Twitter should ban my mother.

It's creepy to see fan sites about me.

I don't really like Nirvana that much.

My look is a Modern Bohemian type thing.

I don't like to look sloppy. I'm a girly-girl.

I can count on one hand how many people I trust.

I'm in a monogamous relationship and very happy.

I have 137 pairs of shoes and 200 pairs of jeans.

We've moved so much, and my life has been so inconsistent.

The death of young musicians isn’t something to romanticize.

I'm really outgoing, but there's times I want to be by myself.

These people are fascinated by me, but I haven't done anything.

The shelf life of an artist or musician isn't particularly long.

Most of my artwork is geared towards being humorous in some light.

Thankfully, I have other skills than just standing there and looking cute.

The hardest part of doing anything creatively is just getting up and doing.

As cheesy and cornball as it sounds, life does get better - if you want it to.

The fact that I'm sober isn't really public knowledge, decidedly and deliberately.

I'm really lucky, because I've been able to go places and meet people you can only dream of.

I'm very lucky because my eyes work with almost any hair color. Thanks for the genetics, parents.

In reality, if he had lived, I would have had a dad. And that would have been an incredible experience.

I'm famous by default. I came out of the womb, and people wanted to know who I was because of my parents.

While I'm generally silent on the affairs of my biological mother, her recent tirade has taken a gross turn.

How we treat our bodies directly correlates to how we treat our souls. It's all interconnected. It has to be.

I really enjoy the aesthetic of building my fashion sense. I enjoy the process of going through fashion phases.

I want to be able to live in a way that isn't too hectic. Calm. And I want those around me to be sublimely happy as well.

I am constantly evolving. The moment I stop my evolution is the moment I disservice myself and, ultimately, those I love.

If you're a big Nirvana fan, a big Hole fan, then I understand why you would want to get to know me, but I'm not my parents.

I don't model unless I think the project is cool, and I don't put my name behind something that I don't genuinely believe in.

So I have been careful about where I go and who I hang out with because if you tell someone the wrong thing, then it's everywhere.

I don't really like Nirvana that much. Sorry, promotional people, Universal. I'm more into Mercury Rev, Oasis, Brian Jonestown Massacre.

I'm a different person. I don't want to be titled as Courtney Love and Kurt Cobain's daughter. I want to be thought of as Frances Cobain.

I've always felt more comfortable in fantasy. Fantasy has felt more real to me at times. Drawing was an immediate outlet for that: to create. It's been my ability to create my own world.

With regards to music, I don't want to pigeonhole myself and say I am a musician or a visual artist, because I feel like it's all-encompassing, and I feel like every bit of my art is related to the other.

People don't follow me around, and they don't stop me in a way where it's excessive or invasive. It's always respectful. If it's not, I set my boundaries, and I walk away. That's just what you kind of have to do.

I had a lot of strong women around my whole life who were survivors. My grandma survived breast cancer twice and the death of her child and the death of her brother, and, you know, just a lot of tragedy, and she's still the happiest person I've ever met.

While I'm generally silent on the affairs of my biological mother, her recent tirade has taken a gross turn. I have never been approached by Dave Grohl in more than a platonic way. I'm in a monogamous relationship and very happy. Twitter should ban my mother.

I find it interesting where grunge originated from and then where it was taken, which was high fashion. My dad was so poor that they kept going to Goodwill to get donated ripped jeans. It wasn't a fashion decision; it was an 'I don't have any money, I have no other choice' type of decision.

They look at me, and you can see they're looking at a ghost. They were all getting the K. C. Jeebies hardcore. Dave said, "She is so much like Kurt." They were all talking amongst themselves, rehashing old stories I'd heard a million times. I was sitting in a chair, chain-smoking, looking down like this [affects total boredom]. And they went, "You are doing exactly what your father would have done."

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