I certainly wouldn't think to say those words. I think that would be totally divorced from my reasoning for going forward with the assessment for MAID. And I am an indigenous person, so some of the conversations tonight at this meeting, I feel, were talking about me without me, and I find that a little bit frustrating.
To get back to your question, no, definitely not. I found it very personal in a sense, in that I felt that I was really sharing things with the assessor that perhaps I hadn't told anyone before, things like indignities that had occurred as a result of my symptoms that I haven't even told my parents. These are very sensitive conversations that I had, and I felt heard. For the first time probably in my life, I felt that I was seen, and I can't really give you in proper words the gravity of what I experienced in that assessment. What it meant for me was enormous. I'm sorry to emote here, but it's hard not to. It's profound, that's all I can say.