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Friday nights in high school,
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my friends would go out,
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they would make out,
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they would go to the movies,
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they would go to the malls.
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I had to go to church, this a true story!
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Strict Rules Your Immigrant Parents Might Have Had
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First of all, we weren't allowed to go to any sleepovers.
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Sleepovers were a no.
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They were insulted.
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They're like, "Why would you want to sleep at someone else's house?"
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"Someone might touch you, or like, abduct you."
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"I didn't work hard
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for you to sleep at somebody else's house,
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you gon' sleep right here."
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I wanted to paint my nails and talk about cute boys,
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and like, my parents were like,
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"Hell no, they can come sleep over here"
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"You can't go to their house"
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I'm still friends with my friends,
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and their parents are great.
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I guess my parents just didn't fully know that,
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coming from a different country,
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it's hard to trust people who you don't know from like day one.
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I'm Egyptian, was raised Muslim,
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and in my household that meant that we couldn't wear
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anything that was provocative.
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Nothing low cut, no short shorts,
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and nothing that showed off your midriff at all.
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We had to have Indian food for dinner, no matter what.
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We didn't go like McDonald's.
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We didn't go get like fast food at all.
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My mom got really confused by after school clubs.
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She thought it was the same as clubbing,
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so she was very strict on like which ones I'd join,
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and was like, "You're too young to go clubbing!"
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And I'm like, "Mom, that's not the same thing."
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We can't leave the house until we're married.
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That even kind of went into us going to college,
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we couldn't go to colleges very far or even apply.
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I was not allowed to celebrate Halloween.
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My parents said that Halloween was the Devil's birthday.
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And that I was not able to dress up in costumes
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'cause it was a sin.
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But anyway, I basically had to make this book report
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and convince my parents that Halloween
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is not a sinful holiday to celebrate.
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And then I, thankfully got to celebrate it for the rest of my life.
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It was more around grades,
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you know they wanted straight A's,
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that's who they were.
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Gotta greet your parents,
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gotta greet all elders.
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Super important.
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That's probably like one of the most important things.
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Cleaning a lot.
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We were responsible for making our bed every morning.
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We weren't allowed to sleep in.
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I don't understand why.
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Let a kid sleep, please!
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Well first, we couldn't drink soda.
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I mean, we could eat sweets,
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but like, when she would pack our lunches,
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she would only put one sweet thing
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and it had to only be the serving size of the sweet thing.
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So if it said like half a cookie was a serving size,
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you know my mom is giving us half a cookie.
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In my early childhood, I grew up in New York
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so I had to make sure I was home
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by the time the streetlights were on.
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If my friends drove,
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I wasn't allowed to go in the car with them.
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My dad didn't trust their driving skills,
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'cause they were brand new.
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That stuff was just a little bit much.
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I think they could've relaxed a lot,
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especially when it came to curfew.
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I would be five minutes late,
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and then I would get grounded for two weeks!
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That ain't right!
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A lot of it went back to how hard my mom worked
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when she was a child,
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which like is incredible.
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But as like a child in a different circumstance,
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it was very hard to understand.
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I get it.
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I also get that my parents were really doing their best
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to kind of enforce their culture,
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which is difficult
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when your kid is growing up
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in an entirely different country; in an entirely different space.
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There's a lot of harassment that takes place
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if you're a woman in India.
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I've been through it personally,
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when you're kind of exposed to that,
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I guess you're going to be a little more protective of your daughters.
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Growing up in a strict household
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helped me to stay very focused.
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It kind of made me realize what's important,
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which is family.
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My parents had the foresight to make sure
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I was good and I made it to this age,
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so you know, shout out to them!
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They wanted us to be close to our culture
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because we're so far away from like our homeland.
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My ethnicity and my identity as an Armenian
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is like very strong because of that,
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and I really appreciate that,
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and at the time, I know I didn't.
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Let your kids figure some stuff out,
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but make sure they're home by the time the streetlights come on.
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That's how I feel.