Begin with a single benzene ring (call it ring A) bearing four substituents:
  - At Carbon-1: a large fused-ring substituent described below.
  - At Carbon-2: a hydroxyl (phenol) group.
  - At Carbon-4: a methyl group.
  - At Carbon-6: a methyl group.
  - Ring A Carbons-3 and -5 are unsubstituted.

The substituent attached at Carbon-1 begins with a fused bicyclic system composed of a pyrazole ring fused to a pyrrolidine ring.
  - Pyrazole ring: Labeled as N1-N2-C3-C4-C5, where C5 is bonded to the previous benzene ring. N1 bears a hydrogen atom.
  - Pyrrolidine ring: This five-membered ring is numbered sequentially as C3-C4-C6-N7-C8 (sharing C3 and C4 with the pyrazole). Within the pyrrolidine ring, C8 is double-bonded to an oxygen.
  - The nitrogen (N7) is substituted by a (tetrahydrofuran-2-yl)methyl chain (i.e., a -CH2- group connected to a five-membered ring containing four carbons and one oxygen, where the oxygen is adjacent to attachment of the -CH2- group).
  - A phenyl substituent is attached to C6. This phenyl ring is disubstituted with a methoxy group (-OCH3) at the meta position and an alkoxy chain at the para position. The alkoxy chain has the structure -O-CH2-CH2-CH(CH3)2, comprising three carbons with a terminal isopropyl branch.
