 I left the Navy in 1992 and because of the self-confidence, although at the time of being in the service, I don't think I fully appreciated or realized the impact the Navy had on me. Of the years that I've grown up, those are probably the most impressive or impressionable years that I've had, the four years in the Navy, but when you go in and while you're serving in the Navy, you don't really realize it until maybe years down the road that you realize, wow, those things that I learned, those things that I did, the skills that I learned, those are helping me now. So right now I'm a project engineer working environmental restoration work and learning, seeing the big picture of what your task is and what you need to do to accomplish that task and the overarching goal is critical. The tasks I did when I was in the Navy as a storekeeper where you get woken up in the middle of the night because part of the ship, the radar, whatever the system is broke and you need to process a casualty report and the way the Navy works, which has been decades in the making, is very efficient. They know the processes that they've established are superior as far as keeping a ship operational. So you feel rewarded when you're part of the team, you process a casualty report, you get a part that brings the ship back into operational status and you can carry on the mission. So that's how I look at it with my current job. What can I do and how can I do it in a way that supports the mission, that keeps it in perspective of what the ultimate goal is without getting carried away and getting off track one way or the other.