 Thank you. So my cousin had called me earlier this year, and she said, you need to come to Belize because we've been called. And I'm like, OK. She goes, the ancestors, there's a message for us. We're supposed to meet at the temple. You need to get your outfits made. And it was beautiful because not everybody knew I was gay in my family. Like my father knows, but not each and not everyone. And she was like, but you're OK. If you want to get a man's outfit made for you, you can do that too because the ancestors accept you as you are. And I just thought that was so beautiful that she would say that to me. It was, actually. And it wasn't something we'd put it for conversation. But she just wanted me to know that if I need it, if I didn't want to get the dress made, I could get the pants made and the shirt made. So, ashay. And so I have not made it this year. I'll make it next year. But I didn't find out, as of this election, as why everyone was being called. And so she said she went, and the ancestors had said that we need to strengthen the community, go back to our roots. And it was the message that we all need it as we go into what we're going to go into with the next four, eight, whatever years what it is for, we hope. But a lack of you done. So one day at a time. So I wanted to sing one song, or more than one. But this particular song I wanted to open with a piece from is I always love this because it was a spiritual that when a slave rebellion would go awry, this is a song they would sing to let everyone know, we'll do it next time. Or that there was not to be heavy hearted that this was just a setback. Didn't hear nobody pray. Didn't hear. And this next one, thank you, this next one, I always loved because as I was a strange house, very devout Jehovah's Witnesses on one hand and the other side of the family devout Catholics. And it was interesting. But my mother fought for the right for me to join this choir to learn Negro spirituals because she felt that was history. And so those she received a lot of flack she felt. And she took it and said, no, I don't think this is worldly. This is our history. And so this one I definitely liked because we all have different tones. But this one I think was around the time that slavery had ended. And so it just had that different kind of fight to it as you can hear. Taylor Marine, remember that name.