Alhayek, KattyAlexander, Bryant KeithFoster, ElissaOjeda, Carmen HernandezMackie-Stephenson, AyshiaMoreira, ClaudioPelias, Ronald J.Poulos, ChristopherSutton, TimothyTwishime, Portnip Israsena2024-04-262024-04-262022-01-01https://doi.org/10.1177%2F19408447211068193https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14394/8482This collaborative autoethnography reflects on how each author experienced COVID-19 and associated precarity. We explore the ways in which this experience relates to our identities (both particular and plural), and our positionalities in terms of privilege and marginality. As a collective of diverse collaborators, we confront dialectical questions of self and society. Our contributions reveal our advantage/disadvantage, mobility/immobility, and the borders and boundedness before/during/after COVID-19. We show the power of curative writing in collaborative autoethnography and how the sharing of our experiences of vulnerability represents an invitation to human connection.collaborative autoethnographyprivilegemarginalityprecarityCOVID pandemicforced isolationCollaborative Autoethnographic Writing as Communal Curativearticle