 I chose to join the mentor program because I think it's important to pass on your experiences with publishing and how to manage and prioritize your time between teaching, education, knowledge sharing and so on. Do you have courses now? No. I joined the mentor program because I would like some advice from my career advancement. I basically just told you how I work with things. In the ideal world. But that worked pretty well because we find out you're very structured and I'm very structured and I just needed a couple of good advice on how to handle certain things. It worked like a charm for me. I could implement that immediately and it made a difference and it was really nice. The easiest things to talk about is the tasks, research, education, knowledge sharing, admin. The hardest part is to talk about some of the conflicts that might arise in the workplace. I thought we had quite a good deal in the beginning that we said this is confidential and we can be honest with each other but of course some of the frustrations that I had within my immediate work group or department I thought might have been a bit personal but we found a good balance also. So the career advice I've been able to give has been mostly about how to make yourself qualified for tenure. So now you're gaining a new perspective from somebody else who can actually look objectively in and say okay you need this and this and that in order to advance and then of course I got a huge motivation boost every time I left a meeting I had a list of actions to take and that gave me a lot of motivation to go on with my work.