 For my team, if they get to see this video, I just want to say thank you. That I see you. I hear you. I feel your pain. People are stronger than they think they are. The camaraderie again that we felt together. I'm working as a team, working with many different disciplines to help these patients. It was pretty awesome to see. During this pandemic, we became so close because we were the only people at one point that we had to talk to about these because we were the only people that actually felt where we were coming from. To take care of other people, you know, selflessly give of yourself to take care of other people that need your help. You know, that's what we're here for. That's why this is our calling. I stay because I want to be the difference in like my community. Like this has been like the hardest thing I ever went through and I never left. I never thought about leaving. Like it actually inspired me to go nurse practitioner school so I could do more for these people. I love being a nurse and I love my co-workers. It's just it's just something you have in your blood, I think. Prices, I think, can do one of two things. I think it can either tear people apart or it can join people. I have never felt closer to my teammates here. I've seen the strength that I have for sure. You know, each day is just and a love and care that I have for people and my team members. This pandemic has also proven to us how strong we could be, how we became more resilient, how all of us work together more efficiently. Going through each of these waves, I realized that I was meant to be a nurse. I knew that when I was a little girl I chose this path that I was going to be a nursing. So if I can save one life, then it was worth it. Many people say it's a selfless profession, but in some ways I think we're selfish. Because we want to do so much to help so many people that you literally check out of your own life, put your problems behind, to take on someone else's for eight to 60 hours depending on what you're working. Each and every person that I see get wheeled out or walk out off our unit. They are happy or they're in tears and that's what I kind of strive for for every patient. That kind of drives me and be like, okay, next person, who else can we get out of here? To see the progress, to see that change when it happens is just it makes you come back every day to work.