Monica: I had really gone to Washington as a short pit stop on my way to graduate school.
Larry: And you wanted to be a what?
Monica: Forensic psychologist.
Larry: Really?
Monica: Yes.
Larry: Really? So that means examining, uh, examining...that's uh, um, examining...
Monica: Looking at the interaction between psychology and law...
Larry: Really? Is that, really?
Monica: Yes.
Larry: Is that when you first met the President?
Monica: No. I met him in August of '95, at a departure ceremony. You've probably been to one of those.
Larry: Someone's leaving?
Monica: He's leaving...
Larry: So, uh, did you, hmm, say to yourself, um, this is the President?
Monica: Larry, I was a 22 year old foolish kid...
Larry: A victim, in a sense. I mean you're a figure of the 20th Century.
Monica: I don't want to use the word victim...
Larry: From flirtation to intimacy. (coughs) What was it like? The first time, for you? Everyone would have to think, I mean, anyone would think of that, as a first time, uh it's, mm, well, OK, it's one thing, to begin a relationship, um, everyone has it, we've all begun relationships. But this, this is with...
Monica: Exactly.
Larry: A person, someone who's larger than life?
Monica: I think the point is that people are all human beings. And that's what I came to see. And that's the person I came to know...
Larry: So, I see, so, um, it uh wasn't President Clinton? It was, I mean, um, Bill Clinton?
Monica: Yes.... it's the same excitement of when you first get together with anybody.
Larry: It was, uh, um, mm, OK, and the attraction, the attraction was first? (coughs) It was not who it was, it was it. It was what it was. Mmm?
Monica: Yes, it was that chemistry.
Larry : Oh. OK. It's got to be difficult. You're always going to be, you're always, always going to be Monica. Monica Lewinsky.
Monica: Yes.
Larry: Right?
Monica: Until I get married.
Larry: That's right. (laughs) Change the name.
Monica: Or move it to my middle name.
Larry: Yes. (laughs) You've got wonderful parents.
Monica: Huh? Oh, yes.
Larry: And finally, do you ever, uh, well, do you have the thought, I am history. I'm part of history? You know, like, um, I mean, ask an astronaut when you, I mean, when you, uh, look at the moon. If you walked on the moon? What did it, um, what does that feel like?
Monica: I don't, I don't know. I don't ...
Larry: You. You're just you.
Monica: I guess so. I mean, that's -- I'm kind of just me.
Larry: OK. OK (laughs)
Posted by Dr. Frank at March 2, 2002 01:00 AM | TrackBack