 One of the interesting things about the book of Psalms, being probably in many cases 2,500 years old, how they speak about anxiety, and in that collection of the literary genre that you find in the book of Psalms, the greatest, the largest collection are laments. In other words, their worries about what is about to come. But one of the interesting things about that literary genre is that it moves from worry to hope. In all of the laments of the Psalter, with the exception of one, you end or finish with a word of hope. That, as you mentioned, with the rise and the fall of things in the movement of life, and for the psalmist, that is God. But for others, it may be the higher power, you know? And if there is no God, and if there is no higher power, then what? Where is hope then based on? I don't think that it's based on our human abilities alone. Because our human abilities are dependent upon the movement of divinity within us, and that's part of the great mystery of, I think, of human life, is that we all have something of the infinite within us while we live a very finite life. So would you say that in the Psalms it's the individual anxiety, and the Godhead is the fact that as a species, we collaborate and work together? That's a bit of a difficult question to answer in a broad way, because not all the Psalms are individuals. You know, you have what are called communal laments also. So the social lament as well, and social anxiety. Because we are not making that distinction yet in our discussion. Individual anxiety is a physiological response. Social anxiety is influenced by other individual responses. And those mechanisms are not well understood, if I understand correctly. And if you buy that mystery that you hold dear, you mean that, then I would buy into your mystery. I wouldn't buy into all your other, you call them, theatrical parts. Not the theatrical parts. But that as a concept, that seems to be tractable by science and by literature.