 What Trio has done for me specifically is it's given me a community and it's helped me to navigate this process because the college process when you come in as a first generation college student, you have no idea, you have no idea how to do it, you don't know how to register for classes even and it has truly given me the skill set to do that and be a successful student. So what Trio has done for me was like helps me with academic planning, find out what I want to do with my life, my future. I was like what my goals are, helps me believe in myself like both academically and just like kind of as a person, as a leader and has provided me with like a friendly atmosphere and like a family. I met an individual here in the Trio organization that convinced me that going and getting my bachelor's degree was a good idea. I'm now the ambassador, student ambassador to Trio and I tell other students, we're not going to do the work for you. We'll guide you, we'll show you what you need, we'll help you. It's a community of support and it's great, it's fun. I mean we also have little get-togethers and whatnot kind of motivational. It's also provided a community of like-minded people and of people that come from similar backgrounds where you know we have low-income students, we have disabled students and we have first-generation college students. Things happen in our lives that don't happen in the average college students life and without the support of Trio I know I would not be here. I wouldn't still be in school and I wouldn't be, definitely wouldn't be as successful as I've been able to be. I learned a lot of knowledge about what colleges look for, what you need to do in order to transfer, how you need to prepare yourself even when you first start. Things you need to look into is for scholarships, really having a focus on what type of degree you want and working with your advisor. I would just encourage anyone that can take part in the Trio program and be a Trio student, they should do that.