Yes, because it’s really evolved. I think that when we’re in the church, we’re taught that the spirit is… it’s a feeling of peace, of well-being. Me, anyway, I always experienced it as… I really had the impression that there was something going through me. It was almost like a little shiver that something was going to touch me and do something in my body, in my brain. It’s a particular sensation that, at the time anyway, I used to call feeling the spirit and that… that… I’d like to say that I was working on feeling in the church. And today, it’s things that go… that I link perhaps a little with the emotional. But I still have that little thrill today that I can feel watching a film or that I can have in front of a landscape or in front of a scene from life itself. And that’s my way of… it’s a good parallel with how my relationship with God evolved.
It was really framed in the Church, before, on principles, on: “I listen to a speech, I pray, I feel the spirit”. Today, it’s more diffuse. But it’s more about moments, moments in life when there’s going to be a touch with God a little… It’s going to be in more different moments, but it’s tending to be less within a framework.
Yeah, pretty much. I’ve always had a physical sensation. Yeah, I’ve always done…To describe… It’s a bit weird. It’s like there’s really an energy going through me. Okay, I almost have the little shiver before. I know it and I feel good or I know that sometimes it’s going to move me, it’s going to make me cry. Sometimes I’ll just feel at peace. Sometimes I’ll just smile and feel really soothed. That’s how I represent him today.