 So I ended up at my parents house, just stayed in the room, dark as possible, no music, no TV. Hardly ate. I went to a very deep depression. I just didn't want to be around anybody. I was a real recluse for about 10 years. I felt like a failure and I pretty much giving up on life. I just was just a burden and I was existing and then that's when I started contemplating about taking my own life. And we came here to the Winter Sports Clinic and my life changed forever. You know, he was like a sponge. He was just getting everything coming in and watching everything and being real attentive on the event. You know, I could see the more you put into this event, the more you get out of it. You could see him blossom right during the week he was here. I was living on a little bit of time left before I got here. I didn't know his day that I was going to check out and it would have been by my own hands and that's horrible to say because life's so precious. But that's some of, you know, a lot of his veterans go through that after a significant injury. He was very quiet, very shy, didn't really want to say a whole lot today. The guy has a smile on his face. Start to finish. He mentors the other veterans coming here. He gets involved in VA at his facility. He's out. He's a spokesperson for rehab. He's just living his life now. A veteran has to be ready to accept the recovery process and I wasn't ready. And then I came here and opened my eyes and made me ready. I think would be a great mentor for this event that's coming here and being with the vets because he's been through it. He's done it. He knows what to do. I'm experiencing a feeling of life and it all started here at the DAV and the Winter Sports Clinic and I can't think of enough. Everything this clinic stands for and he takes whatever comes at him and he turns whatever it is into something incredibly amazing.