Peter: When I was working, I didn’t know, I didn’t even realize that I wasn’t around. I thought I was around all the time. I don’t think they felt like they were 5)neglected, but, now that we’ve come here, it’s different and we’re all together.

If you think about the amount of time in the day that you’re real…really with your kids, if you work in an office, it’s not very much. If you, you know, you take out sleeping and you take out commuting and you take out working…

I’m not regretful, because the thing I was doing before allowed for what we’re doing now, and so you have to think about the 6)causation of the whole thing. But it does make me wonder what we’d go back to when we go home, and I don’t think I could go back to that situation that I didn’t know was so upside down. The whole corporate thing, you get kind of sucked into it. There’s rules for that, that say, you know, if you do…if you do this, you do your résumé, and, you know, you do this proper search, you’ll get a job, and that job involves something in the area of 9 to 5. It’s never 9 to 5. It’s always actually more because you have to put more into it in order to get anywhere, and then they have you, and then you get sucked in.

Josephine has all these fantastic careers for me, that she keeps coming up with. Selling lemonade in front of the house was one. Having chickens and raising eggs, and selling that, and then today we came up with being a beekeeper. A beekeeper, a barn builder and a chicken farmer.