Yes, yes. It did. Even though I thought our marriage was good. I thought it was probably the way marriages were. Well, we didn’t hug and kiss a lot, and, so, it was meant to be, I think.
Yes.
Let’s see if I have any other good turning points. I guess going in the business would be a turning point. It’s a big step. It seems so quiet, that you know, nobody really, so few people know about it around here, and some people say , you’re still doing that, you’re still selling prints, and, so it’s not that I have a sign up that makes me famous.
Raising children?
No, I don’t think that was a turning point. There were so many things I did, like, when Don and I were married, he went in the FBI, you know, and we went to New York and Michigan and all around. I have lived, I think I counted them up one day, and 26 different houses , since the first time I was married. So that’s a lot of moving.
It certainly is.
And a lot of people do not move around that much. That’s not counting living or abroad, that’s just here. That’s just counting houses in the United States.
I guess when people talk about a turning point, it’s sort of like, it could be for the good or the better, for the worse, it’s sort of like life is different for you, and someways from that point on, Because of that event or related to that event. You see things differently, and different things happen to you, or different experiences.
Well, I’ll say certainly, when John came on the Stanford faculty, but that was so soon after we married that I’m associating it with him.
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