 What were some of the differences you saw in these different areas? Well, every place has its character. When I first moved to the U.S., I went to study English in California. That was the university that allowed me to learn English within three months. I was ready to actually apply for colleges, got all that TOEFL test off, and that was just great, just living in California and enjoying my time there. The weather was perfect, so it was a great exposure. It was a new universe to me. Coming from such a small town, such as mine, and going to California, it was just amazing. That by itself was great. Then I moved to Seattle, Washington, and that's where I went to community college first. I just went to that school because I just felt like I wasn't ready for a big school as of yet, although all my scores allowed me to go to university. I wanted something that would make me as a focal point. I wanted a professor to focus on me because I needed that attention at that time. Then I moved to a slightly bigger university. It was still a smaller relatively compared to other universities in the U.S., but it was a private and small because I still needed that one-on-one attention from professors. Going through engineering school was not an easy thing, but having my professors as mentors was key to me. Then off to getting my master's degree, and that's when I moved to the East Coast in the United States, that was completely something different. I did not expect the East Coast to be so different from the West Coast, and that also just gave me a completely different learning perspective on things. Just going through a variety of schools like this just shapes a person. It just gives you so many perspectives on how you, as I mentioned earlier, think about life in general.