 We had a little scare on a Wednesday night and they came in like, okay, he's coming now. We know it's three months early. We've got the NICU here. He was born about 1020, one pound eight and a half ounces, spent the next 101 days here in various rooms, various procedures, tests, injections. When they first come out, I think that they don't look like what the parents are going to expect or they're very skinny. They haven't gained any weight and they look very frail and Oliver looked very frail. He was really little, I think about a pound, a little more, but he was always pretty hearty. And that tiny diaper was big on him. Like it was up to, you know, just ribcage. As soon as he came, we started reading, it's like, what do we need to do to give him the best chance? And it's always be there, skin to skin contact is huge for their development. What I remember is his response, even as an early preemie to his parents' touch. Well, after the first five minutes with the nurses, you know they know their stuff. You know, we're a tight-knit team. They see the same people day in and day out. The families start to think of the NICU family as an extension of their own family. And certainly when they come back to the NICU follow-up clinic to see me, they talk about how much they miss the NICU and all of the people that they made those really strong bonds with. KP.org or the app on the phone. The nicest part is the messaging system, messaging doctors or just different departments, the interconnectivity between the departments so everybody can know what's going on with you. One doctor's not going to prescribe you something that might interfere with something else another doctor did. They remember him. I mean, it's been nine months since we've been in here and they still remember him and they come out and see him and ooh-ah-ah over him. When you see those babies come back and the parents are so excited to re-establish that with you and say, look at what we've done, I don't know what else there is. For me, but I'm a NICU nurse.