That's a mouthful, Mickey, but I'll do my best. I'll start with the premise, you understand that most of our companies are not consumer-facing businesses. When we look at growth-oriented businesses, we're focused on businesses that have competitive positions and revenue visibility, and those don't tend to be consumer focusing -- focused businesses. So we start with revenue visibility and commercial relationships, industrial relationships that are generally sustaining. The second piece is we do start with a very low leverage profile. And I've commented on this on prior quarters, we're well under 3.5 turns of overall leverage. And you have to understand that our investment strategy, when we start with lower middle market businesses, they tend to be growth-oriented businesses that we are providing flexible capital to expand. And so when you look at our profile of businesses, while we may start small, oftentimes the portfolio will grow fairly quickly. And as it does, it organically deleverages. And to give you some metrics on that, at the moment, as of the end of March, 55% of our portfolio on a weighted average basis has EBITDA of greater than $10 million. So these are not very small companies. They're reasonably sized companies, and the overall leverage there is very attractive. The balance of the portfolio, less than half has under $10 million of EBITDA and for the most part, has a very similar leverage profile. So when we track, we've got bigger companies for roughly half of the business, and the smaller companies, we obviously have invested in are earlier in their growth profile and oftentimes, are growing organically. And so that is where -- while they may not grow at the same rate we originally expected, we're not terribly concerned. These are businesses that might be health care, might be industrial, might have technology or competitive differentiation. Not really concerned about where those are from a current performance basis. We've seen negligible deterioration from our third-party evaluations of all of those businesses, as I indicated in my comments. So again, further affirmation of where we are. The last 2 pieces that I would add, our PIK income on the portfolio is very low today. It's under 5% of our interest income. So if we were seeing stress, the logical scenario for this growth business portfolio would be to accrue some income. Our PIK has not even gone up. It's, in fact, going down at the moment. And obviously, as we've commented in the past, our nonearning assets are effectively unchanged from the prior quarter. So at this point, not terribly concerned. We're not seeing the kind of liquidity pressures. And if you run the math, at 3.5 turns of leverage, even at today's interest rates, you're going to have net fixed charge coverage unless you have a material deterioration of the business. And for the most part, we are not seeing that.