No, I love it. So I'll start within my own life, and then sort of zoom out a bit. When I was a kid, what I used to like to do at home was I would play with GI Joes action figures, and I would not set them up in big battles like I saw some of my friends doing. One of the GI Joes would usually be the cool kid from school, and the other one would be me. And the cool kid would say something mean or funny to me, or say something similar to what had been said in school, and then I would respond with the great comeback that I had not been able to come up with during school. [LAUGHER] Or sometimes, you know, my GI Joe would beat up his GI Joe, and that was also very satisfying. The other thing I used to like to do is I played basketball on a hoop on my driveway. I was a lucky kid, had a basketball hoop of my own, and it was super cool, because it could go up to regulation ten feet or down to five feet. And so of course, I would put it down to five feet, and I would dunk and shoot three pointers. And the whole time I would talk to myself and tell myself stories about me making the NBA, what team I would be on, winning the championship. So in my life, from very early age, stories were crucial for me, not just to process my life, but also to live out fantasies that helped me feel mastery, helped me feel powerful, helped me feel good about myself. Storytelling is a complex combination of those things. I also started going to therapy at a fairly young age. I think I was 10 when I first started going and again, that's a type of storytelling, talk therapy. I was sitting there telling the story of my life, and in that case, it was nonfiction, at least it was supposed to be, and usually, usually it was nonfiction. And so that was another way of analyzing my life through stories. So for me, stories have been crucial from the beginning. And then, you know, I never thought of myself as a writer, but I became a teacher. And if your listeners are teachers, they know that the first thing you have to do before you can teach the kids anything is get them to shut their mouths for like two minutes. [LAUGHTER] And I was not very good at doing that... unless I told them stories. It turned out that the one thing that I could do to get kids to be quiet was to tell stories. So I told lots of stories, and eventually I started writing those stories down. So stories became both a way to master my life through fantasy, a way to understand my life through therapy and nonfiction, and then a way to succeed in my life professionally.