Sure, I mean, I'll go all the way back to my immigrant family, and when we came to the States, my parents worked extremely hard to try to create a better life for us. When I was 14, we decided one of the best ways we get ahead is try to do our own business, so when I was 14 years old, we sold our house, we took every penny we had and we bought our first motel, one in Alexandria, Virginia, moved right into the manager’s apartment, and it was a tough time. I think both from a personal standpoint, I think I was in middle school at that time, switching schools, living out of a manager's apartment, knowing the importance of our family business was a time, and I'm going to date myself now, it was I think 1979, I think interest rates were close to 19%, and so it was a really tough time but I knew everything we had, everything was at stake, every penny we had was in that property, we had no option but to try to make it a success and working really closely with my father and kind of helped him build up that business is something that even though years later, I had other kind of very formal backgrounds both in education and work environments, I always go back and and say most of what I know about business in terms of cash flow, economic profit, how you treat people really came from those early entrepreneurial days, and those are skills I've taken with me on many large-scale businesses ever since, so I wouldn't trade, even though it was a difficult time, that experience for anything. It really helped kind of create who I am and afforded me to get through both tough times as well as have that focus to be able to continue to drive forward.