Yes, I never stopped even up until now. You know really, John Wilson, what I think happened to me, I was going to tell you - I have been a very psychic person. I was born a psychic person. You know in the beginning of the story I told you, but what I did, I put that in my music. Like I told you once before that I could, if I was playing with any musician on earth - it could be Charlie Parker -I could almost hear, could hear most of the time, the next note they're going to make. All this was in my music to help me musically, because I've done some fantastic things, you know, and not studied as much as other musicians in the music field. So I think what happened to me after I stopped playing then my vision and everything went on the outside of music and I began to hear what was going to happen musically while I was praying. Like I saw Charlie Parker's death. I felt that a strange foreign sound would enter into the strains of jazz and would destroy the heritage, would destroy jazz completely. Jazz came out of the spirituals; ragtime, Kansas City, swing - well, the 1929 year of jazz bands, Kansas City swing, boogie and the blues of that era. Well, the blues has always been there, that's a spiritual feeling. The next era was bop. Now we've waited I don't know how many years for a new sound in jazz and it hasn't come forth as yet. I could see all this happening while I was in Paris. It kind of frightened me. It seemed like my feelings was altogether out on the street, or what was happening in the world. I was able to make several predictions maybeyears ahead. Some of the predictions that I had was, are black musicians losing our rich heritage, called jazz. The only bad thing about it is the name jazz and I think all the musicians in all eras of jazz have tried to change that name. My era was the swing era and we tried to change it. Also I saw Charlie Parker's death and also very, very bad disturbance among black people, as far as the riots. They've been so disturbed until they're going in the wrong direction and losing the beauty that they had gained through suffering.