 The hardest part I realized as far as basic combat training was, you have to push yourself and make yourself grow. You're going to be in very uncomfortable situations and my mom taught me that from a very young age. So what I did was I reached out to my recruiter as well as my mom and I asked them like, hey, how do I stay strong? How do I stay motivated? And I'm doing this for a reason bigger than myself. Why would I fail and why would I stop now? That I want to see myself grow and develop past limitations that I've put on myself, but more importantly, that other people have put on me, that you can only do what you put your mind to. This is not a job that you wake up and you decide, oh, today I want to quit. We're a team, we're a family, and most of all, we rely on each other every single day. The army is something to be all that I can be by allowing me to be whatever I want to be. So believe me, you can wear the uniform and you can come and you can join our ranks, but if you want to join the army, you have to put your mind to it. And once you put your mind to it, the sky is the limit.