 My name is A.B.H. too, Lauren Perry from the training department. I am the indoctrination L.P.O. I think within the Navy, women's equality has grown exceptionally well. I think a lot of the programs that they've been opening up have allowed women to branch out, to expand more, to do bigger and better things than what they were limited to, you know, from just being a nurse. I think it's important that individually as women and, you know, the males in the Navy that we recognize that, you know, anything that I can do as a female sailor can be done as a male sailor and vice versa. There's a lot of instances where I will see a woman carrying a heavy box and she's going up a ladder well and I see a gentleman, you know, step up and say, hey, let me help you with that. Not so much because he thinks she's weak or she's not capable of doing it on her own, but you know, some people will raise that way. Some people will raise to think, you know, hey, if you're here, you're going to do the same work that I'm going to do. And I mean, it should be looked at that way. So I think it's grown to a tremendous level and I think it's only going to increase from here. It's your woman voice. It's your voice. Certain things that I try to instill in female sailors coming into the ship is to just to do their best to give them 100 percent and to not feel like they have to prove anything to anybody. Although there's been, you know, several centuries of Navy, I think that the development of things with technology and places that we can go and things that we can do. I think there's nowhere to go but up.