you go. Can you hear me now? Cool. Well, it's a pleasure to be included in this noble circle of people who are striving for the future of humanity. And as Edwin called it, it's a movement. It's worldwide movement, and it is not a very old one. It's quite a new one. So for context, because I'm also a historian, I want to remind us, if you open any dictionary in the world before 1951 you will not find the value empathy, not even the Oxford Dictionary. There was no empathy in the world. It was invented by Carl Rogers in 1951 people think it's an old Greek word. It's not the Greek don't know the word empathy, sympathy, antipathy, sure, empathy, 1951 and it's a baby, and I believe we are all nursing this baby, and we can do it effectively only if we nurse it within ourselves. I discovered empathy, not in psychology, but in theater. I was an actor and a director in England and Australia, and I realized that what it takes in order to become somebody else convincingly as an actor and help out. Tell others to do it as director. I have to know myself deeper I affect the same physic, the same biography, the same psyche, the same accent body, and know it so well that I can become you convincingly on the stage, never to be you, but to be as close as possible. So I studied empathy the hard way during my career in theater in England and in Australia, and I graduated in education theater on methodical empathy. And so I realized that this is too important to leave it for schauspielgen, to leave it for the show business. I decided that this is a value for humanity. And in my history study, I realized when empathy started. Empathy started officially as a name in 1951 but as a skill. It started in the fifth century BC in Greece, in the theater Dionysus in Athens, when one human being represented another human being for a third human being to watch through the playwright East colos and that's where it started. Took us 2000 years to make it into a skill. I wanted to take it out of theater. I took myself out of theater to develop it together in all walks of life. So we are teaching in school of empathy. I'm speaking now from the school of empathy based in Slovakia. We are now teaching it in the UK, in Czech Republic, in China, and in South Africa and in other countries before and we are teaching it professionally. And to give it grounding in cultural reality, I put it in a context of professional training for counselors, psychotherapists, psychosomatic therapies and educational and organizational consultancy. So we train people to be counselors and psychotherapists on the basis of methodical empathy. And I suppose, parallel to the development of empathy circles, we develop the same thing. We call it empathy laboratories, the core element in our training is you know yourself. You know others. You want to know another.