 I'm a rehabilitation and forensic neuropsychologist, which means we're the primary people who diagnose and treat memory thinking and learning disorders, everything from concussions, traumatic brain injuries, strokes, a memory problem. And the other thing neuropsychs do is how stress affects you physically and mentally. When I was 17, I was thrown through a windshield and I had a fairly bad traumatic brain injury that left me with a lot of the same symptoms patients of mine had. And so it was very little known about cognitive neuroscience back then, about the rehabilitation memory disorders, and it gave me a very big interest in it. Later on, my father had an early version of vascular dementia that was misdiagnosed, which furthered my interest in it. And things that were half medical and half stress related have always been an interest to mine and that's how I got into it. The Hackensack Meridian System is a superior healthcare system. It's just very well integrated. I think people are very well taken care of. It's a duty and responsibility to give a helping hand to others and to give back. I think it should be more widely known that there is a need and there is a responsibility to give to your community, to give to other people, to give to your patients. I would just hope that we can serve as an example to others to think maybe outside of their normal ways of giving, like just writing a check to the American Cancer Society or a local ambulance society that they work every day in an environment where their donation has the potential of having a real impact of touching someone's lives and think about their environment, think about the patients.