No, definitely not. I definitely had no idea that this subject matter, this discipline, existed till I went to college and took my first Religious Studies course. I was raised in a Christian household; we were very devout. But we also weren't very conservative. My parents were basically Berkeley, Jesus hippies. That was the introduction to religion that I had in my own life. So I very much was raised in a family and a culture that showed the beauty of what religion can be, and the sort of peaceful mindset and love and forgiveness and compassion that religion can create. And then, when I was in high school-- I have one older brother, he came out when I was a junior in high school, came out as gay. And for us as a family, that wasn't a big deal. No biggie, you know, we were ready to love and embrace him. But I know that that's not everyone's story. And I know that that's not every family that has a religious tradition's story. I wanted to have the language and the understanding, to defend my brother, and to defend other LGBTQ Christians and members of other religious traditions. Because I knew, of course, that there were a lot of people, not just in Christianity, but other religious traditions that were not so accepting. And that automatically assumed that religion and an LGBTQ identity were incompatible with each other. So that led me, sort of, down a path of personal study. And I was also just, sort of, drawn in and fascinated by the fact that a single religious tradition, a single sacred text could be understood in so many different ways.