In her home life, especially, Moody sees this lack of willingness from her own mother. Mama, as Moody calls her, can be looked at as a both an individual and also as a representation of the older generation of rural African Americans. Through the autobiography she struggles to survive yet is too afraid to risk what little she has in order to fight for equality. It is due to this that she is unwilling to support Moody’s decision to join the movement. She is scared for Moody’s health and safety and because of that does not believe this fight is worth the risks. Young as part of an even younger generation than Moody was not as exposed to these disagreements and was more commonly around those who are both younger and ready to fight for a change. On the last page of the autobiography, Moody says, “I wonder. I really wonder,” (Moody, 424). This disappointment and skepticism are not caused by the movement itself, however, with the amount of whites in Mississippi whom are holding on so hard to racial inequality and by the willingness of so many blacks to counteract for the prejudices. Moody, her whole life, has been surrounded by an older population, therefore the very fact that she was able to still fight for the movement and not become discouraged until years after fighting…