LeBron James gave his honest take on what it's like to adjust to the NBA bubble, now that he and his Los Angeles Lakers teammates have spent roughly two weeks in Orlando.

There have been complaints about the food, the so-called “snitch hotline,” and the strictness of rules, but the Lakers star brought some perspective to it all hours before the league announced the major victory of zero positive coronavirus cases out of the 346 players tested since the last update:

Via Joe Vardon of The Athletic:

“Everything has gone the way it’s supposed to since we’ve been here, and it’s given me no indication why it won’t continue,” said James. “If something happens or a spike happens, which we don’t believe it is, then if something happens we’ll adjust and go forward from there. I don’t wake up in the morning saying ‘OK this may not work. I don’t approach it that way. I woke up this morning thinking about my family, one, and then thinking about how I was going to impact practice today and help us get better. That’s it.”

James has been one of the biggest proponents of resuming the season, despite some uncertain times. The league's assists leader has his Lakers flying high atop the standings in the West, making this a unique opportunity to capture that elusive fourth ring.

The King is also on the running for Most Valuable Player, which will be judged up to March 11, when the 2019-20 season first came to a halt.

All in all, the Lakers star is glad the NBA is back. He fully trusts the league to do the right thing if infections somehow go out of control in this bubble environment, but for now it's holding strong.

Los Angeles sits atop the Western Conference with a 49-14 record.