 So we're talking a little bit about the culture of fitness. I know there's a lot of changes going in there tangibly for sailors. If you score three outstanding, there's going to be a military decoration that you can get and eval documentation to kind of show where sailors fall on the spectrum of PFA scores. And there's just a lot more going into these changes. What can you tell us about the reason behind these changes or improvements to the culture of fitness? Well, the reasons behind the change and the needed changes, it has become pretty clear to me over the last 22 months talking to a lot of sailors out there. And by the way, at every old hands call, you get the young guy or gal that stands up that's shaped like a sculpted form. And they go, hey, how come you're not giving me more credit towards advancement because I'm scoring outstanding on my PFA? And then you get another sailor that stands up. It's kind of built big and solid, but they look sharp. And they say, hey, I'm really struggling because I can't meet the height weight standards or the BCA. And so we took a hard look at that. And when you really peel it back, what you find out is the PFA, as we instituted today, is really not measuring better health or encouraging or incentivizing better health. It is simply a test. And so we're partnering with Bumad to figure out what defines better health. What do we do to incentivize better health? And then use the standards that we have to get more people to take the test. So we're going to be more forgiving in terms of the BCA measurements or whatever measurement we decide to use to determine who's healthy enough to go ahead and take the test. So we've got more people taking the test. And then really giving them more latitude to really pay most attention to, am I doing the right things to be healthier? Am I lower on my blood cholesterol levels? Am I lowering my chance for diabetes? Am I improving my blood pressure indications? All of those things are really, are true measures, are true or measures, I should say, of better health. So it's a combination of all those things. And I think at the end of the day, when we roll this all out later this summer, I think sailors will understand it and they'll appreciate the fact that this isn't about a foreshaping mechanism. This is about we want to make sure you get healthier and we're going to do what we can. So things like expanded gym hours across the fleet. Things like adding hours on the front and the back end of CDC child care development centers so that more sailors get to participate in healthier activity. That's putting our money where our mouth is. And I think those are important indications to the fleet that we're serious about it.