 I was in Deep Creek, Maryland and I was driving like it was like a Polaris. It's like a type of ATV. I turned quickly and it tipped. She had the helmet on and there's a roll cage, but when you're falling that way your reaction is put your arm out and that's really what it was. And my arm went back and the bar went down, so it crushed my arm. My first thought was, oh my god, my dad's going to kill me because right before we got on he's like, you better not go fast. He gave me all these rules and I was like, dad, you're being too overprotective, like stopping so overprotective. So that was my first thought, but when I looked down I saw my arm and I was like, it's not. It's going to be gone. But we got there and luckily they had been getting pictures from West Virginia, so Penzy was, and Eggles said we're already working up, you know, the game plan basically kind of, then it kind of just went from there over the next, you know, we were there for a month and it was just every day was kind of a new thing and what was the next step, you know, when's the next surgery, the next cleaning, the next skin graft. Each day was a bit of a crisis, there was like a new crisis. And the whole staff at the University, I mean they were amazing when you think of the, you know, the anesthesiologist and the vascular people, everyone was pretty amazing. So basically my arm came back and out and it tore open my entire, like this was all whole. So one of my muscles actually fell out, so I'm missing my brachialis, brachialis muscle. So this, the flap is in place so that there's not just a huge hole because this is what it would all look like if I didn't have the muscle. My radio nerve was damaged so they worked on that for a while. So that also they, the flap, they put the flap in there and then after the flap they added all the skin and stuff and then they had to do, open this up to put my hip bone in. She's very strong. She really is. She's got a great attitude and she has for a while. I mean I think it was very painful physically for her, but I think, you know, and it still is. It still is. There's a lot of nerve paid, but she's a really strong kid. When I look at it sometimes it discourages me because it doesn't look normal and I know it's not going to ever look normal. I don't think about it as much on a daily basis as much as I probably should because I'm more of a move past it. I just don't want to think about it and think about what I can and can't do because I'm naturally a happy person. She's very independent and she's going to do great. She won't be able to do as many things as she wanted to, but she's doing a lot of things we never thought she would and I don't think it's going to hold her back too much.