prepared to enter communities that are multicultural, they're multijurisdictional, they're multiinstitutional. so if you're going to bring an approach forward, and we've learned this through native aspirations, that you have to deal with so many different systems and people that are layered in your community that you have to be aware of sort of what you're taking on. and so at native aspirations, you know, some of the stories that have been shared with us about what works are many times not in the literature, they're not in the research because they're embedded in the community of the people. and they're looking to their own cultural ways of healing. they're looking to their own practices of how can we -- i like the word restorative. how can we restore our balance? how can we create situations of facilitation? because as you study oppression, one of the first skills that you lose is the ability to plan. and so you have to go back and teach those basic skills many times in the communities. so i want to show you a map here. these are the 65 different federally-recognized tribes that native aspi