 This is one of my favorite pictures of us right here. I hate that picture. Really? Having a twin on campus was awesome because just like in regular life, as we go through life, we always have a built-in best friend. Portia and I are like completely opposite of each other. We're very, very different. And I think that's what kind of makes us click in the way that we click is just that we kind of compliment each other in so many different ways. Before we went to Berkeley, we both wanted to be astronauts. That was what we wanted to do. We were going to go to Mars. We were going to be the first twins on Mars. We were just, we could still do that. We could still do that actually. I became a campus ambassador because I wanted to face a challenge that I had for myself. Initially, I was very afraid of public speaking. I saw a campus tour going on one day and I said, hey, I could totally do that. So I was forced to kind of put myself out there and I really enjoyed it. I decided to become a campus ambassador for different reasons from my sister. I do not have a problem speaking in public. Matter of fact, I was drawn to the possibility of having a captive audience for 90 minutes who will laugh at all of my jokes and listen to me talk and I get to be the one to answer all of their questions. I told that Burkellium joke a lot. You say, oh, you know, Berkeley has found all these different elements on the periodic table. There's Lorenzium, Burkellium, what was it? California. California, but there's no Stanfordium. And she said it just like that. And then I was like, it was the way you told it. And everybody always laughed because of my delivery. That's why I was a good tour guide. My delivery was always awesome. Public service I think has been pretty much a common baseline or theme in our adult lives, definitely. We got that from going to Berkeley. We got that from being involved in the organizations that we were involved in. We spent a lot of time talking to students, mentoring students. So that really shaped my adult life because I wanted to give as much information as possible to people who didn't have access to it before. Shortly after graduation, I decided to join the Peace Corps. I went to Thailand and I wanted to make sure, again, that people had as much information that they wanted so that they could improve their lives. For me, it was through the legal realm. So when I went to law school and I decided that I was going to be an attorney, I knew that big law was not going to be for me. Because I knew that I had a heart for helping people who didn't have somebody to help them. And I learned that at Berkeley. Berkeley to me is opportunity, opportunity. No matter what major you decide to work with, no matter where you decide to put your energies. There's going to be a group for it. There's going to be people who are interested in the same things you are. You have so many different options when you go there. Literally the world is limitless.