 My parents and my in-laws since the pandemic began have not been able to interact with my children. I have actually a disabled daughter who is at high risk and this has been a scary time for us. Since the pandemic started, I haven't been able to see my relatives in Trinidad and Tobago. I have a daughter that comes to Purdue. It's a sophomore here. I have a 94-year-old mother that lives with me. All of us have been apart for so long. I really get energy from being with the students. You start to realize how much you mix into working with students. My lab actually works with COVID-19 virus. So getting the vaccine for me is really the ultimate in, you know, fulfilling what my responsibility, my job is. That is to find new cures and prevent disease. The same technology is going to let us find vaccines for other things. So this is enormous. It's hard to overstate how important this is. So I chose to get the COVID-19 vaccine. One, I'm a pharmacist and I want to protect my patients. Two, I'm a mother and I want to protect my children and my family. This vaccine brings us back to a sense of normality. We have family that we'd like to go and travel to. Gatherings. Getting together with my friends, my family, my colleagues. To be able to be with people, to hug people. I just want to go to a game and Ross ate this. What I am really looking forward to is a huge lecture hall filled with 468 students at a time. It means that I can be around my students again. People are coming here because they need interaction with other people and they need interaction with their professors. We learn from people we care about and we learn from people who care about us. To see students succeed, doing well in classes, to be able to make a difference in their lives and to actually see that happen to me is very gratifying.