 If I could go back in time and say, hey, in two years you're going to be married, you're going to be a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, my guess is that two-year younger me would have said something very inappropriate to the current me and said to get lost. You know, one thing my grandfather did give me above everything else was just a shared love of golf. He took a set of his old clubs, cut them down, put some electrical tape on the end of them and had me swing in clubs in the backyard. Five, six years of age. Some of my greatest memories are just sitting in a golf cart, waiting to tee off, just talking to my grandfather. And it's the ability to do that with my own child is something I just can't wait to do. I grew up in a blue collar family, so I feel like I got a tradition I must have to carry on. I mean, they work hard, so. I break up families essentially for a profession, which means I'm a divorce attorney. I think I have a unique perspective as a divorce attorney because I myself am divorced. We were married for about four years. It was just one of those things where there's two people who worked out fine as friends, but as a married couple, just it didn't work. After my grandfather passed, it was like losing a father. I was that close to him. So I had everything going wrong. I didn't have an outlet. I didn't have anyone to talk to. I didn't have anyone to pray to. This says that Taya makes everything better, not Taya. Taya is so important to me because she came into my life at a time where I was at my lowest. She was up front about being a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I explained to him that we believe when you get married, it's forever. It's eternal. It got me because I couldn't imagine the fact that my grandparents were married for 60 years, that upon my grandparents passing that they weren't married anymore. That's what really piqued my interest. So I went up to the missionaries and said, what you got from me? I remember when I was in college and I was 19 years old. You couldn't trust me to like scramble an egg properly and these guys are going to come and teach me about the gospel of Jesus Christ. The gospel isn't 19 years old. The gospel has been around for a long time. You could see how the gospel changed his life and not the 19-year-old kid. I was baptized up in Canada by Taya's father. I came out, I changed. I went as Taya's dad for permission every day. We got married in Central Park. It was supposed to be done at two o'clock, three-thirty. She's in her wedding dress with an umbrella and the pouring rain sprinting down the bold ridge. We had our Central Park wedding on December 6th and again I would get married in the temple in September. When two married people get sealed in a temple, they essentially are going to be married for attorney. I didn't think I was ever going to get back up until Taya walked into my life and threw her into the church. I started to learn just how family-centric a successful life should be.