Mothering Myself
Sometimes I tell myself the loving things
I wish you would say to me.
I imagine the parent you would be
if you weren’t mentally ill
or were more compassionate
or had the Christ-like love for me
that you seem to have for others.
I picture you being happy for me
when I get to be my female self,
being proud of my strength and bravery
and beauty,
offering comfort when I feel rejected
or scared.
When I came out to you,
I naively dreamed it would be
a Hallmark moment,
that you would feel sad
for all my time struggling in the closet
alone,
that you would embrace me
and celebrate
getting to know the real me.
I thought you would be grateful
for my LGBT discussion group,
for all the lesbians who were family to me
when you couldn’t be,
who supported me when you didn’t know.
Now you do know but pretend not to.
You have had over a decade
to mourn the loss of your son
and accept me as your daughter.
You have spent that time in fruitless denial instead,
when we could have been growing closer.
Sometimes I hear in my head
the positive, affirming words
you would speak to me
if you truly knew my pain,
the things you would say
to console me
if I could tell you about my life.
I love this ghost version of you
just like you cling
to the mirage
of a male version of me.
I guess we both have our illusions.
I am not the male child you wanted.
You are not the mother I thought you were.