 Um, so tell me, so you had him at 14, 15, you're about to be 15. You are still going from house to house at that time? Or were you living with his father? Never did that. Um, I had enough common sense to go back to my grandmother's when I was pregnant, because I knew that I would need help. I would get the medical attention like it that I needed as far as the rise of the doctor and the worst, you know, things. So I did go back home during the time that I was, you know, pregnant. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one. Yeah, we gon. And we got a special guest in here today, man. She really don't need no introduction, man. If you listen to music, hip hop, man, you know what I mean? If you are, if you've been watching all the things that's been going on a lot of times in media, even to where the movement of mothers been moving together, who's lost their son, man. This is little snoop's mother, Denisha Ross. Hey, everybody. How are you doing? I'm good, I'm good. How are you guys doing? Man, we're doing great, man. You know, just thanking you for coming even to share this time with us, man. You know, so tell me. So you had him at 14, 15, you're about to be 15. You are still going from house to house at that time? Or were you living with his father? Never did that. Um, I had enough common sense to go back to my grandmother's when I was pregnant, because I knew that I would need help. I would get the medical attention like it that I needed as far as the rise of the doctor and the worst, you know, things. So I did go back home during the time that I was pregnant or whatever. And then maybe within months of having him, I knew it was just time to go. So we just, I left with him again. Where is it dad? He was in and out of jail, but he was the type of guy. Like if he didn't deal with me, he didn't deal with the kid. So I didn't deal with him long after having birth. You know, I didn't, it was a abusive relationship. I really was just kind of, I felt bullied and that it was just anger just building up because it's like, who's going to protect me at this point? You got this 19 year old beating on me and nobody stopped them. So it was just a lot of things I went through. Then it was just like mental, mental, you know, back to back trauma, back to back trauma. And I just knew like I had Snoop and I needed to protect Snoop. That's all I know. So where did you go? You say you went, we were like sometimes that I had family there. We're in a small town, so everybody knows everybody in Louisiana. So just family's house, friends house with a baby. Yes. But once I turned 18, I did, you know, get my own place because I was legal enough to do so before. Then I just had to fend how I could. And were you working? I couldn't work. I was only 15. I braided hair, though. Oh, everybody said everybody got a hustle. Yeah, I did braid hair and I used to steal everything that we needed. And I never got caught and never got a record. You steal. Well, wait, that's what I like to get in here. That's why I come in. Because she was too young to work, so she didn't know what she needed to do. Let me talk to a little bit. Can I talk to a little bit? This is where I cut in that you were still in that world. J.C. Pennis, K-Mart, the Safeway. Where was that? I've done K-Mart before. I went to a successful K-Mart. They called you a K-Mart. Some happened, you know. You had to leave yourself. You know, that's kind of how it happened when you really still and you go in there and, you know, you get your stuff and then somebody found what you keep looking at me for. Why you following me, right? It really, it really be a shadow over you in your mind. And the nigga following me, man. But he right not even watching you, but you watching him. Right. And next thing you know. You're looking suspicious and that's really what it is. Like, you know what? Let me put this bag for now. Yeah. Nah, we, like, I would still, sometimes out of K-Mart, depending on what it was, like, what I would do is I would go in the store, different stores. The mall was different, but sometime I would go in the store and I would just grab something. That was a value. And I would just take it to the service desk to get a gift card. So I can just purchase what I needed. When it came to the mall, we would just, like, give people's bags that went shopping, actually went shopping and then put those bags in our purse and just go in that particular store and fill them up and just walk out. So. Man, you had nerve. You got more strong as you walked out more days. No, let me tell you what's so crazy is I remember being in Dillard's and they cut the lights off and the door was right there, but I already had everything that was in the area before. So I couldn't even steal nothing. Like, yeah, I couldn't because I already had everything that was there because we were going so often. Like, what do you steal and you already got it? So you had a store or something like this, you would come sell it to somebody or you sold it to them too. She wasn't selling it. She was keeping it for herself. No, I was keeping it for myself. I was not a booster. You wouldn't sell it. No, I needed it. Whatever I stole, I wore. Herself for her baby. Me and my son, my sister came and stayed with me when she got pregnant. It was still for me, my son, my sister and her baby. Wow, that's wild. And then basically y'all be clean as hell. Come that weekend, everybody popping, it's kicking it, everybody clean, tags popping everywhere. How old? Go ahead. Making sure we was tight for the holidays type of thing. Like it was more so bad. Like I didn't just go dry stealing at the mall, but if it wasn't something going on on the holidays or Christmas, then I needed to give. You're so addictive. Yeah, I just needed to do what I needed to do to survive. How old was your sister when she got pregnant? 17, I believe. Okay. Yeah, y'all young, light-skinned and walking around. Yeah, diggers down there and lose animal habit, boy. Y'all was looking good too, had them new clothes on. The thing about it. Y'all talk.