 The guy that probably had the most influence on my life was my father. It's not that we always saw eye to eye, far from it, but living with a regimental sergeant major is not easy. So I was a very shy, introvert fellow, and when I hit 13, the commanding officer of the school cadet corps, army cadet corps, sent home a form. Because it was voluntary then, prior to that it had been compulsory. It was now voluntary, had to have parental permission so they could get you into the army cadets if you wished to join. Well, my father, there was no discussion, my father volunteered me. And it was a turning point because I was forced to become far more extrovert if you want to teach a squad of cadets, stand up in front of a group of people, and so on. You have to become more extrovert. I went on to become a senior school prefect. I not only was a member of the school cadet corps, I went on the adult staff and taught at an outside cadet corps as an adult sergeant when I was 18. And that scholarship that I got with Richard Thomas Baldwin's in large part was due to the fact that because of all the work I had done with cadets, plus obviously academic ability, when I was interviewed, the interviewer was an ex-Indian army colonel. So all that cadet work stood me in very good stead, paid off. I think they put out 16 scholarships that year out of 5,000-plus applicants. So it was a very good move. And at university I went through the office's training corps, I was commissioned into the territorial army as a second lieutenant in 1966 and so on. So it was something which allowed me to or forced me to become more extrovert and to develop whatever leadership potential I may or may not have had. So I seem to find that just about any organization I join, whether it be the Kiwanis club or the opera guild, I always seem to end up as the president. So yes, it was a turning point in my life. And for that I thank him. He knew more about me than I did. Yeah, well, that's what parents are for sometimes.