 Lethality is the skills you use to close with and destroy the enemy, and being here has just put in that definition into context. Now you have exposed yourself and you have no support, so now you're a casualty in the fatal funnel, and what happens when your casualty is in the fatal funnel? Osset? So Osset is a one station unit training. It's where soldiers go instead of basic training and then moving into their AIT, it's just one station, they go from basic. All the way through their AIT to graduation of turning blue with the same drill sergeant the entire time. A lot of repetitions, a lot of sets, because we're doing more than just training, these guys are actually trying to get them to a level of proficiency. It helps the soldier, you build more of a rapport with that soldier instead of being there for nine weeks and then they leave and then go into another unit and then having to build another rapport with them. You've already built it, you've already made them a soldier, in other words, and now you're turning them into actual infantrymen. Hey, you, in there, hey, hey, get over here, get closer to me, do it, you're already here, you already engaged the target, right? The need to be quiet is gone, it's gone. So violence of action, right? That's the only thing I have with you guys, and Bravo team, you need to, you need to get some more training. Well, I chose to be in 11 Bravo so I could get to where the fighting is, get to where we're needed most and help the people that are there. One of the things I experienced back in school is every year you transition teachers in there, for the first few months they're trying to figure out what you know. Here they teach you from ground zero until you're finished. That way we're a lot more confident in our ability, we're able to execute it quickly with a lot less issues, a lot less problems, and they're not going to waste time reteaching you lessons. You can never be too trained in a job that can take your life. I've improved in many ways physically and mentally, able to push past my barriers and well past what I thought was my physical limits. It's funny seeing how everybody changes when they get that leadership patch put on them, they kind of quit joking around like they used to and get a little bit more serious. As close as you can without them being able to see your progress again, but see it like a foot off of the wall. It would kind of give them a jump and give them a boost of confidence. But you're also watching them. I feel like it's at a slower pace where they can take more time. Number one man is going to tap back. And we did it over and over and over again because we have the time to do that. This point, room is secure, four man turns around, full security on the doorway, yes? This training has probably set me up for success. I feel confident in a lot of the battle drills, attack and individual soldier discipline. When you're at your last ounce of strength or energy or you're not mentally there and you think you can't take any more of it, then you look left and right and see your buddies and so you just got to buck up and take it. Before I came here it was enduring extended hardships and digging into yourself to really find your motivation to keep going regardless of pain or suffering you're experiencing in the moment knowing that there is a goal that you're striving to. Your people, you put them before you. If they aren't as experienced as you, they're going to have a leader guiding them through this who already knows what they're doing. And then they can get themselves through because they have the experience. We're the front line guys, we got to be the hardest. You put them through the ringer, the light's waiting tears as what makes an infantryman.