 Well today we did a static line airborne operation and we did it out here at North Auxiliary Airfield in North South Carolina. We do it the same way every single time but it's muscle memory. Once the paratrooper leaves the door the jump master has no control over what that parachute does so we make sure that we practice it to standard every single time every single jump. It doesn't matter if you have you're a five jump chump or if you're on your you know hundred and tenth jump everybody does it. This is our capability to get to the fight so the ability for our paratroopers to get used to doing that and having it be second nature so they can really focus on what their mission is going to be once they get on the ground. It's quite a rush because you just jump up and out and the wind just takes you and then shoot pops open and brunch you when you first get out it's the most quiet time in for about two seconds it's super quiet and then you're worried about getting on the ground so it's awesome. The commander and I were the jump masters on the first pass it was the end of my tenure and it was her baseline as a jump master. He's been my my right-hand man for the last year since I took command and then on top of that just to be under his mentorship as a master rated jump master with a significant amount of experience he's mentored me as a as a brand new jump master and so to sort of finally get set as he is on his way out the door has been an honor. With the brigade I've been here three years what goes through my mind is just the things I needed to do for the operation. How to clear the door how to put the jumpers in the door exit them safely and then do a good exit myself and land for that fall unless it was only when I got on the ground that I thought about it okay that was my last one and so I think that's a that's how we should be thinking right my mind wasn't on other things my mind was on the on how to how to execute the task to standard the way I'd been instructed the way I've learned for 31 years.