My father was a great innovator in public life, but when it came to raising his daughters, no one could have been more conservative.
I always had the sense that nothing was never good enough - striving for perfection. My mother and I had a sort of typical mother-daughter relationship.
When I had my daughter, Louisanna, two and a half years ago, I started recording every funny or sweet thing she said or did on my phone.
I had to live and breathe Margaret Thatcher for a few months. I totally engulfed myself in her life. I read her autobiography and a biography, 'The Grocer's Daughter.'
When my daughter was born, I said: 'I feel like I know what I've been waiting my whole life to be.'
I have learned that I have to slow down and appreciate that my daughter still needs me, still wants me to help her negotiate everything in her life.
My daughter is my biggest achievement. She is a little star and my life has changed so much for the better since she came along.
It is just a crazy life as a sportsman. My daughter, Sam, wants to go into tennis, and I tell her, 'No, you don't want to go into professional sport.'
I think the first 10 years of my daughter's life were my mother's happiest, because she could finally have carefree time with a kid.
It's what I tell my daughters: Know that your birthright is to shine your light, and don't let anybody deny you of that right. Take responsibility for your life.
Let your daughter have first of all the book of Psalms for holiness of heart, and be instructed in the Proverbs of Solomon for her godly life.
I have a daughter who I love very much, I hire women, I've worked with women, I've never had an issue with women.
My daughter has always had a strong sense of her own identity. From the day she was born her father and I were in love with and in awe of her and still are.
I love being a mother. I loved being a daughter, a sister, a wife. I love being a woman with men. I love having given birth.
I always have a camera now that I've got a kid, but I don't think I've got one picture of anyone other than my daughter.
I'm a middle-class former housewife who goes to my daughter's softball games.
My story is so boring: Long Island Jewish parents take their daughters to Broadway.
In 2002, my daughter was diagnosed with a rare form of colon cancer. And it was such a shock, a surprise to us.
And I, Nephi, took one of the daughters of Ishmael to wife.' Well Mr. Go-And-Do just went and did!
The best way to keep your daughter out of hot water is to put some dishes in it.
I have two children who are daughters, so female issues have always registered high on my scale of awareness.