Fearless.
Midfielder George Dobson was talking about the attitude Wrexham will take into Saturday's FA Cup fifth round tie with Premier League Chelsea.
But he could have just have easily been summing up the mindset that Phil Parkinson has made sure has been present at the north Wales club for three promotions in a row.
What might be of concern for rivals for the Championship play-off places is that it looks like Wrexham are coming into their own.
A key period is approaching for the side currently in sixth with a four-point cushion over the chasing pack.
There will be global attention on the Chelsea game - the biggest fixture since things went Hollywood at Stok Cae Ras under Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac – which will have a pressure to go with the profile.
Then there is the visit of a Hull City side currently just three points above them in the table, before welcoming Welsh rivals Swansea City.
With 11 league games to go, the stakes are only going to get bigger.
"To be fair, the club have been in these situations for the last three years," admitted Dobson, following a hard-fought 1-0 success at Charlton Athletic that a frustrated Addicks boss Nathan Jones admitted underlined Wrexham's ability to find a way to win.
"So it's the fourth year they've been in this situation and it's only going to stand you in good stead. There have boys that know what it's like, and the boys that have come in have already been involved in the top end of the league.
"There's a lot of experience in the group and it showed against Charlton."
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Just as it oozes out of Parkinson, who seems to revel in what boxers would call the championship rounds.
In recent weeks they have adapted to different challenges.
They came from behind at the death to win a lost cause at Queens Park Rangers.
They put five past Ipswich Town who arrived in Wrexham with the best defence in the league.
At Charlton, they had the quality of Ollie Rathbone's goal and Arthur Okonkwo's late save but also the ability to dig in and battle physically.
"It's inevitable," said Rathbone, who now has six goals from midfield despite injury delaying the start of his season until December.
"This group has shown it before and definitely since Christmas and it seems to be getting stronger and we're getting better.
"We all know how much hard work has gone in to get us to this position – and it's not been easy by any means – but we want to kick on and keep going. It's a privilege to be part of."
They are far from the finished article, but since losing to Swansea in the last weekend before Christmas, Wrexham have taken more points than anyone else in the Championship.
"If you look at the group since that Christmas period you can really feel a change in the group," added Dobson. "There's a real togetherness, a confidence and there's a belief too.
"We've got to keep that going, try not to look too far ahead and – after Chelsea – get back to those last 11 games and see where it takes us. But we're in a good place."
Parkinson had said the weekend win was important to allow his team to enjoy and embrace the Chelsea challenge, not to mention avoid accusations of losing focus on the league and that bid to meet top-flight sides on a more regular basis.
Rathbone almost laughed at the suggestion the players would be allowed to take their eye off the ball because "it's ingrained in us – the next one is the only one that matters".
It's just they are mattering a little more with every step towards the Championship climax.
Wrexham, though, look to be taking it in their stride.