 When my wife and I got married, we thought everything was going to be perfect. We thought that we were not going to fight, even though people warned us that marriage is simple, that we're different, we're good at communicating. Well, those that we know, we also would have challenges. We had some ups and downs in the first few years, but I think at the time when my daughter was born, about two years into our relationship, that's when things got to a point where I said, we need to get help. We had two separate people refer us to amygotherapy. One person referred us specifically to the therapist that we work with, and it was, I would say, love at first sight. It was an amazing experience for us. We were able to see the light at the end of the tunnel. We were able to see that our relationship could be better, and not only that, that all the reasons that we thought, all the struggle that we had, we could see why we were having those problems, and we could see how we could work through it, and we had to learn tools to be able to work through it, to communicate more effectively and not kind of get into the same problems that we kept running into every time we tried to talk about something that we had a difference of opinion. So I was in school at the time. I was getting my master's in counseling psychology. I was also studying to be a rabbi. I wanted to be a pulpit rabbi, and our therapist said, you know, Shlomo, you should really do this training. There's a training coming up. And I said, for sure, I'd love to learn how to be in the model of therapists, even if I'm going to be a pulpit rabbi. At least I'd like to be able to have this skill set because I saw how much it worked. And I know that therapy doesn't always work, unfortunately. And I saw that this worked, so I believed in it. So at that point, I decided to pursue the clinical training in Washington, D.C., with Rebecca Sears, who is a faculty of the Imago Institute. And I learned with her for about a year, and we had videotapes and trainings to become certified as an imago therapist. This was almost 20 years ago. Since then, I've done continuing trainings where I became an advanced clinician in imago therapy, became a certified workshop presenter, where we present the Get Me Love You Want Workshop. And then I was asked to join the faculty to be able to train other therapists. And I've been actually spending a lot of time over the years training therapists, you know, continuing education credits about imago therapy and about ethical couples therapy. But now I'm going to be training to actually be on the faculty to train other people to become certified imago therapists, just like I got trained about 20 years ago.