Family life was unstable. They moved often, and by the time Gingrich was sixteen he had lived in Pennsylvania, Kansas, France, and Germany. Recently, at a campaign event organized by a Web site called CafeMom, he talked about living with his mother’s depression and bipolar disorder: “My whole emphasis on brain science comes, indirectly, from dealing, um . . .” He winced, and started crying. “See how I’m becoming emotional?” he said, with difficulty, then continued. “From dealing with the real problems of real people, in my family. So it’s not a theory—it’s, in fact, my mother.”
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2012/01/27
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Source: www.newyorker.com

