 Today we're certifying seven more soldiers that are going to be ready to go out and start performing services. We have to have people that are detail-oriented, that care, that are going to be professionals and that truly want to serve those that served before us and honor them. I joined the National Guard as kind of just an opportunity to gain experience with the military. I'm a college student, I'm looking to commission. I've always known that the Honor Guard has been a program within the National Guard and so I was looking for any means to be able to reach out to them. So being able to give back to the families of deceased veterans is just a huge honor and privilege. I think the most challenging was at the very end the six-man flag fold. Just because there's a lot that goes into it, there's a lot of specific movements that are timed and it just takes a lot of coordination between all six people and so I found that particularly challenging. We have to work as a team. If ball bearing, if somebody steps off with the wrong foot, that casket's going to wiggle. It's going to shift, it's going to move. So we have to all together be in unison, be in sync. We're training for the real thing for when there's an individual in this casket and it is our responsibility to make sure that they are sent off in the best way possible for their legacy and for their family. It's very solemn, it's sad depending on the family when they lost their veteran so it does get very emotional and it's our job to maintain our professionalism, maintain our composure more than anything else. I think ultimately we have to respect the craft. We're not just showing up to a funeral and representing ourselves. We don't wear name tapes for that reason on our uniform because it's not about us. It's about that veteran and we're not just, like I said, we're not just representing ourselves. We're representing the guard, we're representing the army as a whole for that family. We want to give those families the absolute best.