In her autobiography "The Woman In Me," Britney Spears discusses her mother. It seems the "Toxic" singer is quite angry with his 68-year-old mother Lynne Spears.

The "Circus" hitmaker, who acknowledged being heartbroken after her breakup with Justin Timberlake, has a serious problem with the way her mother described her 2007 breakdown in her 2008 book Through the Storm.

The mother of two believes that her mother exploited her celebrity. Britney felt like she was in full meltdown mode when Lynne released her book, and she described the timing as "unf-kingbelievable," a source told Us Weekly.

In 2008, Lynne appeared on the Today show to promote her book and discuss the "challenges" Britney's celebrity status presented for her family. "I have sat for hours thinking and thinking about everything that's happened," Lynne told Meredith Vieira in September 2008.

"It's been a whirlwind. It's been a wild ride for everybody," she added.

Naturally, Britney Spears expressed her annoyance that her mother was writing a book on "the darkest times in her life" and "making money" from it in her autobiography.

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She began to doubt whether or not she was as "bad" as her mother was portraying her to be.

In 2022, Britney claimed that her mother was the one who persuaded her father Jamie Spears, 71, to establish the conservatorship that she had been subjected to for 13 years. In a since-deleted YouTube video, Britney said, "My mom actually helped him follow through and made it all happen. A woman had actually introduced the idea to my dad."

It was all essentially planned out. I didn't have any drugs in me. No alcoholic beverages. Not at all. It was blatant abuse.

The "Oops I Did It Again singer" added that she was more upset with her mother than her father as a result of the conservatorship.

Jamie Lynn Spears, Britney's 32-year-old sister, and her mother, Pam Spears, didn't support her during her conservatorship, despite the fans' tenacious #FreeBritney campaign, and Britney felt betrayed by them. 

She said to her, it appeared as though they secretly and sincerely preferred that I be the bad guy-that is, that they accepted that she was flawed and kind of loved it that way.

She said she had a hard time understanding how her family had tolerated it for so long. 

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