Blythe Baird
My Mother Asked Me to Stop Writing About Her
1

When my best friend was a child,
her mother used The Game of Life
as a metaphor to explain sexuality.

“You can have two pink guys
or two blue guys, you know,” she explained.

My best friend is so straight,
she doesn’t even masturbate.

Still, she always knew that even
if she wasn’t, even if someday she ended up
shotgun to another pink piece,

she would remain loved and supported.

She wouldn’t have to ask for forgiveness.
Of all the things she was taught to apologize for,
love has never been one of them.

2

My mother doesn’t bring up my sexuality
anymore. I think she is tired of arguing.
She is sick of reading about her faults
in my poetry. She hates my selective memory;
how I only remember the sharp things,
the slammed doors, the heavy whiskey.

“I used to sing to you before bed
every night,” she reminds me icily.
“but you must’ve forgotten that story.”

Last week, she silently folded up her old flannels
and placed them at the foot of my bed.

I know this is probably just a coincidence,
not a peace treaty or an attempt to understand me.

But for my own well-being,
I have to take this as a sign she is trying,

even if it isn’t.