I don't know where it fits, but it's a big factor.
The reason I don't know is that we haven't asked the question specifically of what they think about that. Too often, kids who come from underprivileged homes or homes where there's a single parent take on a burden that is like that of an adult at a very young age. They worry about those adult issues. They may not always let their parents know, because part of being a responsible member of that family is not to let that burden fester on the other members of the family. We see that as part of single-parent families especially or families where the parents are dysfunctional. Of course that comes into clubs.
What our clubs do is try to take on those opportunities for those kids where the family can't provide it. We often hear—in fact, in London, at the club, at an event I was at—a family say that the club was the missing father in their family. It provided the balance those kids needed and couldn't otherwise access.
I think we don't understand how significant that is. There was a movie at TIFF called Scarborough. It came out a year ago, I think. It's well worth watching. It's not the real-life stories; it's a dramatized version, but it's the real stories of what our clubs see, of kids who take on the burdens of their parents, who are working through real challenges in their life, from putting food on the table to securing employment.
You talked about regulating emotion. There is the challenge of dealing with a parent who cannot regulate their emotion, and the kid becomes the antidote to that or takes on those challenges. I think those are pretty scary elements that live on in adulthood one way or another.