 So I got there at over 40% of my body. I lost my right hand at the wrist and my left arm at the shoulder. The pain was probably the most difficult part of it at that point, but even more difficult was never being able to hold hands with my wife. Those are the things that hurt the most, I think. She dedicates her life to me from the moment she gets up to the moment we go to bed. The daily stuff, hygiene, getting dressed, doing buttons. I can't do those. When I went to the university and studied, she was always with me. She went to classes, to turn tages, to hold tapers, to bring books. So when I graduated and they gave me an ID Clona under my name, I took her name because her life is me and I appreciate that because without that, without the support, without her love, without her assistance, I would never have reached the goals that I've had. I see the toll that it takes her on her physically and emotionally, yet because I served in Vietnam, we're not eligible for any of the services. I would love to see that corrected. The difference that it takes to take care of my wife instead of a nursing home, a provider to come in to take care of me at 24-7, that is the key. It's not that I want more money, that I want more money from my wife, it's that I want for her to be taken care of and the costs are much higher to put me in a nursing home than it is to take care of my wife as she cares for me. She needs that. She needs that.