 We respected the Japanese culture, we respected the Japanese people. This is our way of showing that. The legend of a thousand cranes comes from the idea that if a person folds a thousand cranes, their wish will be granted by the gods. When I first came here, I asked many Japanese Okinawan people that I can, the locals, if they've ever heard of a lone American folding a thousand cranes. They've heard of groups of Americans holding interest groups, they've heard of Japanese people doing it, but they never heard of a lone American folding it. So I just saw that as an opportunity to do that. Went to the Aboko Hospital where they had pediatric care and I donated a thousand cranes. I've already told a couple people about the story of me donating the cranes. Some of them decided they wanted to help. From mid-September to late October, we finished the second batch of a thousand cranes. Going into this last project, the one that we donated to our nursing home, it was 10 of the Marines, and this was an all-Marine effort. I was awestruck because that was the third thousand cranes that we did. It was amazing to do that. It's all what you make of your stay, it's all what you make of your opportunity. Not everyone gets a chance to go to Japan. You have the ability to make a difference, you have the ability to be a positive influence.