 You're good. All right. You ready? Stand by. I've been interested in competitive shooting. Since 2008 I've been shooting competitively. I got into it back when it was more bullseye focused. It's always been a passion of mine. I enjoy shooting guns and the ability to shoot a tight group or shoot accurately is to me a very, is an important skill to have, especially as a Marine. I wanted to come out here, to want to expose the Marines to a different style of shooting than what they're usually used to in competition. Watch our boundaries a little bit, show them they can travel at a place as far as Phoenix for an overnight trip and just really expose them to something new in the competitive world. So we started out at the 300 yard mark and we shot some, I think they were 12 inch steel gongs, six shots to get six hits. And then we moved over to more of a 25 meters and then shooting some steel, going through some different barricades and whatnot. Moved over to the 200 yard mark, shot pistol at 100 meters. And then we shot rifle at the 200 meter mark at steel targets. And then to finish it off we did all steel pistol at the 25 yard mark. There's a lot of people that come out and they think that, you know, they're God's gift of shooting and they get humbled very quickly. You know, I had a lot, I had some success in the bullseye area, but coming out to action shooting is a whole different style of shooting to learn and it really, it forces you to constantly try to push yourself and be better. And then through that competition it breeds excellence and it allows you to take what you learn out here because I can touch base and talk to other shooters, civilian shooters and we can share ideas and share, you know, just different TTPs. And from there we can take that back and we can again, we can incorporate that into our lessons and our teaching for the Marines that come out to the MTU. So it's all about increasing the survivability and lethality of the Marines in combat. There's definitely other people that are better than us, so keep practicing. Pistols is probably our biggest thing to practice on. It's just a whole different ball game. My favorite part about today was really just seeing the Marines improve. I saw Marines that really had, prior to coming here, a lot of issues with steel plates and steel targets. I saw them improve like right before my eyes. It was really impressive to see the hard work and dedication they put into training to come out here really paid off and that it was very, as an OIC of the team, it's very rewarding. Figured I'd have the time to shoot while I'm in so I'm going to do it and it definitely showed me the different sport that I'm super interested in and I'm going to continue to pursue it. I would say that, I mean, over the past 24 hours we got to come out to Phoenix, experience a great level of hospitality from the people that ran the range, shoot an awesome match that had a lot of challenging stages. We were pushed, we were challenged, we were, we had Marines rise up to that challenge and it's just, it's great, it's an extremely rewarding experience because it will make you better at things that you might have thought you were good at, but you can always improve and you just get traveling, shooting, competing and just getting to do this for a living. It's unbelievable.