 Yeah, it was scary. So personally at the beginning of the pandemic felt like a train hit our household. All of us at home having to change the internet plan because the bandwidth was not enough. We've all had to change the way that we work. What if there's an extended lockdown? Do I have the resources I need? Does my family have it? Does my community have it? The need for strong civil society organizations at the local level was more critical than ever. The non-profits that we serve realize during one weekend that their technology investments were not enough. We never thought of ourselves as a frontline organization when disaster strikes and this was a unique situation in which infrastructure was actually the frontline of response. Probably they were saying yes, we'll leave the technology investments for later. Later is that the pandemic came. Some people talk about organizations thriving. They're serving more people than they ever have before. They're doing more this than they ever have before. This is because more people are hungry than have been before. More people are sick than have been before. They're not thriving. They're doing what non-profits do, which is they're showing up for their communities in all the ways that they know how.