 Shannon Sander, U.S. Air Force, 92 to 96. My motivation for serving in the military was actually to pay for college. Ran out of money for college, identical twins. Parents couldn't help both of us, so the military was good to my family, so I decided to go into the Air Force. Being the only female, you had to figure out how to fit in. And my flight sergeant used to bring everyone over to his room after shift. And one time I finally said, yes, I'd go over. And that was the one time he'd invite everyone else from the squadron over. And I didn't drink a lot. I wasn't 21 yet. So I had a couple, and he's like, well, just lay down here. Well, I lay down, fell asleep, and then I'm waking up to him, raping me. And when you're medically boarded out of the military and told at 24 years old, you're disabled for life. You can't serve. You're disqualified for further military service. It just multiplied into, I've done something wrong. I'm not good enough. So it became where you isolated. You didn't talk about it. DEV has given me a purpose when I felt my purpose was gone. Has shown me I can be a leader again and inspire people to do something.