And I think it speaks to that. It’s describing an emerging generational trend of people feeling like other people take energy away rather than give you energy. It gives examples like the rise of noise-canceling headphones where people feel distractions are hard. But there’s an amazing experiment in this article where they asked a group of citizens—I can’t remember which country—“Would you like to get on the train carriage where everybody is talking to each other or the one where nobody’s talking?” Every single person said, “No way, I want the quiet one.” And then they split them into groups. The ones that went on the chatty one came out feeling completely uplifted and engaged in the world. I think that kind of difference in the idea of feeling that coming into contact with people will somehow cost you something or take things away, rather than add to the sum of your experience… And of course, that’s different for different people at different times. But I think there’s so much value in that.