 So my main kind of reason is this kind of multiple. I have a family history of members of my family who've served in the military. I also had kind of a calling about two years after 9-11 I was working construction, building houses and stuff and that's kind of about when my calling kind of took place. I felt the need for me to give back to the country at that point, provide kind of safety for my family and friends and it was something that just kind of just pulled at me right about that time. The meaning of Veterans Day to me is the ability for people to give back to veterans you know the ones that are currently serving as well as those who've served in the past or in times of war. It's time to sit down, recognize them, to you know kind of pay tribute to the things that they've done for the country and bring light to the opportunities that they've brought to the table. I believe the best way to honor a vet on Veterans Day is to sit down and talk with them, acknowledge the sacrifices that they've made, sacrifices they've made for their family and their friends. It's a hard life to be a soldier, to be pulled away from their family and friends for long periods of time, to also go through times of war. Those are things that maybe they need to share, maybe they'd like to talk about but it also is something for average people just to just sit down and acknowledge what they've done for the country.