Yeah. But Milton thrives on it, and as I said we've been together over, well at least fifty-five years and it's very important for him to do this. See Milton believes he's never going to die. He says that he's going to live forever. And I believe him, that's been his basic philosophy, that he, as long as he shares his talents and his knowledge with young people, and those young people continue to carry it on, in that way, he says he'll never die. And he has really spent his lifetime trying to, not really be a role model, he's just being Milton. But in the end I mean that's eventually what he is, I mean to show these young people that you can work with your church, with the Boy Scouts, you can be the best musician in the world, and you can make it. And I'm very fortunate I mean to have been able to work with Milton. We've been able to work together and Milt never wanted to be a band leader, he never wanted to have a lot of money, he believes that money is to be spent, to be used for the good, for somebody's good. And I go along with him on that along those lines. So there's many youngsters that have come through the years that have in later years I mean they have really shown us their appreciation for some of the things that we did for them. Some of them laugh about how I used to put on a big pot of chicken wings and a big pot of red beans and rice and if you ever see Richard Davis, the bass player, that's the first thing he says, "oh Mona makes the best chicken wings in the whole wide world." But you know you made a big pot and stretch it, and we have the basement, and the kids call it the cave, and they, anytime they would come, sometimes they would want to, didn't have money, place to stay, but they could always stay down there as long as they behaved themselves. So as I say we've been very fortunate like that, in order to help a lot of the youngsters.