 Well, today is year 10, day 2, and it's no different than year 1, day 2. Absolutely. It's as vivid in my mind as it was the day I happened, the 8-day struggle, the day we sat there and held his hand when he passed away. I can remember every single second of it. The Marine Corps does not forget Jason, they teach and honor what he's done. Our crew here, they honor Jason with their action. I don't have a lot to say, you know, the bottom line with all this is I lost my son. Every day, every single day I think about that. Every day I think I did, I got to be there and hold his hand when he was leaving, because I know a lot of parents didn't. It's hard to remember, somebody did forget that you have four children, and to have somebody else say, you only have three. We've actually had that happen where people say, well, you only have three. I have four. Well, we don't, we have four children. And I hope as well. I have thousands now that have been added to the list with the Marines and the Navy. I think some of our younger people have lost military history, history in general. Kids, they're going to be standing on this ship and they're going to go, wow. And then they're going to go back to the baseball field that Jason stood on. He stood here. He was right where I was. He's one of us. That's Jason, you know. He was the kid that forgot to take out the garbage. He was the kid that made sure that somebody had somebody to sit with on this full bus. This is such a huge ship. It's a very, it's one of the Navy's toughest ships, and that's what Jason represented, and it's here to look out for the little guy, and that's what Jason did. So it's, he would think this is awesome. Our people that become Deirdre's just because we get to sit down and have a meal with them or maybe go out to dinner after everybody's had a meal or something like that, and they get to find out that we're real as much as we get to learn about them. And I guess the fact that they led us into their lives, that's a blessing for us. You can never fill the hole that's in our hearts, but the military's filled a void that we've had and given us something to do. That's why we continue to come to the ship. We continue to try to do things for the military to help them in any way that we can, because that's what he would do.