Jennifer Aniston confesses that she grew up in a home where she did not feel safe
The actress has given an interview to her friend Sandra Bullock coinciding with her 51st birthday and has talked about how this has affected her throughout her life.
Jennifer Aniston is in one of the best moments of her life. The actress, who has just turned 51, triumphs professionally thanks to the Apple TV + television series The Morning Show, for which she has received the Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actress in a Television Series. And she, on a personal level, recognizes that she lives a moment of tranquility and fulfillment.
But it wasn't always all rosy for Jennifer. This is what the actress has confessed in a recent interview that she has made her friend and her partner Sandra Bullock. Aniston has spoken openly about what her childhood was like when Bullock asked her what allows her to stay optimistic and avoid getting discouraged when things don't go well for her.
"I think it comes from growing up in a destabilized home, seeing adults being unpleasant to each other and witnessing certain things about human behavior that made me think, 'I don't want to do that. I don't want to be like this. I don't want to experience this feeling that I have. on my body right now or anyone I'm with can feel it. 'So I guess I have to thank my parents. You can be angry or a martyr, or you can say,' Do you have lemons? Let's make lemonade. '
Jennifer Aniston's parents divorced when she was little and both were engaged in the world of acting. Jennifer distanced herself from her mother, Nancy Dow, when she wrote the book From Mother and Daughter to Friends: A Memoir (1999), in which she discussed her relationship with her daughter. It was in 2005, after the divorce of Jennifer and Brad Pitt, when both were reconciled and gave a new opportunity to their mother-daughter relationship.