 When they walked in, I was like, wow, okay, I had these two people and I'm like, what do I do with this? There's this woman who, you know, her joints, her knees or elbows are really swollen. She said she couldn't use them and then I have this guy, two men actually that were very fit, but I think high. When I moved from New York City to Venice and I made some calls to the shelters in and around the west side and everyone was just really excited and would love Debbie Yoga programs. So I got volunteer yoga instructors and they come into the shelters one hour a week and they teach a class. I just feel so ready to give more because I feel like I've received so much and it's just that cycle and it really will, I hope it never ends. New instructors, there's a thing that they do usually when they're just beginning to teach, it's called SAVA and it's like giving back. And in the last six years we've had, I guess, over 20 weekly classes started and over 200 clients and people seem to really love it. Just being paid attention to for that hour and providing them the time just to really kind of go inside and be calm and be still and not be stressed out about, you know, where they're going to get their next meal or where they're going to sleep that night, I really personally saw, you know, the transformation it had with them. It's just been so incredible working with this fun group of guys. They're like funny, they make me laugh so hard. Like we all start meditating, we'll start breathing. It's just sweet, it's human connection, but it's also teaching them their own human connection. I came into this thing with anger issues and I've been treated with therapy. This gives me real physical help in order to maintain that tranquility. When there's 48,000 people experiencing homelessness and there's not 48,000 shelter beds, I can understand our clients losing hope. So PATH is one of the largest homeless service providers in the state of California and our mission is to end homelessness for families, individuals and communities throughout the state of California. When I became the volunteer coordinator here, Alma Yoga was really one of the first projects that I wanted to expand. I got a sense of these people who don't really have homes, like, you know, they have temporary housing and how what a great service would be to teach them tools that they could actually do themselves to find sort of the home within their own self, no matter where they're living at the moment. I'm Axel Twist. I had gotten hit by a car. When I first started off I was walking like Frankenstein, you know, the monster. A couple months I was walking normal. More than anything, these people need someone to care about them and to be inspired and with that strength behind them they are able to make moves.