“…Regardless of the discipline of the authors and the aims of the reviews, the transformative power of mothering was apparent from the earliest (Clemmens, 2003) to the most recent primary review (Lucas et al, 2019), and across vulnerable subgroups including teen mothers who were homeless (Meadows-Oliver, 2006); had experienced violence (Bekaert & SmithBattle, 2016); or had spent time in foster care (Connolly et al, 2012). Reviewers referred to this transformational potential with language and metaphors describing how mothering provides meaning and fulfillment, and serves as a catalyst for becoming mature, reducing risky behavior, repairing relationships, reinventing the self, and seeking a better life anchored by the baby (Clemmens, 2003; Erfina et al, 2019; Graham & McDermott, 2005; Lucas et al, 2019; Meadows-Oliver, 2006) precisely because teens who became mothers lacked options for gaining meaning and independence (McDermott & Graham, 2005, p. 75). On the background of social disadvantage and difficult childhoods, and with few avenues for developing other identities, mothering was rewarding, provided purpose, and filled an emotional void (Bekaert & SmithBattle, 2016; Connolly et al, 2012; Macutkiewicz & MacBeth, 2017).…”