 So an Air Weapons Officer is the baseline Air Battle Manager. It's the position you first start out as a 13 Bravo. It's kind of related to being like an offensive coordinator on a football team, kind of talk on the radio as to all the different planes that are in the AOR and kind of tell them what's out there and what they need to be paying attention to to keep them safe. I decided to become an Air Weapons Officer or an Air Battle Manager because my dad was an Air Battle Manager and we actually kind of like the similar things and I imagined that since he enjoyed it, I would probably enjoy it and I don't have any regrets so far. We'll be doing an offensive counter air mission with a 35th fighter squadron, some F-16s and we're gonna go put some bombs on target and do some simulated red air or enemy air, counter offensive air. 49, 45, 30,000 hostile, two contacts. I think it's a really cool opportunity to get to fly with my dad on an aircraft that he flew 15 years ago or how many years ago it was. I have never flown with my dad before. I don't know what year he last flew, the A-O-X. I've been in 2008. Yeah, my final flight was in 2008. So airplanes completely different in the backend from the mission systems but the airframe is the same. The jets that he's flying now are the same jets that I flew 20 plus years ago in Southern Watch, Northern Watch, all those different campaigns in St. Com, exact same jets, a little bit different in the mission systems. There's no single path to where you wanna go. A lot of people look at careers as, hey, I need to do these things or I'm not gonna achieve what I wanna achieve in the military and no two paths are alike. So it's okay if you don't do those things that other people do because you're kinda set in your own path and you're gonna get to where you wanna get just working hard. So the same advice I would give him, I'd give any young officer is just, again, do the best you can, where you're at and you'll achieve what you wanna achieve. I spent a lot of time deployed during my Air Force career through Northern Watch, Southern Watch, OIF and all the time that I spent in the Middle East. I realized that the time is precious. You know, your kids grow up fast and before you know it, they're all moving out of the house. I very much appreciated the time that I did have with them knowing that we had commitments to deploy and defend the nation. But it just made me appreciate the time we did have, even that much more.