I went to take care of my mother in Buenos Aires, who was bedbidden. It was a whole journey to get there because there were no – the airplanes were not – the flights were not arriving in Buenos Aires because the airport was closed. So I had to take a charter flight with people who had – Argentinians who had been stranded with the lockdown.
So I stayed there for the whole year with my mom. And I started – that's when I started following Christian pastors who had left – who had kept their churches open. And to me, it was like, finally, all those tales –
It's, um, it's, uh, it's, uh, like slapstick humor, um, uh, stock characters who depict, uh, the immigration flows from all over the world. And it's a lot of fun and it's very interesting. And as both my grandfather were Italian immigrants, it was very interesting to me to do that research and understand where I came from.
And yeah, I'm sure, I'm sure it was, um, I think, I think that's one of the problems that, uh, that, that we, that we have today is not even that we're, um, that we as a society, as in general, where we have no perspective of tradition of any of the traditions that we're surrounded by. But like the other problem is that we have no perspective when it comes, uh, when, when it comes, when it comes to God and to, um, and to, and to our, um, and, and to the, um, and to, like, we have no perspective when it comes to either of those things because we're not either, either we weren't taught or we just, you know, you don't know. Like you don't, at the end, because at the end of the day, you don't, you don't know what you don't know.