 Just like any other school, especially a competitive one, I think it's very rewarding. I'm a passionate person. I love a challenge. Marines being that we're a small percentage already, McQuist even smaller. The amount of training that goes into training an actual McQuist is not overkill by any means. The amount of training which goes into a McQuist versus a recruit is a lot different. We teach the recruits, we are training them to pass with a basic swim quality. The training that McQuist have to go through deals with swimming a 500, that deals with rescues, 25 meter underwater swim, and some brickwork. The culminating event is rescues being the most important thing that we're geared towards. Extremely excited to graduate this course. It was super demanding, seven weeks, but I'm happy to be on the other side and have gone through what I've gone through to be more prepared in emergency situations. And being McQuist now, being able to train any recruit that comes through this pool and extremely confident in the Marines that are here already doing that on a weekly basis. Going through this course there are a lot of situations that are unknown to you. How long you're going to stay underwater, how long you need to have your breath for, the amount of exhaustion that you get, and then you have to go in the pool again and rescue a victim, makes you extremely confident as a Marine, as a leader, just to protect each other in any situation, whether it's the water or outside of the water.