 There are difficulties that you face when you go out in the public, but it's a really good society that everyone accepts you, who you are. I grew up in a state of Kajarath in India. It's on the northwest side. Grew up on my own, basically. My most of the family was in America when I was growing up over there. My uncle was in the Indian commando. He was an Indian commando, and I wanted to always join the military. Came to America, learned English, went through high school, and then everyone in my family was a doctor, a lawyer, businessman, everything. So I'm like, I want to do something different. And I just like, everyone keeps talking about the Marines, how it's a different challenge and it's the hardest one out of the all. I started driving young in India. There's like no really laws when you can drive, when you can't drive. And then when I was joining the military, I wanted to do something close to combat. And then the jobs available was a motor-tea operator and motor-tea mechanics. So I picked motor-tea operators. Make sure you don't lose any screws or anything. I mean, the American dream, that's true. What everyone talks about, what you can get in America, yes, it is true. It's not nothing impossible as long as you put in for it. Even in the Marine Corps, like they knew I was in the citizen, and then you just accept it. And it's just a brotherhood. You know, that was just the best part, that I haven't seen anywhere else. I grew up in China. My mom, she really persisted me to come to United States for education. In China, parents give you directions, tell you what to do, and you just do it, follow it. But in America, you have to plan for your own future. And then knowing what's the best for you and make the decision on your own. One of the dreams as a child was actually go visit Japan because, you know, anime, they're really popular for anime. And then Marine Corps made it happen. I have a couple of people ask me, like, where are you from? Like, who are you? My automatic answer is, I'm from China, from Chinese. But after living in America for almost seven years now, I just feel like America is part of me. I'm belong here, but I can't say it because I've lived in China. But now, with that certificate, I feel like I belong here. I am an American, and we are United States Marine. I am an American, and I'm a United States Marine. I gotta say it again.