 I still am someone that believes in lifelong learning and I still remember, you know, I finished college. I didn't finish college. I came in the Army and then I, you know, I had this goal, I said, I'm going to get my degree. I finally got my degree and then, but all that time, you know, I was reading and preparing some of those books. So even when I finished my bachelor's degree, I didn't stop trying to learn and grow and reading has been a vital part of that, of who I am. And then over the course of my career at some point, like mostly right after I finished my bachelor's degree, reading became more of the one, more important things to understand how I see the world and to look at it differently. What I mean by that is when I take a book that's not written by an Army person, it gives us a new way and new ways to think. As an example, the book called Mindset by Carol Dweck. It talks about two mindsets, it talks about a fixed and a growth mindset. Well, that's not something, you know, normally talked about in your professional military education and then having that different perspective is maybe that's a direction we need to grow, maybe with our NCO Corps. So reading and being a lifelong learner helps me get new ideas that not necessarily grounded in just in the professional military education books that we read, but it just gives you new ideas, new way of thinking and it's probably the most valuable thing that I can do so that, you know, we get fresh ideas through reading and that's how I do.