 My name is Masha Sargent Marcus Floyd. I am the NCOIC of Education and Training for the 188th Medical Group. As a civilian sector, I'm a captain pair of medical enforcement fire department and I'm also one of the training captains there as well. Here today, we are doing a TCCC along with multi-lossens level training for the next 48 hours. This is getting us very well prepped for a local deployments along with a national deployments to better serve our military and communities. We're creating leaders for the civilian sector. With this, they are going to be leading the medical fields. As you see behind me, we have doctors, we have PAs, we have nurses all the way down to EMTs behind me that are learning this life-saving, critical skill. Us doing this now better prepares them to serve their hometown. Some things I thought were pretty interesting. I got to learn how to do needle chest decompression. They taught us two different ways, upper chest, mid-axillary. One of the things I thought was pretty interesting, I got to learn how to properly apply a tourniquet. I've been to that more than a couple of times being a medic, but there was actually some things I learned. How to apply them faster, get more attention, those kinds of things. So outside of the guard, I'm a medic on a movie set. I'm pretty much there in case any actors or stuntmen, crew members get hurt, which sometimes it can be pretty dangerous depending on the scene. I believe that my job in the Air Force is actually what led me there. I wouldn't have the credentials that I need to be a medic on a movie set if it wasn't for this show. So I believe that actually helps me out a lot. We're prepping these particular airmen to serve here, to serve the city of Fort Smith in the surrounding areas or wherever that city may be, to be excellent students and citizens of medical care.