 Well I feel very well prepared for this mission and a lot of that preparation happened before I got to NASA. As you said, I was an Army Aviator. I spent my whole career working high-risk missions in small teams in remote areas, which is what we're doing right now. And you know, there's a few things I really took from the Army. One was how to lead a team and make tough decisions in circumstances like that, how to be a good teammate, how to be reliable for your team, and how to make your team have trust in you. I think the skills that it takes or that it's required to fly helicopters in combat is very similar to what it takes to work on small teams up here in space. The two spacewalks I did last month were, actually earlier this month, were very different. The first one was doing some battery replacement and upgrades to our power system here on space station, and the second one was installing some cable jumpers to allow us to have a redundant power system to our robotic arm. And ever since I first started training for spacewalk, something that struck me was how similar it was to being a pilot on a scout weapons team. And there's a few reasons for that. You know, the suits that we wear outside, they are like small spacecraft, keeping us alive out in the vacuum of space. And so you have to be able to monitor that suit. You have to know your suit well enough to enable yourself to do the mission while not having to think about the suit, but still at the same time monitoring its systems. It has its own power system and thermal regulation system, electronic system, a radio system. Very much like flying a helicopter. You know, the best pilots use that helicopter for the mission rather than all of their attention having to be focused on the helicopter. So getting to a level of proficiency where your focus can be on the mission, but you're also cross-checking this very complex system that your life is relying on is very similar to doing a spacewalk. And in addition to monitoring yourself, you're also monitoring your partner that you're with. So up here on a spacewalk, that's the other astronaut that's outside with you on the ground. That was the other helicopter that I was flying with. And most importantly, you know, you have to be able to work with that other person and their system, their spacesuit, their helicopter in order to accomplish the mission. So it was actually amazing to me how many of the skills kind of carried over into that environment. Sure, one of the things that I really like to point out to soldiers and to your civilians are outside the military is that the army is so diverse in the opportunities that it offers you. And no matter what your passion is, you really can find it within the army. I was very fortunate to be able to pursue my passion for aviation. I was able to get advanced degrees because of the army opportunities that I sought out. And the biggest advice I can give to soldiers is to have a goal and to think five, seven years out, where do you want to be? And then, you know, talk to your leaders and see what you can do to make that happen. The opportunities really are endless and the sky is not the limit.