Yeah, young Lorelai rules. I thought it was strange how the Haydens were so much uglier in their insistence. Emily and Richard insisted on a marriage while Straub was pushing for the abortion, and Richard looked so somber while considering his daughter's options, angry, yes, but not directing his wrath at Lorelai.
That was kind of funny, though, Christopher's home life was so bad that he thought running away from home to move in with the Gilmores sounded nice. I can see why Lorelai wouldn't see it that way, but she wanted away from all of it, not just the pieces that were yelling at her. She wanted to be able to drop her sweater on the floor and register Democrat, not just belong somewhere.
She was opposed to the hostel backpacking when Christopher first brought it up, Almost like right up until Christopher started becoming one of the grups, she hadn't realized how addicted to her lifestyle she was. Grown-up Lorelai talks like it would be fun, but maybe that's just to teach Rory that the freedom to backpack is way more important than the reality of doing it.
I had a thought about the Lorelai/rory/Emily triangle dealing with my family over the weekend - Emily's greatest fear was losing her daughter, and she controlled Lorelai's every step to prevent it happening before she was ready. Lorelai shares the fear, but she reacts to it by encouraging, even coercing, Rory into flying free whenever possible. It's like her every prop is daring Rory to run away, and that reversed action is naturally having the reverse reaction - Lorelai never needs her mom, and Rory always does. Go figure.