Abstract
Our memories very rarely represent factual events, but rather they are tethered to our personal goals and how we see ourselves. Autobiographical memories are a specific type of memory that come at us in an instant with no warning of their arrival or clue as to their purpose. This autoethnographic research offers layered emotional understandings of memories—of what we may have resisted in our moms, what they may have resisted in their moms, and the new meanings of resistances that lead us to see both our mothers and our daughters outside the confines of their singular roles.
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