 I know everyone says that when you get your driver's license, you have freedom, but when you get your pilot's license, that is freedom. Being at the controls of an airplane on a calm, beautiful, serene morning is just something that you can't find anywhere else. Getting up into the air, you can catch the sunrise. It's quiet and it's calm and you just feel alone and you can look down and be like, everyone's still sleeping. I'm up here experiencing this. Like how many people get to experience flight? So much of my work has gone into the aircraft that you can sit inside the plane and say, I made that where I've seen that in CAD and I've worked on that specific part and now I'm sitting in an aircraft and I'm looking at that part and I know it's going to fly. There's something really cool about being able to be part of that entire design process where you design a part, you make a part, it goes in an airplane and that airplane flies. I would say that that's the coolest part about my job. I get to be part of that entire life cycle of the development of Aliyah. A bunch of the stuff that I'm working on at Beta is backed up by the math that I'm learning at UVM so I'm able to take the content of the classes and just directly apply them to my work at Beta. So I've been able to kind of merge the two and utilize both to benefit my education. Learned an incredible amount about what I wanted to do with my career, what my passions were. I found aviation which has been life-changing. Beta is like the perfect job. You get to play around with airplanes, you get to design an airplane. It's a group of individuals who are driven and kind of pushing at the forefront of the aviation industry. Normally you go into school and you learn concepts and then you're like, this is great but where do I apply these? So Beta gives me kind of an outlet to apply all of the skills that I've learned at UVM to a real-world engineering problem so it's super satisfying. Of course I want to be here.