 So at this time, team six, go ahead and kid up and then you'll receive her. How you doing? No. Let's go. Good morning. I am Sergeant Major Daphne Charles. I am the Division C-Burn Sergeant Major for our first summer division, America Tank Division. This morning is day three of the Iron Squad competition and we have a few soldiers, at least nine squads coming by and compete. So today we have the C-Burn Station and a few other stations around the field. In our station is C-Burn where they get to react to a C-Burn threat, where they wear a protective mask and they're just this. They time them and they get points based on how they do. Then next door they have a bunker to clear. This is for today only. When you're competing, you train for it so you get more knowledge and studying and learning, but also it's pretty core. This is the team, the concept of this is my squad. We work together, we struggle together, we win together. This competition is only 10 level skills, so it is basically a warrior spirit. So yes, I'm a C-Burn soldier, but that doesn't mean I cannot go local and fire should move and communicate. So it's the warrior spirit and winning. I'm looking at these young soldiers doing great things and I love the fact that it's a squad concept because they're working together as a team. And most importantly, they are representing their units and representing the first armored division, which is America's Tank Division. I am specialist Caleb Stone Nelson, 91 Bravo, wheeled vehicle mechanic. Dakota FST, 1-1 Cav, 2nd Brigade. I was a little bit of a challenge, a little bit of a learning too, because my squad's a, we're all mechanics. So we kind of had to figure this out and then learn from our experience because this is our first time ever doing these battle drills. No matter what your MOS is, you're a soldier first, so it's kind of cool running through all these things that we're supposed to do and it was, yeah, it was pretty fun. It's been challenging. A lot of early mornings and a rigorous tasks, especially early in the morning like this, starting off this whole competition with a 12 mile rut. Yeah, I mean, it's been fun too. Like we got to ride helicopters, obstacle course, shoot and all that stuff. We're having fun, but it's also still a challenge. Oh, it's fun because this part's more team oriented, so you actually have to work together as a team. So I mean, we all know each other, we all work with each other. So it's like, now we get to do a different aspect of work, more soldier tasks more than fixing a truck or fixing a vehicle. So yeah, we came in decently prepared, but there was a lot of small things we had to fix, like calling things up, stuff like that, like the small things. But most of it, we were able to improvise and get it done. We had a small class. We all sat down, had a whiteboard and went through. This is what we just went over the gist of Battle Drill 5 and went over that and then plan of attack. This is how it's going to work, this is what we're going to do. Does everybody know what they're doing? And if something happens, this is what we're going to do, or this happens, this is what we're going to do. So it's being prepared. I feel great. We came in here, like, oh, we might not be doing so great, but we're in third place already and all that stuff. And it was like, dang, all these mechanics are showing up, all the combat arms people. And most of this stuff is what they do every single day. Step up, do things. If a challenge pops up, do it. You'll learn a lot from it and it's fun.