 So, I had the opportunity to interview Patty Wackstaff. We went down to Sarah Spies and I to visit St. Augustine, Florida, where her flight school is. Patty is a three-time U.S. national aerobatics champion. She didn't want to just win it one, but two, but three times to prove that her win was not a fluke. So, she is definitely an incredible aviator in history, right, really kind of a walking legend, in my opinion. Something that was really fun was hearing about Patty and her experience flying, not just her experience about her passion with flight, and she talks about in aerobatics how she likes to feel one with the airplane, so every single movement that she's doing, she's doing it with the airplane in the sky, so it was just really cool to hear her story and her passion associated with flying. So, Patty showed us around her flight school, and one of the things I noticed is that her flight school is essentially a museum. It's pretty incredible, actually. She has medals, trophies, news clippings. There's a lot of memorabilia around, especially pictures of her with other people. Something that I really took away from the interview that we did with Patty was how appreciative she was for all the people she had through her journey in life, right? Either someone that's helped her or either someone that's just been there and been a best friend through whatever situation she was going through. Patty went through a lot of adversity, actually, to get to where she was today, and just found her passion in flight. So Patty kicked off her flying when she was in Alaska. She was an economic developer for the state, and she chartered a plane to get to these different cities in Alaska. So what happened was they crashed. After that, instead of being afraid of flying again, Patty just said, that's something I can do much better. This guy's ridiculous, right? And I'm going to be a pilot. So that really is what kicked off her. No kidding, I'm going to start flying now. Isn't that crazy?