 So the first time I ever wrote a line of code was when I took EECS 183 in the fall of my sophomore year and now I'm really proud to say that I'm an incoming software engineer at Amazon. I took EECS 183 and I was incredibly intrigued by that class because of the incredible things that I could create in my final project there and that was pretty much my first exposure to computer science really. So definitely one of my notions about this entire field was the fact that it was incredibly male dominated but actually once I started taking upper level classes I realized that like a lot of the professors are like women, powerful women in these positions and that's been like really inspirational for me. Imposter syndrome within this entire field is something that you may continue to feel but you have to keep reminding yourself that it's not real, it's just something that's in your head. So just because you think you don't fit in doesn't mean you don't fit in. Everybody feels like they don't exactly know what they're doing and that's completely okay within this field. Where I am today is I am taking a bunch of CS classes including machine learning which is a very interesting topic for me and I'm also a researcher in a lab at Michigan in the natural language processing lab and where I'm headed is to be a software engineer at Amazon. I'm super excited about that so I know that this journey is definitely possible for anyone.