 My name's Corporal Brent Goode, first force reconnaissance company. Well, I'm listed out of Memphis, Tennessee, which is a metropolitan area, but I'm actually from a small town between Jackson and Humboldt, Tennessee, called Threeway. It's like a five-mile stretch of highway. There's nothing really there, but a convenient store and a gas station. So that's home. Just like anything, if you're going to do it, it's worth doing to the fullest extent. That you possibly can, so I thought I'd find the toughest path. And that was recon. I met my wife in a very stereotypical way at a college toga party. And we talked every day after we met. It was actually on her birthday that we met. And she was very upfront with me about having a son. Once I met him, I immediately fell in love with him. She already had her, you know, her way of taking care of him, something that only a mother knows, you know. It was definitely an adjustment for me. And it's dealing with his needs, his specific needs. It's an ever-changing event, so, you know, you learn something new every day and he's changing every day, whether better or worse. And we have to learn to adapt with that, just like anything else in life. He generally wakes up laughing in his room. That's generally when we know he's awake. And he goes to school here on base. He's in a special needs program, same times as everybody else. And he comes home and he generally, he loves swinging. So we have a swing that we set up in our garage that's made out of spandex. And he loves bouncing around in that thing. Anything where he's moving freely because he can't do that on his own. So if we can allow him to feel like he's moving freely and he's in control, that's really what makes him laugh the loudest, you know. He loves watching cartoons. He particularly likes the sounds of women's voices and music. I've liked him ever since he was a baby. It's funny, he doesn't speak like you and I are sitting here speaking, but he has his own way of communicating. In a very black and white way of saying it, it's happy, which is laughing, or sad, which is crying. But in between that for Taylor and myself, there's a way he has in communicating what he wants and what he doesn't want. And when he's happy, his like true joyous laugh is probably an innately joyful thing I've ever heard.