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FERGUSON: And when I went up that aisle, I had I married my man. I also married a sailor. And I got a prince. But my man was the most important thing for me, Piers, because nothing was more important than him.
MORGAN: When you were on the balcony -- I mean, very few people outside of the royal family have ever experienced that moment where you look out and there's a million people and you know there's probably a billion watching around the world on television. What was that moment like?
FERGUSON: Let me go back in time. You are taken with such a wave of energy, that it is just mesmeric, it is just extraordinary. And you're so in love -- anyway, it's your wedding day. Like every bride's wedding day, it's a special day. And you've got a beautiful dress on. But you're standing there with the man you love. And then there are people out there who are wishing you so well. And it's just extraordinary. It's just unfathomable. You can't explain it. And then when we got into the carriage to leave and my father did the most wonderful thing, he walked out of the palace and stood alone holding his son's little hand on the pavement. And as the carriage went round, he just waved and said goodbye -- you know, it was just so moving.
MORGAN: Do you think he knew what he was saying goodbye to? Do you think he knew what you were going to be immersed in?
FERGUSON: He had a much better idea than I did, I think. He has been -- was in it all his life, you know, working with the Prince of Wales for 38 years. And he sort of knew. I think if anyone had said to me, do you understand for the rest of your life this is what you're expected to do -- I would have still said yes, because I loved my man. And I'm red-headed and passionate and feisty.
MORGAN: Do you ever -- I mean, putting Prince Andrew to one side, do you ever wonder what your life would have been like if you just met an ordinary guy who wasn't a royal or wasn't famous, and could have had just a very nice anonymous life?
FERGUSON: You know, Dr. Phil said, Sarah, why don't you go and live in Australia with your sister and go quiet? I said, oh, no, I don't think I can manage that.
(LAUGHTER)
FERGUSON: I don't think I'm that sort of person. I think I'm just I'm always wanting to do more. I want to use my life. I want to especially now that I've changed this course of health and wellness and getting creative and really using it the right way. It's pretty exciting. So, I don't think I would have ever gone to live in Gloucester with (INAUDIBLE), no.