 I've been thinking a lot about what it means to be a leader in the world today, with things moving more quickly, greater disruption. The other day I was riding the car with my son, and both sons are drummers, and I was talking to my eldest son about a song that is particularly difficult on the drums. We're listening to Welcome to Paradise by Green Day. And I was asking him, why is this song so difficult? And part of it is the pace or the cadence of the song. The second part is the complexity of the drumming. Now what I've always wondered about is how drummers do it. They're using two hands and two feet almost all the time. So one foot's on the kick drum, the other's on the hi-hat, and then the hands are doing the drums as they do the song. It seems like a miracle to me that anyone can do that all at once. But it dawned on me. That's what's being asked of leaders today. In the past, I think leadership was like managing the kick drum and one drum at the same time. You had to hit growth and profit, and you were good if you did both. Today as the world, and it was actually relatively slow, today as the world speeds up, the cadence, the speed of the song is continually getting faster. But at the same time, you need to be playing with two hands and two feet, at least, to deal with growth, profit, inclusion, community impact, sustainability, and a list of other things that people are looking for from companies and from leaders. So as a leader, one of the key elements is how do I get myself into the space to play in that complexity? So I asked my son, what is it that enables you to do that? And he said there's two things. One is to actually focus on parts of the song. So get very good. He calls them rudiments, I guess they're called rudiments, which you start to build a capacity within yourself, a pattern within yourself, so that you can do the complexity unconsciously. And it's broken down into rudiments. So you have to practice over and over and over. The second part is he said you can think about nothing else, you have to be in the song. One of the principles I've talked about here before is be here now, being fully present in the moment. So part of the power of navigating that world is being fully present. The second part is to figure out what those elements are that you need to be better and better at to navigate that world and treat them like these rudiments. Practice, practice again, practice again until they are natural. So I wish you the best of luck navigating that world and I'll talk to you soon.