 I'm working in Ada ILS, so that's the locality community team. I wasn't really planning to go into adult social care and actually it's worked out to be really, really good for me. So I kind of feel really enthusiastic about sharing that because I qualified in 2020, so I've been qualified nearly two years, and I kind of always planned to work in mental health and I actually lined up a job on a ward in mental health. But then obviously 2020 happened and I did four months on the ward and I just, it wasn't manageable, it wasn't flexible enough, I couldn't really continue and I found this role in ILS and I wasn't sure that I would be suitable for it because I didn't feel experienced enough. Well I wasn't, well you always felt like that when you're newly qualified don't you I suppose, but I didn't have experience as an OTA or in physical disability so I did, or moving and handling so I did feel quite unsure if it would be right for me, but actually it's been great and the best thing has been the support and the expectation, there hasn't been that expectation that I know everything and that's to reassure you that's really nice to know that there's a lot of training available and a lot of support and there is a lot to learn and I think actually now, kind of a year and a bit on, I realise how much there always is to learn and even working alongside really experienced people, we're always learning. It's always a continual kind of, yeah, new things come up. In terms of the positives, for me definitely the flexibility has really is a massive bonus, working around family life, being able to work from home is a positive, but I would say that's also one of the challenges as well. I haven't been able to have that much face-to-face training and not got to know people in the way that I would have liked to, but actually I think that's changing and we are kind of doing a bit more face-to-face stuff, much more face-to-face training so yeah, I mean that is a challenge but I think that must be across the board really and yeah, and that flexibility, being able to kind of be a bit flexible with my hours, being able to do a short today, not having to do full-time, that's been fantastic for me and that was something that I wasn't able to get in the NHS, they just wanted me to work full-time and that wasn't really negotiable so yeah, so in terms of my day, ILS, Independent Living Service, we work with adults who have acquired a disability so over 18, but so it can be really broad Parkinson's, dementia, a lot of kind of age-related conditions, arthritis, fibromyalgia, motor neurone disease, lots and lots. I have my own caseload which I kind of managed myself and I think another nice thing about this team is that it's not crisis, you know it's a long-term service, so you kind of see people a bit further down the line in there after they've acquired their disability and you're supporting them to stay at home, to be independent, you know you can work on those long-term goals with people so you kind of, you build that rapport and that relationship with people which is really nice, you work with carers, families, you know all the kind of social things that go with that and you're working alongside carers, you're working with interdisciplinary, working with social workers, physios, different teams, yeah a lot of moving and handling things which I thought was quite out of my depth and quite, I just didn't really know anything about it but actually that's, yeah it's been really interesting, I really like it, I'm kind of surprised myself and what I do like, you know, what I've enjoyed the most.