 Well, I'm Bill Kenneson. I'm the survivor of a survivor, which means I survived everything she went through, which sometimes is interesting. But that's who I am. My wife is going on a 10-year survivor. I got involved with the men's support group nine years ago, a few months after I got involved in it, the leader of the support group died. And so I kind of inherited this group. And so I've been doing that for nine years. I felt like the reason I'm involved in the support group is I felt that John West and Brest, Lincoln, Cordelia Knott Center saved my wife's life. So when we got near the end of the chemo and getting ready for surgery and all that, I told her then I'd like to give back time in whatever way that they wanted. Dr. West talked to me and thought I was so personable that he said, you know, we'd like for you to get in the men's support group. So I said, fine. And then like I said, the gentleman that had started it actually passed away in just a few months. So all of a sudden I had this support group and I've enjoyed it for nine years. Sounds weird, but I've enjoyed doing it. The support group is made up of basically husbands of wives that are going through breast cancer or boyfriends or partners, whatever the case might be. My situation was when my wife was battling breast cancer and going through all the chemo and the therapy and all that, it was it was it was very difficult for me because I had always been the type of person that took care of my family. I raised my three brothers. My brother was the comedian Sam Kenison. I was his manager. I was always, you know, getting him out of trouble and everything else. And that's what my life was about. I was a minister. I'd been a minister for 17 years and just helping people. Well, all of a sudden I think for probably the first time in my life, I'm facing a situation I have no control over. I have no control over if she's going to survive. I have no control over how she's going to handle anything she's going through. And for me personally, I made it very, very difficult, very difficult. And I think most men feel that way because you're supposed to protect your family. Your family is supposed to be able to depend on you. You're supposed to take care of your family. Now you have probably the closest person to you in your life that's facing a life threatening disease and there's nothing you can do except be a cheerleader. And so we, I got involved with the support group. It's usually a two session support group to two evenings and two weeks. The first evening is to get everybody to open up, which sometimes takes some work. Get all the guys to open up. It's guys only. It's anonymous, whatever they say in there, stays in there. But to get them up and tell the story of what they're going through or, you know, what happened to their wife, how they got, you know, how they got to this point. Then the second week, we deal with your mental approach and what you can do, you know, to help women that are going through this, their mood swings or off the chart one day, you know, I'd be there with my wife and waiting on her and helping her. And she'd tell me, you're smothering me. So the next day I'd be like, all right, well, I'll sit here and whatever she needs, then it'd be like, well, don't you care? You know, you're just sitting there. Why don't you help me? So I finally just went, I'll tell you what, I love you. I'll do whatever you want me to do, but you're going to have to tell me. I don't know what to do. I don't know what to do. And so we deal with those mental approach we do not. We do not deal with the medical advice on anything. I mean, they can say what they're going through, but we don't answer medical questions. We usually have a doctor, Dr. Wester, Dr. Link that come in and will answer those questions that they have. But it gives a release for the guys that they're not out there by themselves. I mean, it's a very, very lonely, you know, and I don't mean that you want the attention, but your wife is getting all this attention. She's getting all this therapy. And you're sitting there watching the kids wondering if she's going to live. Wondering if she's going to be there to help raise her children and stuff. And that's very difficult. So that's pretty much what our support loop's based on. Thank you. I think probably the biggest advice that we give them is to try to keep a positive outlook. We don't push, you know, religion or religious things, but I believe in faith and I tell them that, that a lot of times when you exercise all the natural things you can do, every once in a while you get into an area that supernatural things happen. And so our biggest advice is to have these men get mentally, mentally approach it in a positive manner and not deal with it that they may be gone. You know, you deal with it like you're making it today. You're going to make it tomorrow. You're naked next week. We're going to meet it. And over 97% new. And when I got there, it was a lot lower than that. I had nothing to do with it. But I mean, that's how much the cancer treatments and different things that they have done has helped. And so that's the biggest advice we give them is the mental approach. Thank you. Thank you everyone.