:32:03
	with these two little kids, and the man
had one of the kids on his shoulders.
:32:07
	And she said "I spy a family."
:32:12
	And I started to cry.
You know, I just started crying.
:32:17
	And I went home
and I said "The thing is, Joe,
:32:20
	we never do fly off to Rome
on a moment's notice."
:32:24
	And the kitchen floor...?
:32:26
	Not once. It's this very cold,
hard, Mexican ceramic tile.
:32:33
	Anyway,
:32:35
	we talked about it for a long time. I said
"This is what I want" and he said "I don't".
:32:40
	And I said "Well, I guess it's over."
And he left.
:32:47
	And the thing is, I... I feel really fine.
:32:51
	I am over him.
I mean, I really am over him.
:32:54
	That was it for him.
That was the most that he could give.
:32:57
	And every time I think about it, I am more
and more convinced I did the right thing.
:33:03
	Boy, you sound really healthy.
:33:05
	Yeah.
:33:07
	- At least I got the apartment.
- That's what everybody says to me.
:33:11
	But really, what's so hard about finding an
apartment? You read the obituary column.
:33:16
	You find out who died, go to the building,
and then you tip the doorman.
:33:19
	It'd be easier if they combined
obituaries with the real-estate section.
:33:24
	Then you have "Mr Klein died,
leaving a wife, two children
:33:27
	and a spacious three-bedroom
apartment with a wood-burning fireplace."
:33:34
	The first time we met
I really didn't like you that much.
:33:37
	- I didn't like you.
- Yeah, you did.
:33:39
	You were just so uptight then.
You're much softer now.
:33:43
	I hate that kind of remark. It sounds
like a compliment, but it's an insult.
:33:47
	OK, you're still as hard as nails.
:33:49
	I didn't wanna sleep with you
so you wrote it off as a character flaw,
:33:53
	instead of dealing with the possibility
it might have something to do with you.
:33:58
	What's the statute of limitations
on apologies?