No, if you, if you're going to take me all the way back, I can only say that my mother used to cover me up when I was in a crib, she told me, because my head was like a hexagon. It wasn't round, it was, it had shapes, and, and she said that people used to come and look at me, 'What's that'? She says, 'That's my son'. 'My God!' Because my head was a shape, hard shape, I think that was a foretelling eventually what's going to happen, you know? And so, she put a curtain on this thing that she pushed me around. You know the curtain? So the people wouldn't see me because the comments she was getting from everybody, but that made things a little easier for her to deal with me as a, as a six-month-old or whatever I was, you know? Yeah. But you have to go through those ages.
[Q] Is, Judy, is younger than you?
Yes.
[Q] Your sister Judith?
Yeah. Uh-huh.
[Q] Did she have a…a?
No, no it was normal. I was abnormal, with that shape I looked like... it was probably a foretelling what's going to happen, because eventually it became shape, you know? It had sides to it, and she said people were laughing at me and that's what that... But I had other weird situations, I think. I think I grow my bone, or whatever, because she said I used to walk around on the street with my hands behind me, like this, you know, how elderly people walk like that. And I used to do that when I was like three or four years old, to walk to like that, on the street. Now it's nothing weird, isn't it weird?
[Q] I guess. This was in Hungary?
Oh, sure.