The thing that surprised me more than anything else when I was doing research for the book was that people would come to me as if I were a priest, as if I were a rabbi, as if I were some healer and say, I haven't told this to anyone before, but we're having a good conversation. I want to let you know this is the hardest thing I've ever done, in fact, it's so hard. I really felt that my emotional well-being was under threat. Now, that doesn't mean that these people didn't find moments of joy, it didn't mean they didn't find their calling. But they all found this to be one of the most difficult, one of the most challenging things they've done. So if you're thinking that social enterprise and starting your own social venture is going to be this exciting thing, travel the world, see wonderful beaches, visit magnificent temples, do zip lines in the jungle, well, then do that. But do that by taking a trip, don't become a social entrepreneur because you're going to experience a lot of pain. You're going to experience friends and family saying, what are you doing? Are you throwing your life away? They're not going to understand you. They'll support you at beginning, but they won't support you endlessly. You'll be told better ways to do it, things that you think are silly, but you have to listen respectfully. You'll be told a thousand ways why your idea won't work. You'd find lots of things that cause you to struggle, you're going to find that friends and family initially support you and not endlessly. They are just going to questioning why you're even doing what you're doing. Are you throwing your life away? Are you really doing this with all the other opportunity you could've had? You're going to find challenges to raise money, you're going to find challenges to attract a team, you're going to have stress, you're going to have long days, long nights, longer than you do now, a lot longer. Again, I was told so many times something like I got close to the edge, it was my brother, my wife, my cousin, my best friend who really had to walk me back, who had to sit me down at a tell me to take time off. I was that close to burning out. This idea of burning out is pretty prevalent among social entrepreneurs, even successful ones. So you're going to have to have a good strong team around you, a team of people who can support you, a team of people who can help you get the work done, a team of people who compliments what you do. But at this moment, I simply want to say that social entrepreneurship is not for the faint-hearted. It's difficult, it's also among the most rewarding things possible. The joy you'll get from serving, the joy you'll get from working with people, with working with people in partnership, not giving to, doing for working with partnership. Is something, again, that I heard from social entrepreneurs that just can't be replicated in other spheres of the activity. But remember, before you do, this is something that really, really takes a firm commitment. There are other ways to serve, you can donate, you can volunteer, but only if you really feel like you've got it in you, the problem need solving, and you have to stand up an enterprise and you know that you can withstand, at least you believe you can withstand the rigors of becoming a social entrepreneur, should you go forward. Much of the rest of this course is going to teach you exactly how to do that.