Well, I live in the Little Rock Arkansas area, and I have been an SLP for 14 years, I came to the field quite a bit differently. We all talk about what we want to be when I was 17 years old, I was convinced that I was going to be a television broadcast or sports announcer weatherman somewhere in that vein, I did a lot of sports broadcasting. Then about my senior year of high school, I got a scholarship offer for an athletic scholarship. But the funny thing about that was I didn't play a single sport, not competitively anyway, to be an announcer for a college basketball and baseball team. I took that scholarship and started out in broadcasting finished my four years of college. And then life happens. I met someone that I was very enthusiastic about building a life with, I wasn't convinced that that person wanted to move to Tupelo, Mississippi while I was going to take the morning weather man job at a television station. So about that point, I had to find a field that appealed to me, that would sort of bring in communication and reaching out to especially the elderly. I had a couple of grandparents that had Alzheimer's. So I decided to go back to school I took a job as a speech therapy aide at the Fayetteville public school system in Arkansas. Then went on to post baccalaureate into a program got my Master's in speech therapy back around 2010. It was kind of a difficult transition, especially being post baccalaureate coming from a different field and also being really the only male that we had in that cohort. And in my program, can talk a little bit about that later. There's some interesting perspectives I went to work in the skilled nursing facility kind of world for about 10 years really enjoyed it a lot of rich experiences. I think that I've always been that kind of speech therapist that because coming from a different background, I didn't feel like I was probably just more of a true clinician getting to know my patients, and not really mixing a lot with some of the academia and some of the other speech therapy world that are doing conferences and that kind of thing. But I often felt like especially in that sniff world where we have productivity requirements, and the demands were just so incredible, especially through COVID that, are there any other skeptics out there that are trying to find some ways to have conversations with rehab companies or maybe questioned some of these things about Asha. Then when this movement came along, I was just blown away? I was like, wow, these are the SLPs that I've been looking for, that are willing to ask some tough questions have different kinds of conversations. So that's how I came to the field. I've got a daughter who's going to be 12 next month, and it's it's exciting time to be in the field. I still work. I did leave the sniff world back a couple of years ago. Now work in a psychiatric hospital setting, which is different keeps every day very interesting. And you have to keep your head on a swivel some days, but it's certainly it's a field that I'm still very passionate about and I'm happy to help this movement as well.