 My perfect day-to-day activities, my ideal day-to-day activities, involves, you know, finishing up a paper. Like, actually today I was working on a couple of projects and trying to finish up a science paper. And that's, you know, the best part is actually having something come to fruition that I've been working on for a while. But for my particular position, I, you know, I don't get as much time to do that kind of thing. My typical day in my non-ideal world or my actual real world is attending a lot of meetings. You know, I attend staff meetings and I run a lab, so I hold staff meetings. But, for instance, right now we're going through things associated with the sequester. And so that's a lot of time spent on what are their new roles and how do those apply. And then I have to figure out how many people in my lab can travel and they can't travel. And so those are sort of the more mundane things that I end up having to do. But I also get to serve on committees outside of NASA and I, you know, in the solar physics community. I attend science meetings. So there's probably not a typical day, but, you know, overall is generally split between administrative work, approving time cards, that kind of thing, and some research and then, you know, being able to attend science meetings and presenting the research. So that's an important aspect of the science that I do is not just doing it but making sure that I'm getting out there and communicating it and especially as a NASA scientist because taxpayers are paying for us to do those and so they are owed, you know, the sort of end result, well, here's what you're getting for your money. So I do a lot of outreach as well, talking to kids at schools and that kind of thing.