 How you doing today? Good how are you? Are you currently in the military? You got any friends or family might be interested in the Army Reserve instructor program. They work at a school house five days a week and when soldiers come in you know I teach them on an MLS or some type of additional skill identifier. We're trying to get more instructors into the fold. Currently we've got a severe shortage of instructors across the Army Reserve. And it's a great job. It's a great job. It's a great brilliant assignment to do. It'll help your career out and you're going to touch somebody's lives, somebody's soldier's careers. Looking for people that are in the military looking to maybe maybe get out of like the Air Force or something like that and keep their foot in the door of the reserve capacity and then come on as an instructor in their career field. First you have to be qualified in that MLS and your packet will end up going to a board. Usually a panel as in the chief instructor or the common of the particular schoolhouse you're trying to get into and that chief instructor comment they'll sit down and they will look at your packet and determine whether you're going to be a best fit because it is you are competing against others. It takes roughly approximately about a year to become a certified instructor. So if there was a way to speed that up we would be able to get more more soldiers behind a podium. Part of what I get out of it is it's honestly the reward of teaching soldiers not only the right way to do things but also the safe way. We had one student that did not speak English very well and we teach in the APA format which is what we have to for college credit and we had an entire class surround this soldier and help him translate his papers. That's when he learned what it was all about and you could see that you could feel that. If you are intimidated by the idea of being an instructor when you get into the schoolhouse they're there to help you. They want to see everybody succeed in the entire schoolhouse so there's nothing really to worry about there.