 Go ahead tanto. I've had so both of us were Navy test pilots and fighter pilot while you were an attack pilot I guess in the beginning of your career. I was a pilot attack. We both ended up flying. We both ended up flying F-18s and How does that help you when you're an astronaut and going into space? I think it's the Across the spectrum in the Navy E1 all the way up to 06 and above we are out there on the tip of the spear We're out there on the aircraft carriers We're out there on the surface ships on the submarines and it's that Operational experience of getting to live in that really critical environment that kind of hard environment where you got to make Timely decisions and sometimes you don't always make the right decision But you got to you got to move forward you got to take in all the information you got and make a quick decision and move forward and to me That's what helped me. I think the most in space. It's just that hardcore operational background. I agree You the compartmentalization anytime you go out to sea you leave your families behind You've got the job to do very dangerous like we operate on the aircraft carrier flight deck I don't know that there's a more dangerous place on the planet during flight ops So you compartmentalize focus on your job always aware of things around you and that's very important in spaceflight as well But one of the other things I'll add is teamwork. I mean trust We have to trust our shipmates with our lives many times and working together as a team Throughout the ship as an example of the battle group and the same way with that within NASA We completely put our truck our lives in the hands of others and trusted they're doing their job Well from launch to on-orbit operations doing spacewalks, which we got to do Reentry coming back into the atmosphere and and everything in between training so teamwork working together trust That's a big part of it as well that the Navy really provided a lot of good training good opportunities to prepare us for