Most of them are Catholic schools. The public school board hasn't quite wanted us to do them there yet.
When I go into a school, after the other presentations, I step up to the microphone, and I basically talk to the kids and say that you should wear your helmets. I was like you once upon a time, and this is my story. And then I tell them basically everything I told this committee at the beginning about all my injuries and everything. I tell them that this was a four-second decision. I took my helmet off on a hot summer day when I was really close to home, and this is what changed my life forever. That's basically my presentation.
The doctor does his, from a doctor's point of view, on the brain and everything. I do mine. And then my stepfather, Bob, comes up and tells it from a parent's point of view. He tells them how it was, the whole experience of being called by the police, telling him to go to CHEO, and about the wait and what it's like for the parents and everything.
When we go there and we do all that, usually, at the end, for most of the kids--you can see them when they first sit down--you can really tell that you've given them a piece of information and that they'll think first before they go bike riding, which is the objective of our group.