"How did that movement affect you, did you feel like you could speak to it?" she then asked Shields, who replied,"No, because I didn't know where I fell on the spectrum of it. I don't know where to interpret my experiences because I was made to feel culpable, and by the same time, you victim shame yourself."
"But we were so young," she added,"and it was appropriate that we just, I couldn't feel sorry, I didn't know what it was, I didn't know, and so when it was called out to me as such I was like, 'No, not going there. It did not happen.'" Barrymore -- who is mom to daughters Olive, 10, and Frankie, 8, -- said she felt the same way, noting that now after having her daughters, she looks at her past differently.
"I felt like I experienced too many things that were so gray and so awkward and that I didn't know were wrong at the time, I guess as an adult with hindsight, as a mother of daughters ...," she said, to which Shields chimed in. "As a mother with daughters, I think that's what helps with the perspective of it," said the"Wanda Nevada" star, who shares daughters Rowan 19, and Grier, 16, with husband Chris Henchy."But the ownership of it, or the ownership of the reality of it, that never was in my, I did not know how to handle any of that so I just pushed it under the rug."
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