Cindy Sherman: It is kind of funny that right now everybody’s, or a lot of young people are certainly very confused or maybe even obsessed with identity. And maybe because we make too much of it because of the internet or, you know, social media, but. But yeah, I mean, I guess I was always questioning who I am and especially where I fit in my world, in my family. And I did this really early, very early book that—it’s called the “That’s Me Book,” and I think I started it when I was maybe, I don’t know, 8 or 10 or something. And on every page, I had taken a photograph, a family photograph where I’m in it somewhere, starting as a baby and then a toddler, and then it’s like a 10-year-old birthday party or something, and under each one, I’ve written, “that’s me,” and circled wherever I am in the photograph. And I think that was also just this very early on, trying to just figure out my place in the family at that point, but also then just in the world. I guess, yeah, I mean, I wasn’t ever questioning my gender at that point, I’ve never had an issue with that, but I think I just was imagining, imagining being all different kinds of people or in different places, and gender was not really a question about it.