 A star swimmer is someone who goes flying, and when someone needs to be rescued, we jump out and pull them out of the water. For us in our normal star jumps training, you know, we're back home, we're in an area where it's pretty controlled, there's no one going in and out of it, it's not the open ocean. So these junior guys who get open ocean training is really good, it's something they won't get back home at all. When the healer door opens, we're looking into the water right to make that leap, what we feel is excitement, excitement because here's a train that are finally being utilized. Once you hit the water, you're feeling a adrenaline rush because you want to try to go as fast and as smooth as you can in order to save this person's life. You know, you can sit there and you can see, you can see for miles under water pretty much, and I get so blue and you're just like, what is swimming underneath you? What other sea life is around? You know, you don't have, you know, a control of like, we have safety boats when we're back home, some happens they can come get us, you know, just like that. Out here, you're at the mercy of getting that healer to you, so you know, you just have to be on your toes at all times. Every now and then, depending on the situation, we'll have to lower a swimmer via the hoist and that could be due to any number of reasons, whether it's an extremely high sea state or if there's any debris in the water, which would be unsafe for us to deploy our swimmers the normal way. If I was put in the survivor's position and I saw the helicopter overhead coming to get me, I would have a feeling of extreme relief knowing that the United States Navy is going to pick me up. These guys are the experts at what they do. And everything, like all the training that we were taught, you're like, man, do I remember this? Do I remember this? As soon as this happens, everything comes back. It's just a rush of knowledge that just comes back into your head. You're like, I know exactly what to do. I know how to get this guy out safely. I'm not, you mess this up. Your training kind of kicks in and you just get this guy on the aircraft that we were going to transport into the closest medical treatment facility. I don't think you really think about your actions until a couple days later when you're like, oh, wow, that guy's alive. Because we went and did something about it.