“But to talk with an adult, I think that…adults judge a lot (in general here, right?) if you come up thinking you know everything, you see? You come up all sure of your stuff, you get there saying what you think…adults will say: “You don’t know anything, you’re a teenager. And I think the best thing if you’re gonna talk with an adult is to show things little by little, you know…you show them what your life is like, you say “Look, I’ve been through this, I’ve done that, I got my hair dyed and nothing bad happened…I got a nose ring and I’m still beautiful, I keep having my life. My life is not going to end because I dyed my hair, got a piercing or a tattoo. And this…you never really know what each person’s reaction is going to be, but I think the best way to talk with an adult is to show it and spend time together. My dad, for example, living with me he saw that nothing has changed after I changed those things in me. And I think through being in touch and talking it gets easier to accept and understand, too. Because they were teenagers once too, it might have been a different adolescence, but everybody was a teenager once…my dad got a tattoo without his mothers permission, you know?“