Megan: [My son] kept running back to me for "One more hug, one more hug." He must have asked me for five or six hugs. What started as being first in the line to get on the bus, by the time he was done running back for all those hugs, he was the last little boy to get on the school bus. This went on for almost two years, kindergarten, first grade. At first, my husband Brian and I were sort of hurrying him along, like, "Come on, time to go to school. Let's go," quick little hugs and then pushing him on his way. Then we realized, oh, my gosh, we need to slow down and cherish these moments and just be there for him. It became a little saying in our family where when he'll ask for one more hug, we'll say, "There's always time for one more hug." That happens at bedtime. That happens when Mommy needs to travel for work. That's how the book came about. In the book, we take the boy not just through childhood, but also into high school and then when he's going off, supposedly, to college. You can always come back for one more hug.