This is just honesty and such a quality of a Vaishnava. Even for you to say that ‘my taste is gone,’ is so nice. All this is purifying. To sit here and to look at yourself is purifying. To sit here and even make the effort to be here is purifying. And I have a very strong feeling that the service you’ve given, or any of us have given—we can very quickly regain that and go up higher and higher and higher. It’ll come in a flood. It’ll come in a flood this fast if you let it in. And this is true for all—because you surrendered 100,000 percent when you did service, you were cent percent sincere in that. Maybe you were full of fears, maybe full of apprehensions, maybe full of all kinds of baggage. Maybe you weren’t protected in your early youth, so now you have to find that protection so you can be strong on your own, and stand on your own two feet. At first we imitate. We become Vaishnavas externally, and we don’t know the depth and the profound glory of Vaishnavism, so we imitate. But this is the point: the more we practice honesty, the more headway we make. At this point in my life, I don’t want to have to judge anyone. I want to just work on myself and chant. Actually the power of this chanting is inconceivable, it’s the beginning, the middle, and the end, and that’s all. I mean if I could just do that sincerely. . . .