And then started in, and everybody kept telling, “Well, you’re not gonna get into vet school. Nobody gets into vet school, blah, blah, blah.” And you all heard that. And so I said, “Well”, that’s got a bit of a challenge, so … I went through the second year, which you could apply in the second year, and I was deficient in English and history on my grade, on my curriculum, but I thought, “Well, I’ll go take the interviews, and just kind of, you know, see what it was, get ready to maybe take the interviews year three, year four, like many of the other people did.” So I went in there and they were talking to me, and they said, “Well”, they looked at my grade point, it was a 2.4, which is a C+ and then I said, “Yeah, but look at my grade point now.” And it was a 4. And they said, “Well, how did you go from a C+ to a 4.?” I said, “Well, I quit playing football, and I decided to study.” So I got in to vet school with a 2.4 which nobody would ever do now, and deficient in English in history, which I had to make up in junior high in Bakersfield that summer. And that started me in the veterinary curriculum. And it was kind of the same way after, as I was graduating, I didn’t know what to do. I said, “My gosh”, and then I heard about an internship at Angel Memorial in Boston and I said “The internship” and “Oh yeah, but you’ll never get into that.