 Hi, my name is David Siegel, I'm the Chief of the Myloma Division here at the John Thur Cancer Center. I'm also the founding director of the Institute for Multiple Myloma at the Center for Discovery and Innovation at the Medical School Campus. I love the science of what I do, but by far the most important thing about what I do is I have relationships with people. My success is measured by my research success, my success is measured by how my patients feel about me and how I feel about how they're doing. It's all about making the best decision for that patient at that time and not, oh, we need to get 50 patients on this clinical trial because then we're going to get to publish this data. And I think being close to other people is important. I have more intense relationships with more people than I think anybody in the world. And if that's what you want out of your life, this is an opportunity to do that. When I was a medical student, I didn't know what I wanted to do. And even when I was a medical resident, and I didn't know what I wanted to do, I had met a young woman who had been diagnosed with breast cancer when she was in her 20s. From her breast cancer, when she was in her late 30s, she wanted to see her kids grow up and she didn't get to do that. I made a difference in her life. That's why I do what I do.