[DSB] I would say something with interruptions and how they’re getting it out and people going on without responding or even listening, in the morning and then, I’d hear someone like William Wheaton in the afternoon, saying just the same thing. And people would say, ‘Oh, yes’. They never interrupted him, of course, ‘You’re so right, how wise, how true’. And if got to feel resentful about that, I don’t blame me. But then, if I did behave in an aggressive way that was terrible, that meant the world was against me. Whereas, if a man is aggressive it’s… he should be that’s the right thing to do. Well, women have been taught to make nice, to get their way by wile. And I think the toll that takes on a soul is really, very bad and I have not done that. So, I haven’t smiled and said, ‘Oh, yes, and how wise’, and all of that kind of thing, because I felt it would destroy me, as well as, not being right. And there ought to be other models of behaviour open to women. But you find a lot of feminism talks about that. But, I think, I saw in my younger sister when she was very small that tendency and I just felt, first of all, anything she did, I couldn’t do. So, if she was making nice and getting the attention of my father by being cute and small, I had to do something different. And I think, these are some of the reasons for it in me, but if I were a man, I think, they wouldn’t be saying, ‘She thinks the world is against her and she’s insular and she’s all these things’.