and that's because you became involved with the susan gchlt komen foundation. how did that happen?> it does stand out, and, you know, i have to start this story but saying i was never the girl who wore pink at the racetrack. i was anti-pink at the racetrack because, you know, i just wanted to be one of the other drivers. i wanted to blend in. but i started to follow the career of sarah fisher in indycar. she was the first female driver whom i've ever heard of having that level of success in hope wheel. sarah and her team turned her car pink in october in support of breast cancer awareness, and i thought, you know what, this is something that runs in my family, that that's a really cool thing to do with your platform as an athlete. >> absolutely. >> and then sarah retired as a drive eric and so this sort of went away from indycar racing, and you have those thoughts of, you know, someone should do something and so why shouldn't i be the someone who does something? and so this started with taking my red and yellow helmet and turning all of the red areas pink, adding the susan g. komen