 I had COVID in April of 2020. I had 102 fewer every day. So I called the COVID Center, they said, you know, just quarantine and just wait it out. I started trying to work out after that, after my two weeks of quarantine, and I couldn't go down the block without being out of breath. And at that time, I had swollen lymph nodes. So I went to the urgent care and they told me, you need to go to the emergency room, like today, right away. They gave me three options. Either it was benign, it was lymphoma, or it was sarcoma. At the time, the only thing I thought was that I was going to die. Before I went in the room, I was looking at the scans and I read the record and I saw a 23 year old female and I said, Oh my God, this is not good. And I realized that doing a quick literature search that the standard of care was not going to work. We didn't have enough time. It's not that effective. And unless you can have the tumor surgically removed, you cannot cure it. And it's 100% fatality rate if you can't remove it surgically. We realized that we're going to have to do something different. We had access to this new type of genomic assessment where we could look at DNA and RNA of the tumor. We were able to get a path forward. The problem was, though, that several of the medications that the genetic testing said would probably be effective were not FDA approved for intimal sarcoma because nothing's approved for intimal sarcoma because it's so rare. So because of our relationships with industry and because we're an NCI designated cancer center, we were able to get things that others couldn't get. And so she received those medicines and slowly but surely this tumor shrank. And I remember we went to go see my thoracic surgeon, Dr. Risk, and he told me, We're going to cut you from here to here. We're going to break your ribs. We're going to take out your heart. We're going to stop it. And then we're going to do the surgery. And then you're hopefully will get the tumor will put your heart back in. And then from there you'll go on a ventilator and you'll be asleep on your ventilator for 24 to 36 hours after your surgery. Probably the greatest moment other than her waking up and being okay was getting the pathology report and showing that the medicines and the radiation that we gave her following this genomic pathway, the tumor was 90 95% dead. It's likely she's been cured. They were able to put a plan together that works so well and I owe my life to them.