rest. Which is where the hierarchy thing comes in. And wanting to be different. Even though the Course keeps telling us, make this year different by making it all the same. It keeps encouraging us to go for sameness. Saying sameness isn't boring. It's not monotonous or anything. It's actually quite joyful to have perfect equality to see everything and everyone the same. And also it says it takes lots of mind training. So what's happening is, you know, you give yourself over to a desire to really practice the Course and live the Course and transfer the training, like the workbook talks about. And that's going to just seem to come up and come up and come up. That desire for recognition. That desire to be just a little different. Just to be a little distinguished from the rest. And that's why we're giving a curriculum, really, to teach what we would learn and to practice and practice and practice so much that it's part of like a rinsing that goes on in the mind. You know, where you have more of that experience like Ana was talking about that experience where you don't know where, you said, I don't know where I begin and where anything ends. There's no end. It's just a vast experience. You've been having a lot of those kind of vast, vast experiences and everything. And those are like glimpses. You know, you get a glimpse of the real world. You get a glimpse of the happy dream of the forgiven world. And, you know, those are what mystical experiences are about. And yet, the core of the training and the practice is to put the purpose out front, to come into an awareness of a purpose, you know, in terms of willingness for what, readiness for what, mastery through love of what, of changing your mind about your mind, of changing your mind from believing that you are an ego, changing your mind from believing that everything is changing to an experience of the constancy of divine mind to the constancy of spirit to the unchanging quality of spirit. You know, that's the course of saying you have to change your mind about your mind. And that, you start off thinking, how will I accomplish that? Well, the Holy Spirit is the only way that that gets accomplished. You may think of changing your behavior. You know, some people want to change their behavior, their behavior's weight, quit smoking, you know, change their financial circumstances, you know, change their intelligence, and so on and so forth. That is more of, you know, tinkering with the deck chairs and the Titanic, you know, just moving the chairs around. All of that. It's so important in this world, self-improvement, self-help books, you know, be all that you can be. And all this in terms of like the Army or some kind of a program of self-improvement, you start to realize that all of that is still involving pride and is still trying to come up with a better self instead of opening humbly and seeing that God created me perfect. And maybe I just need to release and forget everything that I've been trying to do to improve upon that perfection. So it's, you're on for, it's a deep journey and really the one right use of judgment is how do you feel. You know, when you feel just a little bit closed off or maybe even when you notice that need for attention, you notice that underneath that there's like a sense of neediness or a sense of needing to prove something or prove worth or demonstrate worth or whatever. And this whole curriculum is designed to show you that you don't have to go down that road anymore. And anything that it seems to involve that anything is with people or public or whatever, you just have a lot of mirrors. You're noticing you come here and, you know, wow, you've got a whole house full of mirrors. And so you pay attention and you notice and you notice and you notice and you just trust that you'll be carried through into that purity and that innocence. That's what you're really here for.