 serving the American people what you're serving your team. Your team is your lifeline, it's the most important thing to you downrange. There's nothing more important to you in a hairy situation than your teammates. There's no thanks in this line of work. Don't come here expecting someone to say thank you so much for what you're doing. You'll get that from civilians walking on the side of the road just for being in the military. Here you do the mission, you re-cock and you go out again. No one will know what you're doing, no one will know where you are, no one will know what you're working in. They're not going to know the context of your job. You're going to be out there with your team when you leave that country, come back home. That's it. The caliber of people I work with is the highest caliber. They've been through assessment selection, they've been deemed, but ultimately their moral caliber and their ability to handle themselves as a normal person from their day-to-day life is the highest caliber of people I've ever worked with. I would go anywhere and do anything with any one of these guys that I work with. Participating in here is designed to enhance the overall operator. Driving is always a plus. Having that advanced driving capability to recognize the road ahead of you, identify dangers and avoid them is not only survivability state side, it's also increasing your survivability, O'Connor's on deployment. Learning to take vehicles to their threshold, you're learning where that vehicle's breaking point is. Center of Gravity is going to change the point that it's dangerous for you and your team. It's life-saving in the sense that if you're in a situation where you have to do evasive driving, aggressive driving, you know what that vehicle's capable of and how to use that vehicle to your advantage. How to maneuver in traffic, out of traffic, get around the vehicles, get out of situations and always have a way out. It just really teaches you how to manipulate your vehicle, understand your vehicle just so if you're ever in that situation, you have all the tools you need to be successful. Shooting is always a plus. The ability to precisely put around where you need to greatly enhances the survivability of the team and reduces collateral damage and increases mission success. The piece of it being top the right range, an average person's reaction time is a quarter of a second. So when the target presents itself, you have a quarter of a second. You react to change and act on it. So you start at the low ready, the target presents itself, you have a quarter of a second to get your sights on target and squeeze the trigger and make sure it's accurate and dead center. In a vehicle, getting out of a vehicle, taking cover, exchanging fire from that aspect versus standing online and just shooting for targets all day. I'm working on basic marksmanship skills. Most of the guys here have done that. We're at that level and we're looking for the next level of training and that's absolutely what they're capturing for us here. We're shooting in civilian attire where all we have is a concealed weapon and we have to react or we might be in a full kit. As our training, we're prepared to do anything that's required of us and anything that might be stressful enough to accomplish. Our adversaries overseas are learning our ways, so we're having to shift and adjust our training and do things differently. So every day is learning. You can never walk around and think that you have it all, know it all. The men on my left and right, they have a sense of drive. They have a sense of pride. There's just something about them that you'll never find anywhere else. Somebody's thinking about Marsock, what I would say to them is go for it. It never hurts to try. The only thing that's ever going to hurt is your pride, but just pick yourself up, dust yourself up and do it again. Thank you.