 My name is Kamoha Opie, I'm from Mortensen. My name is Elijah Nifai, I'm from Kamaq, I'm from Shibashi. And diving is my testimony. It all started with my dad. My dad always told me stories about him growing up diving, growing up being outdoors, loving it. And he talked about his dad growing up diving. And I think that always drove me to kind of want to be like my dad. I was six or seven when I started. It started here and all from my uncle and my dad. He always taught me dive where you're comfortable diving. Push your limits but not to a point where you can't handle. For me and all my friends that I dive with know that wherever I dive, I dove with my dad before to learn how to dive it, learn where it's safe and where it isn't. I think that anything to make a good diver is just patience. You have to have patience. You have to be able to calm down your breathing, slow down. You got to be humble. You can't go out and expect the fish to swim to you. You got to go and sometimes the fish are there, sometimes they're not. And you go down, you sit at the bottom and you got to be patient. You got to hold your breath and just wait until something gives you the right shot. If you're able to stay focused and stay calm in the moment with everything happening going around you, I think that makes any diver a solid good diver. My dad always taught me whenever you go hunt or whenever you go dive, always remember to keep the Lord. Making sure that you pray before you get in the water. Pray while you're in the water. Pray for patience. Pray to improve your skills but make sure you pray for protection. Pray for safety to keep wisdom in the water. Always remember to pray and don't even get in the water if you don't pray. That's why before we jump in the water, we say our prayer and that's the least we can do. And for me and Leah, we know that if we say our prayers and we have faith in each other that we can protect each other and be aware of what's around us, the Lord will protect us and bring us home safely. Always having the Lord in your life and every decision that you have, you want to keep a constant prayer in your heart, no matter any scenario that you go through. Out on the water, you never know what's going to happen. Just always being able to dive is always being able to keep a prayer in my heart. I love to do service for people. I love to see them smile and something is given to them or done for them. I think that's my biggest push to go diving. It wouldn't even have to be a big fish. It could be a few small fish and it's something that others can't do. For example, the kupuna, they definitely can't get in the water like they used to but it does put a smile on their face to be able to eat what they used to. There's a difference between talking about it and being about it. The whole talk about service, everybody wants to do it. Everybody wants that smile, that thank you from whoever you're doing service for. It's easy to talk about it but when it comes down to the details of when, where and who you want to serve, it's a whole different story. You've got to put in your own effort, in your own time to serve somebody without expecting anything in return. For me, Kama was always there whenever I needed help, whenever I needed something. Kama would always be there as a friend, as a brother. No matter what, diving or anything, Kama would be there right by my side. I started diving with a few of my friends with Kama, my friend's star. Pretty much taught me a lot of how I dive now. I think it's good for anybody to just have that partner, you know, have somebody that matches your skills and just having that one person that you can trust. And for me, it's Kama. There's a thing called one-up-one-down when someone's on the bottom, someone's on the top waiting, watching that they'll be ready for the next move if they need help or when it's your time to jump in. You have someone you trust, like for example, Lehiah. I trust him in my life as a diving partner, as a friend, family. Lehiah and I like to relate that one-up-one-down system to the gospel by Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ being there and the Holy Spirit being there for us. As we go about our day trying to serve others and share the gospel, I know that they're there when we need them. You know, it's comforting to know that when you go out, you have someone watching out for you. Kama is probably one of my best friends and, you know, he's got my back no matter what. Sometimes, you know, the deeper you go, whether he cannot see you from the top or, you know, you're just at the bottom and something just totally goes wrong. You know, it doesn't matter whether you're on land or, you know, two-hundred feet down. It's so comforting to know that someone's there by your side. My name is Kama Ha'opi in my fault. I'm Mortensen. My name is Lehiah Ishibashi. I am a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and diving is my testimony.