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Erik: How are your family relationships changing as you get older?
Lulu: I accept them more and I realize all of the little things that they've done as
parents growing up, they might not have been the perfect parents or the best parents, but
they definitely tried. And it took me to become an adult to realize that they did certain
things right. Maybe not everything but they did a lot—They tried. You know? And the
only thing you can do is be—try your best, you know?
Erik: Do you go back and have those conversations with them about "Okay, so thinking back when
I was a teenager, when you did this, and I was always fighting you about it, you actually
were doing the right thing."
Lulu: Well, no, it's more that my tolerance for them has grown and my appreciation for
them has grown. And my struggle with my parents were actually more when I was older, you know,
not—well, not in the teenager so much because they worked so much, they weren't even really
around. We didn't really fight. But growing up, just remembering the little nuggets of
advice that they used to try and shove down your throat, you know, you didn't understand
it then, you kind of had to make your own mistakes and then now I realize, "Oh, that's
what she meant. Okay."
Erik: What was their advice?
Lulu: I think my mom always tried to tell me to take a moment, you know, I was very
headstrong and I would just leap into things, or I would say things, I was very outspoken
when I was younger. I guess I still am now but I definitely try and take a moment and
think about it before I leap, you know, just to—Yeah, just to be more observant. So,
that was a very good one, I think, in general.