MR. YANG What’s interesting, Matt, is that when you talk about the tying up of a presidential campaign it’s actually very much a multiday affair. I’m in Nevada right now to thank the team and also show up at an event that we already sold tickets to. It’s a different affair now. But you still want to come out and thank donors and staff and volunteers.

It’s not that you go back and then you give a speech and then you can go and get on with your life or something. My phone started blowing up with text messages and calls. I received a phone call from each of the other candidates, and so there was a lot of time and having those conversations and responding to people.

The thing I’m looking forward to most is getting home to my kids because I miss them terribly.

There are people who put months and months into making you successful, and then you have to pull the rug out from under the campaign in a snap second. How were those conversations?

Most of the folks I’ve spoken to have been very proud of everything we’ve done. They do have a sense of perspective, that if you had something like 28 people, that 27 of them are going to end up falling short. We outperformed expectations at just about every stage.

So people were upset. But many people also felt a sense of accomplishment. And I think in some cases, a sense of a return to normalcy. Because like you just said, people are working hard, and they’re also not making time for their loved ones or personal time or for their friends’ birthdays and on and on.