Allyson, you told a very succinct story. I think in what you've done, you're very brave in being the worker's voice, something that many people in Canada are afraid to do. Thank you very much for doing that, for standing here and giving us a concrete example.
Perhaps you could delve a little more into precarity. Some of the stuff in my research had indicated that there's not only just the economic and health issues that precarity brings, but there's also a social disengagement where people are so busy raising their kids, going from job to job, looking for security that their ability to join volunteer groups, democratic engagement is less.
Do you feel that at all, that sometimes you're just so tired you don't have that ability to go out and engage in society?