 This is my new home, my first home in my entire life, and I thank the DAV for it. How is it to be homeless? It's devastating. It sucks life out of a man, right out of your spirit. So you manage to get a little energy to get out, but you get pulled right back again. And that goes on for years and years and years. In my case, 48 years. Sleeping in pickup trucks and cars. This car here was probably the first car I've owned. It had to be 35, 40 years. That's the truth. And what I did was I put some wood in here. These seats were up. And I have boards that I now use for shelving. And I put three of them together in here and made a full-length bed in here. I built this bed, and it was good to get it out of storage. I could watch my TV at night. This room is my hangout room, except for the music studio I'm building in there. But I'm an artist, so I couldn't wait to get my stuff out of storage. My stuff is in storage for over a year and a half. And it broke my heart that it was there, because I have these things that I've earned in life. This is all I, this is about Joseph. My degrees, my certificates, and my artwork. Ladies and gentlemen, we're listening. All of this comes from the VA and the DAV helping me accomplish this. I would not have any of this if it weren't for these fine people helping me.