My mother is my seamstress, lapping around a genetic retail store, she had 23 chromosomes to spend. Knitting freedom’s peach fuzz fabric over the inseam of muscles, cross stitching stereotypes of blonde thread into the pores of a rounded scalp, hot-gluing privilege into blue eyes, kneading the molds of a thigh gap between legs of the race that would shame its way to superiority. I am white. My mother was my seamstress, she made sure the licks of discrimination didn’t scar my back.