 What I think really makes JFK unique is we live in an intersection of being an academic tertiary medical center that provides the highest standard and the access to the highest quality of care and yet it is truly a deeply rooted community medical center. We have a wide range of residencies available through family practice, internal medicine, emergency department and various surgical specialties and medical specialties. The residents, they receive all aspects of dental medicine. We have endodontics, periodontics, prostodontics, general dentistry, orthodontics and pediatric dentistry. The progress that I've made here, I can definitely see myself getting better at a much faster pace than I actually anticipated. We actually allow the residents to go out to the faculty practices on rotation and there they can see, especially with the specialty practices, the more complex cases that we don't necessarily do in our clinic. Our office atmosphere and the way it's run is pretty similar to how I've seen other private practices and independent offices run, so I think by the end of this residency I feel like I should be pretty well prepared for any kind of independent practice if I decide to enter that. They learn practice management techniques on how to run a practice. They learn coding for insurance cases and the business of dentistry as well as the practice of dentistry. They're always here for you. We have oral surgeons on call with us, so if there's anything, maybe as a general dentist, you are not trained to deal with, you have somebody there to back you up. And I've never felt like I've been in a situation where I didn't have backup. If I ever have a question, even the middle of a procedure, if I need help or anything, I always know Dr. Hobson or one of the attendings is right there for me two steps away. We have two residents. We're one of the smaller programs, but actually that's probably one of the benefits of the program because you get more of a one on one on one with our faculty. If you decide to live in Edison, Metro Park Station is very close to the hospital itself, and from there it's a hop, skip it and jump away from New York City, the atmosphere and setting in school is very different from the real world. I think this residency is really preparing me for not only here's how you do dentistry well, it's also here's how you do dentistry outside in the real world. We tend to think of the residents more as colleagues. So you're going from the student portion where they're in dental school, where everything was checked, double checked, triple checked, to them being a little more self-reliant. You get a really good handle on the practice of dentistry.