 Professionally, this year has really set a precedent for clinical and surgical excellence and has really given me a head start for career growth. Personally, I've really enjoyed living in Vale. I've enjoyed hiking after clinic every day. I've enjoyed learning how to ski a little bit more professionally. For a Michigan boy, Colorado is really breathtaking. I've been really honored to pick the brains of the thought leaders and giants of our field. They really took the extra step and they met us in cadaver labs to run through the nuances of the cases that they really innovated. This is the only place I've ever experienced where I can conduct biomechanical studies on one day and the next day take that to the bench and do bench studies and ultimately translate that into the clinic. So I worked with the U.S. snowboard team in the Czech Republic and that was a really once in a lifetime opportunity to travel with the team and really be integrated with the Olympic team, both in practice and in competition and learn the ins and outs and what it really means to be an Olympic athlete. What I think one of the benefits of training here is that you have seven attendings, each with their own training and personalities. You're hit with multiple styles of leadership. The breadth of experience is unparalleled and this is stuff that you can take with yourself to your next job in terms of how to run a team. How to get people to work hard for you. How to get yourself to work hard and how to elevate the game of really everyone around you. I think that's one of the unique experiences of being here.