Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. Turning to our second quarter earnings. We reported a net loss of $792,000 or $0.01 per diluted share. Core FFO totaled $17.6 million for the quarter or $0.29 per diluted share, a 12% increase from the prior year period. AFFO totaled $18.7 million for the quarter or $0.30 per diluted share, a 7% increase from the prior period. Turning to G&A. Total G&A expense, excluding onetime items, increased 4% year-over-year to $5.1 million, which was primarily due to a higher employee count. However, with total G&A representing 16% of total revenues in the second quarter versus 21.5% the year prior, we saw a considerable improvement in this ratio. Similarly, on a quarter-over-quarter basis, our cash G&A declined 1.6%. As we look out to the balance of the year and beyond, our G&A should continue to rationalize relative to our asset base and total revenues as the company has reached the proper scale to effectively operate our business on a go-forward basis. Turning to the balance sheet. We had total debt outstanding of $489.4 million at quarter end, with a weighted average contractual interest rate, including the impact of fixed rate swaps, of 3.49%. During the quarter, we amended and restated our $175 million senior unsecured term loan to extend the maturity to January 2027 from December 2024. All details are in our supplemental. Please note that we fully hedged this term loan using a combination of forward starting swaps that resulted in an all-in fixed rate of 1.37% through November 2023, which then adjusts to 3.12% through December 2024, with the final adjustment thereafter to 3.65% through the fully extended maturity of January 2027. Additionally, and subsequent to quarter end, we closed on a new $250 million senior unsecured term loan with a delayed draw option, which has a fully extended maturity date of January 2029. The term loan includes an accordion feature that allows the company to increase the total loan amount to $400 million. At closing on July 3, we drew down $150 million and plan to draw the remaining $100 million in the first quarter of 2024. We fully hedged the $250 million term loan at an all-in fixed interest rate of 4.99% through January 2029. As a result of these debt transactions, we no longer have any debt maturing until 2027, and our only exposure to variable rate debt is via our revolving line of credit, which has nothing outstanding as of today. We'd like to thank our banking partners for executing these transactions during what remains a tight lending environment. We also note that demand for both term loans far exceeded the principal balances raised, which we believe speaks to our ready access to efficiently priced capital. At quarter end, our liquidity was $307 million, which includes $13 million of cash on hand and $294 million available on our revolving credit facility. However, when including the closing of our $250 million term loan in July, our pro forma liquidity increases to $557 million, which provides us with ample dry powder to meet our increased net investment target for 2023. From a leverage perspective, our net debt to annualized adjusted EBITDAre was 4.6x at quarter end, which remains well within our targeted leverage range of 4.5 to 5.5x. Turning to the dividend. On July 24, the Board declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.205 per share, which represents a 2.5% increase versus the prior period and is our first increase in the company's dividend since our IPO. The dividend will be payable on September 15 to shareholders of record as of September 1. Based on this new dividend amount, our AFFO payout ratio for the second quarter was 68% and which we believe bodes well for future dividend increases. Lastly, echoing Mark's sentiment, we have all the components in place to execute on our external growth plans, and to provide the best risk-adjusted returns to our shareholders. Therefore, we are updating our 2023 AFFO per share guidance to $1.20 to $1.23 and increasing the midpoint by $0.01. With that, we will now open the line for questions. Operator?