 We're very rarely in the office, we're very rarely doing powerpoint and projection, we're out there in the field, we're training in our warrior skill level tasks. It's rough, it's tough, we're adaptable and we're very resilient. It's one of those things that you have to be cut out for, such as detainee operations, going out on convoys, escorting VIP personnel, understand that you're going to come in and you may be on a 12-hour shift, a 14-hour shift and your QRF just responded and you don't necessarily have the team that you need to but there's another VIP that's either approaching or getting ready to leave the wire. You have to have that ability to keep pushing forward, that motivation to keep moving. Military police soldiers have to be tough, they have to be able to deploy and mobilize very quickly and be able to operate in austere environments and the soldiers out here training are doing just that, we're in a mountainous area, they are setting up tents, they're digging the trenches, all while engaging the enemy and actually building a detention facility as well. The establishment of a theater detention facility is hard work. They're pounding stakes day in and day out. They're also running thousands of meters of constantino wire to ensure the safety of the enemy prisoners of war. Lethality still plays a role in what we do day to day. We still have to get to the fight, we still have to defend ourselves during the fight and the overall lethality of the army itself, getting the enemy prisoners of war off the battlefield or the displaced civilians off the battlefield allows for those combatant commanders to get after what they do and that's bring it to the enemy. Specifically with detention operations, we don't operate in a vacuum, we are in daily interaction with these other specialties in the execution of the mission. For maneuver units or the units who are closer to the front lines and fighting our battles, we have to free up their ability to move around and do their mission. It's very possible that the next conflict we find ourselves in will be a large scale peer on peer conflict that can result in large numbers of enemy prisoners of war. When they take enemy prisoners of war or displaced civilians, we want to move them away from the front lines into a secure area. So military police as a branch, that is one of our major missions, is to ensure that freedom of maneuver for those combat units. People don't understand how well rounded MPs are, you're not just detention operations or combat support or law enforcement, you need to be good in all those aspects and there's very few MOSs that have that same requirement. We went from doing this in the cold in Iowa in February to doing this in the 90 degree heat in Fort Hunter Leggett in just a couple of months. Always be ready so you don't have to get ready at a moment's notice. The pace picks up very fast. We're combat support so anything can hit us at one time. You have to be ready for everything. They really love to be part of the fight. When you love what you do, your attitude and your demeanor while you're out here in theater, it just gives you that level of endurance.