 Hey, I'm Dan Klaskins here with DAV, Disabled American Veterans. We're talking with Army Veteran of Vietnam, Veteran Bill Trujillo, about his service during Vietnam and some of what he encountered there, some of the challenges you've faced after the fact. Bill, talk to us a little bit about when you went into Vietnam, what was it like when you arrived there and the type of things that were going on? It was a monsoon season when I arrived, November of 1966, and raining all the time, very depressing, had rocket and motor attacks on a regular basis in our compound. Real scary stuff. When you were over there, a lot of injuries that you entailed, some were at that time you knew, some popped up years later. Let's take us through some of the injuries that occurred during your service. I had a head injury in June of 1967 through a training exercise. From the head injury, I almost lost my right eye, but I still sustained injuries such as pulmonary neuropathy, ringing in my ears, tinnitus, and hearing loss. Over the past several years here, six years ago, you were diagnosed with PTSD. And after living with that pretty much for decades, talk to us about how you found out about that and ultimately what led you to get in help there? Well, I just had this anger my whole life and rage and suffered from bouts of depression, isolation, you name it, addictions, multiple addictions, and finally went to the vet center and I was diagnosed after four sessions with full-blown PTSD and I've been in recovery for the last six years because of that. You needed help, you needed the VA benefits that you earned. You had a tough time getting them, but then you found DAV. Take us through that experience and how DAV helped you get the help that you deserved. Well, the same day I called the vet center, the second call was the DAV, the very same day, and I met with them that same day on a Monday and they have been helping me immensely with all my compensation and negotiating everything that I need to negotiate with the VA concerning my rights and everything else. It's PTSD, not your only issue you're dealing with. You've also found out recently that you have cancer from your exposure to Agent Orange. Take us through your treatment there and how DAVs helped you through that process. I was diagnosed with continuous T-cell lymphoma December by 18 months ago and I'm in treatment at the VA hospital in Denver and at the cancer center, University of Colorado and the DAV has helped me with that as far as my compensation and representing me and helped me understand what my rights are and everything else that goes along with that. To our veterans out there that are watching right now and there's many of them that follow us here on Facebook, what would you tell them about DAV and how it might be able to help them? I really think that if you have needs or don't understand DAV to contact them and to understand how they can help you in so many ways, more than compensation just in many many different ways. So I was ignorant of them over six years ago and now I understand they're phenomenal organizations so if you need help contact the DAV. Definitely you can do so if you would like to get help, you need help or you want us to help veterans you can do all of it. Visit DAV.org to learn more. Thank you. Thank you so much.