 For me, it was my first experience in the airplane but when you get thrown into something like OAR on your first mission, that's something else. We were heading out there already before everything started and got a call kind of halfway that this thing was going to kick off. You're in a real world event that people's lives were on the line. Got down, they're like, hey, who can you take? Load them on. And so load on the first super short wave of people. I kept going with our mission and then the next day was when everything like really got kicked off and that began the cycle. And to look people in the eyes who are desperate to get themselves out of a certain situation and then you're placed with the responsibility to get them out of that situation. Part of what a human should be and I think that's OAR taught a lot about humility. How many of us, as everything was going on, was like, yeah, I'm not going home. I'll cancel my leave. I need to go be there. And I think that's a really cool response I have. Like the other day, we have a plan with wings and a niche and that we're going to take off and go land somewhere. And so we did make a big impact on those people. Obviously we would have liked to make a bigger one, but the fact that we did impact a certain amount of people's lives, no matter how big or how small, people may think that was. I hope the American people will look back at this no matter what, that they were people who really, really wanted to make a big difference in this world and go fill in need. And they did for sure.