I think that we’re so consumed by our lives that we don’t go back to where it all began. I did, and it felt like it was a different lifetime. KKHH released when I was 25, 26… At that point, I took a lot that came into my life for granted. It hasn’t turned out that way… You feel yourself changing totally. Today, I have an ambition I don’t think I had then, a sense of competition, a sense of wanting to live up to my father’s dreams and ambitions as well, which obviously I didn’t have then. And the industry has changed. Today, we’re surrounded by so much corporate energy in Indian cinema that we’re all different human beings. I was part of a fraternity in 1998, I am part of an industry today, and I think therein lies the hugest difference.