I think that's key. Thank you for restating that question, because from a multi-generational approach, we realize that our responsibility is to make sure that the future generations begin to understand and embrace this way of being, so enforcing and impacting are, in our hearts and minds, moving from a sense of entitlement to a sense of responsibility. That's critical from that enforcement lens. It's understanding that the role and responsibility of each and every one of us.... That's especially for the younger generations, because we've lost things.
The generation before me was the last of fluent speakers, but now it's even more critical that the younger generations begin to understand how to steward the land in a really meaningful way and that the land has to walk first in everything that we do. She has her rights and responsibilities to thrive and get back to a place where she's our first teacher and our first healer.