That's exactly it. Well put.
Apart from the payment itself, which is significant, in many ways it's less important than the recognition. The man or woman injured in service to our country, regular force or reserve, needs to know that their country respects and recognizes, not just that they were injured in service to their country but their road to recovery—as you said the two years in that example of a paratrooper—of surgery and of hospitalization. The physical and mental stress on the family through that period is not only compensated now, it's also recognized, and we're recognizing that it was a gap because of the way the disability award was calculated at recovery.