The `start` statement prefix operator is a bit like Go's `go` keyword.
(In that when I translate Go into Raku, I usually replace `go` with `start`.)
my Channel \input .= new;
my Channel \output .= new;
start for input -> \message { output.send(message) }
start for output -> \message { say message }
input.send(5);
But what he was really talking about is something more like the following.
sub foo () {
sleep 10;
42
}
# ___
# V V
my $delayed-result = start foo();
say 'Hello World'; # Hello World
say $delayed-result.status; # Planned
say await $delayed-result; # 42