As a child, I was bonkers for Christmas. The entire month of December, I couldn't sleep at night from anticipation.
My mother died when I was 17, and I moved in with my dad to make a 12-month pig's ear of retaking my A-levels.
If truth is the first victim of war, then read on - I've got some great lies for you this month.
Employee of the month is a good example of how somebody can be both a winner and a loser at the same time.
A few months after graduation I was working in films. It took off pretty quick.
Four months is a lot of living with that little life in you-thinking about it, eating right for it, nurturing it and all of a sudden, it dies.
When I started working on 'Michael And Michael,' it was my life for three to four months, and then suddenly it's gone.
For the first six or eight months at Juilliard I felt paralysed. I didn't know what I was doing.
As an astronaut, especially during launch, half of the risk of a six-month flight is in the first nine minutes.
If things are going untowardly one month, they are sure to mend the next.
Things are going better now than ever, but in 24 months? I could be hearing crickets.
I started at Pixar the month 'Monsters Inc.' came out.
I took six months off, finished high school, and hung out with friends.
An investigation may take six months. A quick interview, profile, a day.
We don't pump out albums eight months apart from each other.
They took my mother's stomach out six months ago.
It usually takes me a year to do a book. A year or eighteen months.
Live shows are fun - sometimes. But you have to practice for months on end.
But I'm not as bad as Al Pacino - he doesn't even know what month it is half the time when he's working.
I'd gone through periods where I didn't work live performances for probably seven or eight months at a time.
Just because something is three months away and seems far off, doesn't mean you will want to be there when the time comes.