So this is good question. Let me go back to what I was just saying about the strength and resiliency. We've never been able to - we've always had a great deal of appeal regardless of environment. And there's always been a view that for our company and our industry, when things get a little tougher, when we are in recessionary times, people won't take the longer trips. They may not go international, but they stay closer to home. Go back to '08, '09, that's when the staycation term came into vogue. And I think when times are good and there's a lot of discretionary income in the market, people may have other choices, but some of our middle to lower end customers get to trade up even though we may lose the higher-end customer to a trip to Orlando or again an international trip or whatever they may do. I do think that one of the trends we're watching, it was a question earlier, are people going to travel further for experiences that they want. That was what the research suggested was happening during COVID. We're going to watch that now. But from a historical perspective, our industries, both pre-pandemic as we recover from the pandemic has posted higher revenue numbers, higher margin numbers. There's a trend line that over the course of time, almost unbroken in terms of the performance of us or others in the industry. So that return to historical trend lines has always been something that I think has validated the performance of our company. And I think that in every slowdown, we've come out of it stronger and better and found ways to retool our business, make it stronger and more efficient. So from our perspective, I don't see anything right now that says that there's not a great desire to go out and do experiential things. I think we're well positioned. I think the consumer has spent the better part of the pandemic buying goods. Now they're really booking and adjacent businesses are seeing the same thing. The other adjacencies be cruise lines, hotels, others. Bookings look strong this year, and it's not just our sector, I think it's the broader sector. So I understand the concerns about a potential slowdown given the nature of who we are, the peak demand that we see, particularly in July and August, the traditional vacation months. And given the strength we always see in October with our Halloween events and then take that into Winterfest and the holiday appeal, the back half of the year is always really strong for us. I feel really good about our cycle for '22 and where we are. And I think, once again, what we'll see is even if there is a slowdown, we have tremendous appeal and the recurring nature of our revenue stream, the loyal customers that come back generation after generation, I think, really fuels our growth.