 Family Service History, I guess it would start with my grandmother and my father's side. She served for the Foreign Service and then it trickled down on my father. He wanted to give back to a country that did so much for him, gave him so much opportunity so he joined the Navy. He worked from the bottom all the way up from an E1, nothing to Chief Warrant Officer 4. My brother, Marco Colkbrunner, he joined and my father enlisted him. And then while my brother was still in, I decided to enlist and serve as well. And enlisted through Fort Mead. I got a phone call, they're like, hey, you know, we got a spot open, do you want to go? It's good to leave in like two or three days. And I said, sure, I was like, but I mean, I'm not going to do unless my father can enlist me. And they said, all right, well, can you get up here? I gave my dad a call. He's like, yeah, I'll pack my bags and I'm on my way, you know, and just dropped everything, took off from work and drove up and he swarmed me in. But it made me proud to see my brother, Yvonne, do the same thing, and especially for him to be in my career field, the career field that I was in for 20 years, it was amazing. My brother joined in the military and following my footsteps, following my dad's footsteps in a way. This is the Colkbrunner thing to do now, you know. When you see my dad and you hear my dad talk, you know that he had Navy running through his blood and veins. So it was just being in the military. It was not like he didn't force us to do the military. We did it because we wanted to. We wanted to serve our country. We didn't do it for the school. We didn't do it for them. We definitely didn't do it for the money. We did it because that was our calling. I wanted to serve my country. Be it good, bad or whatever situation we were in, deployed, you know, or just for me, it was all about pride in serving my country. It's only a matter of time before Marko's kids and my kids, you know, they start asking questions, you know, and we start explaining to them who our father was and who his mother was and why we served, you know, or why we're serving. And it's just like it did to us, something's going to light up, man, and that fire ain't going to go out.