I pretty much am my mother at the moment, I didn't think I was, though I looked like her, but I have been turning into her for years and sometimes I catch the way I'm sitting, my expression, posture, and I realise it is her exactly
Mum was the one that did the gardening, picked fruit and veg to feed us cheaply because there was no money (dad was a minister so had a free Victorian house but no salary to heat it or pay things, he also had a habit of giving away any money he had at the end of a month until she taught him that having kids means setting a bit away to pay for new shoes!). She made jams and preserves, did crafts though different ones to me (she was a compulsive knitter, made rag rugs out of cut up old clothes, crocheted a double bedspread, embroidered pictures, did tapestry cushions, you name it, I do none of those as she was so good I couldn't bear my early efforts so found different things!), she was a very basic cook as I am, she did domestic tasks on set days which I don't, and hated housework as much as I do tho she had a weekly helper to do heavy housework and I just ignore what I can't manage!
She was widowed at 40 and lived the rest of her days on a tiny part widows pension (Dad died at 56 so didn't merit a full pension and she'd never had a day job with a salary) and eventually her own OAP pension, but unlike me she managed to save off that in case I needed bailing out when I was working abroad in my gap year and she eventually gave me the money anyway when I was buying my first flat years later! I get by like her on very little and am grateful for knowing how, all the recycling and reusing came from her wartime make do and mend experience but I'm not as good as her and not quite as compulsive - I found a huge biscuit tin she had full of buttons, another of screws and picture hooks, curtain rings etc just in case, she even had a bag of bits of string!
Physically I look so much like she did at my age (I discovered a photo recently and its scary since I had my haircut changed to the same as hers earlier this year!) and we both got osteoarthritis in our 40s tho she had both hips replaced and my hips are so far ok touch wood, mine is worst in feet and hands at present but also I feel it in my left shoulder and my back, which she did, we both manage on paracetamol as codeine gives us "very vivid dreams" as a hallucinatory side effect!
Both very pragmatic approach to life, physically active til things started falling apart.. I could go on but there are also key differences, primarily she was much better with people and with responsibility, taking on all sorts of things that "someone" had to do, as a minister's wife it was her career checking up on people and keeping in touch with relations and huge card lists this time of year, she was intensely religious and I don't celebrate Christmas at all, neither religiously nor commercially and I don't keep in touch with extended family as she did, nor old friends - she still exchanged cards with student nurses she lived with in her late teens when she was into her 70s and she hadn't even completed her nursing training when she left to get married because dad was offered a parish and she felt it better to go as a newly wed couple for a complete new start together! Oh and that's a key difference, she married at 19 and had 3 children, she wanted to be a wife and mother above all things and made her marriage work tho she had less romantic love for dad at the time than admiration for his persistence in adoring her and pursuing her and taking her dancing! Oh we both loved dancing, in different ways, but you should have heard us discuss Strictly Come Dancing or, as our final ever conversation Dancing on Ice - she cut me off from our regular Sunday night (and Mothers Day) phone call to watch the DoI finals and that was the last time I heard her voice.
I still have the crocheted blanket she made for my cot and ended up with double bed size, there are rag rugs she made on both sides of the bed, and one of her embroidered pictures is on my wall. My jams and chutneys are pale echoes of hers but our baking is equally mediocre and our gardens equally underutilised but full of good ideas and intentions. And we both love homegrown broccoli!