 So, I was on Interstate 5 in San Diego and I was going southbound to go back to Coronado and I saw him in the southbound lanes and a drunk driver fleeing from the police got on the highway heading northbound in the southbound lanes and we kind of met head on. So I had a head injury, I broke my nose, had a collapse lung, lacerated liver, had a chest tube, open compound fracture in my right femur, broke my right knee, my right tibia. I got a plate and nine screws in my right ankle and my left tib and fib and I got a rod down there and a rod in here. I was in a wheelchair for a little over three months and then I was on crutches for about close to six months. It's good and it's bad and it's good because it's a totally new vibe now. As one guy had mentioned, it's like it's your new normal, you have to live with your new normal. So maybe the most challenging thing that I've come to realize is that I got that yank off of the track that I was on and everything I've done since then, which I don't have any regrets, but it wasn't really the path that I had in my years ago. One lady asked me, if you can go back on that particular day, would you do anything different? And I quickly said no, because I don't know where my life would have been if it didn't happen. So I'm in a good place right now. So I wouldn't take a different exit or be in a different lane. You might realize, oh, you thought that everything was over. I can't do this anymore. I can't do that anymore. And then you get up and you go swim or you go run and you shot put and you say, oh, jeez, wait a second, I can do this now. And it may be in a different position or in a different way, but you can still do it.