 My name is S.O.1, T.J. Omdahl. I'm with the Navy parachute team, the Leap Frogs here in Coronado, California. I get paid to jump out of planes. After the first jump, I was just addicted. It was awesome. I had a little over a hundred jumps coming to the parachute team. I've been here for around four months and have gotten about 250 jumps since then. I enjoy the free fall aspect, going roughly about a thousand miles an hour. I'm just kidding, about 120 when you reach terminal velocity. Something I'm still working on is the main part of our job, representing the Navy, letting different high schools, kids, but also different arenas that we're jumping into, the opportunities that are in the Navy. But when we're working crew formations, attention to detail will be very important, just because I value the life. The other jumper more than my own. If I mess up the details, then I could potentially put his life at risk. When you're putting your life in the hands of another guy, it tends to draw you a little closer to that guy. With the SEAL ethos, you're a silent professional, not talking or advertising your work. It was a change for me. As a SEAL, you really don't interact with anybody in the US, hardly at all. A little bit in travel, but they don't know who you are, they never see you. With the parachute team, you're in the spotlight. With that, I feel honored. Going to an air show, so many people thanking me for my service. And all I can think about though is the men and women that have sacrificed more than myself. You know, those men that haven't come home, or that are carried home. Those are the people that really deserve the thanks, and I'm just humbled. Now the best job in the Navy.