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Sure, I'm still here. I was going to say my father was not a Rosie Riveter. Well, wouldn't be. He worked in the, I think, the Kaiser Shipyards here in Portland. When I was a kid, he didn't, I don't think he had to go into the service because he had three kids. I'm not sure about that. I think my sister was a little younger than me. I think she was born about 1945. So, my whole family's gone. My two older brothers are gone. My sister's gone. And all my aunts and uncles are gone. The thing when you get older is you lose a lot of friends and you lose a lot of relatives. We're down to nieces and nephews and cousins, I guess. And we don't see them too often. But, yeah, we're just trying to take it day by day and see how it goes. A lot of, I mean, since I had a mini heart attack here a couple months ago, they got me on physical therapy now on blood thinner. And I got to go, well, I go twice a week to physical therapy. But we'll see how it goes. I had a doctor's appointment yesterday, so I had to skip my physical therapy yesterday. But we're going as best we can. Yeah, my 93-year-old cousin out there, after cutting wood, he looks like he's 50 years old. And he's thin as a rail. And I think that probably helps to be thin. You don't see too many people 100 years old that are heavy. KZSELT-EW.

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