 My family and I have been in the Northern Territory for the past nine months. Life is really good. We enjoy it. It's very outdoorsy, a lot warmer than Canberra, where we're from. You know, we get out to the beach a lot, do a bit of fishing, a lot of bushwalking around here, so that's one of the positives of living up in the top end. As one of the executives in Darwin, I'm responsible for four teams and about 25 staff amongst those teams. My role is to ensure the team know what direction we're going with, provide them with leadership, a sounding board for when they've got difficult situations and help work through difficult situations with them. You can see that you're making a different stay today in the department. That's what I love about it, the challenges it offers. It's a challenging environment. You're dealing with people, you're dealing with their issues and your decisions are going to have a consequence on their lives. In that same sense, that's what's exciting about the department because the decisions that you make do have an effect on people. Or if you're at the border, you know, that can be letting somebody in or not letting them in through an airport. And that's a challenging day today. I just think that this is a department that Indigenous people should consider. I really did. When I joined the department, I didn't really know. I was lucky enough to get a cadetship but I didn't really know what the department did. I only knew what the media showed that the department does. And that's such a small speck of the different work that you can do in this department that, you know, I would encourage people to consider this as an option and a career path for themselves.