So where do we house this arrogance? In a jar on the shelf? Perhaps, the porcelain, blue, cracked one from your mother? She shared that, as well as that need she had to better everyone around her. You hover, as she did, looking for faults in the cards I may have missed in solitaire, a game so named for its singularity. As you take things from my hands, I place those absorbed insecurities into kitchen cabinets whose color choice was yours, as well as the furniture in this sun-yellow room. Feelings are stored in wine glasses and soup bowls inherited from her that I clean. Emotions hide behind dusted photographs on the living room wall. Hers. I dare not sever them from my life. They are, as you have said, Perfect. Nevertheless, what would I know of décor? You pay the bills; I pay the price of my inadequacies with rolled eyes and demonstrated patience, as well as my clutched hands. I weary of your presents and word gifts, as you gently take my heart and instruct it how to beat better. Anyway, what do I know? Who am I to solve this complex jigsaw?