 Well, our lifestyle was, as soon as you were able to walk, you worked. So we worked along with our parents. We did not have electricity or a vehicle or anything. We had horses and we had coal oil lamps. And we grew everything that we ate in our gardens and raised chickens and animals. We had very little contact with the neighborhood children because we were all a mile or so apart. We would meet at school. There were about twenty-three of us at the school, usually grades one to eight. And we had very little contact with the outside world, but we had a happy, healthy life. And we couldn't beat it, so as for the children in town, we thought, oh, they're lucky they have cold pop and things like that, but that's about all I can remember from that. But we worked, we weeded gardens, and it was hot and dry, but it was a good training. And I think today it's a factor in the fact that nothing really bothers me or upsets me, be it temperature or people or what have you, so it's a good background for anybody.