 Exercise Arctic Edge is the premier DOD homeland defense exercise, is a joint level exercise comprising all branches of the military. Really it's just combining the task force together and trying to integrate different branches of service and different MOS's to effectively engage the enemy. I think that it's important for the Marines to understand and gain some confidence and actually operate and understand the complexities and the challenges of operating in that environment. We call it PMA, Possible Mental Attitude. It's huge out here because whenever it gets down to the negative, it's on the leadership and small unit leadership to bring everybody up. It takes strong people to get up when they're cold, when it's negative three degrees outside to get up to check on their Marines and check on the soldiers that are around them to make sure they're okay. It's definitely nice to just meet people from, you know, different branches and see how they operate and then, you know, you take the good and describe the bad. That way we all progress together. I've enjoyed being closer to Marines I work with every day. It's not doing a job and then going back home. The field is a completely different beast. Just because something's cold or wet and hot, just don't give up. Just keep pushing through because we're all in this together.