Thoughts in Spanish

Thoughts in Spanish

I want to write about Mexico.


About what it was like to return somewhere after 22 years and feel like you’d always been there.


I want to write about Mexico, but my thoughts are scattered among mountains, and cactus. They are running rampant with stray dogs along winding roads lined with palm trees and pop up food stands.


How do I make sense of everything that happened in the two weeks that stretched out like an eternity.


Things run slower in the motherland. There is an urgency, and need for immediate gratification that doesn’t exist there. Time has slowed down. Or maybe it’s that time is just running along at the right pace and we’re running too fast in the States?
Either way I came home tired.


And that title is misleading.


My thoughts have always been a jumble that predominantly exists in English. A place where Spanish shows up like a fond friend who’s mostly traveling and cannot be tied down.


No pos guau.


When I close my eyes and think of Mexico all I see is color.


Mexico is the brightest blue sky dotted with fluffy white clouds.


It is dark green mountains rising up towards it.


Red dusty earth.


The golden tan skin of people who rarely have the sun hidden from them.


When I close my eyes and think of Mexico, all I can think of are ghost stories, bygone times, and memories that don’t belong to me.
I think of blood that is a stranger to me and a longing to know who they were.


The family gathered, their aunt had come home. The baby of the family, who’d been away for so long had come back for a visit.


Naturally a pig was slaughtered and there was feasting and drinking and singing.


I watched my cousins clasp her hands and ask her one by one if she remembered them, if she knew their names. She nodded until she was overwhelmed by the amount of people, and questions.

I watched a cousin break down and cry as he tried to reconcile his memory of my mother– strong, vibrant, full of life, with the fragile, quiet, woman that stood in front of him.

I sat with her, holding her hand as the tears slid down her cheeks, for reasons I don’t think she understood.


When I think of this trip, I think of a loved one saying, “goodbye.”

Your Name is Love

Your Name is Love

“Hate begets hate; violence begets violence; toughness begets a greater toughness. We must meet the forces of hate with the power of love.”  – Martin Luther King Jr.

Every weekend, Friday night and Sunday morning, I sing in the choir at my church.

There is a song by Christian artists, Evan Craft and Banda Horizonte, called Su Nombre es Amor, and I love when it comes up on our song list. My favorite part being the pre-chourus and chorus:

Mis ojos fijaré en aquel que ya venció 
Me asombraré, mis cadenas Él rompió 

Su nombre es amor, 
Su nombre es amor, 
Jesús 
Su nombre es amor, 
Su nombre es amor, 
Jesús

“I will fix my eyes on He who already triumphed.  I am in awe, He has broken my chains.

His name is love, His name is love,  Jesus. His name is love, His name is love, Jesus.”

We are proclaiming He is love. Because this is what we believe and this is what we know.

I’ve had love on my mind a lot lately. All kinds of love. The divine love I sing about, the familial love I feel for my family and friends, the romantic love I feel towards my boyfriend, the fraternal love for my fellow man– my neighbor.

Because I spend so much time reading about the pain and suffering my neighbors are going through, hunger, poverty, violence, homelessness, murder, depression, suicide– a laundry list of heart-wrenching pain. And I feel hopeless in my inability to help these strangers who are so far from me.

These people are in dire need of a demonstration of love. And I’m not trying to be cheesy or cliched. I’m not talking about sitting in a circle, holding hands, singing all you need is love with our eyes closed, and an acoustic guitar. I don’t mean going around saying “I love you” to everyone you see. You see words mean nothing if there isn’t any action to back it up.

Love isn’t just an abstract noun, an idea we spend a lifetime searching for. It is concrete, an action verb. We need to love. It is something we do. Love is a weapon we can bear to combat the hopelessness we feel in the world around us.

Instead of doing nothing but scrolling through headlines and feeling sad I can take a look around at the people that are within the reach of my love. Being love for them with a kind word, with an open ear, with my money, with food, with supplying a need that needs to be met. I want to be love for the people around me.

Because when everything feels like chaos, there is always one thing you can control, the way you react and the action that you take.

So choose to love.

“Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”- Martin Luther King Jr.

On Giving Thanks and Eating all the Food

On Giving Thanks and Eating all the Food

*I wrote this four years ago. It came up as a memory on the Facebook. Since Thanksgiving is upon us I thought I’d share it again

I don’t really cook.
 
Scratch that.
 
I don’t cook.
 
Occasionally I will bake things that look really nice and taste just as good. Sometimes I make beans and I don’t burn them. Other times I manage to make spaghetti. 
 
I know what you’re thinking, “HOW IN THE HELL DO YOU BURN BEANS? YOU ONLY HAVE TO BOIL THEM.”  Oh my friends. If you only knew. I once burned the spaghetti. You can’t win them all, my little turtledoves. You can’t win them all.
 
I digress.
 
It’s Thanksgiving, a holiday that makes me so happy that I’m ‘Merican. Trust me, rest of the world, you are missing out.
 
I’m sitting in the kitchen smelling the turkey I just put in the oven (but did not prepare, putting it in the oven is the only thing I could be trusted to do) and watching the parade. There’s cajeta boiling on the stove because I learned the hard way, last night, that I do not know how to make praline topping the way the Pilsbury cookbook told me to. It’s okay though.
 
And as I watch a bunch of overly excited elementary school students dance to a song about Santa being real or something I realize I’m supposed to be reflecting on what I’m thankful about.
 
I know there are those people who like to ruin Thanksgiving by moaning, “you’re supposed to be thankful every day.” And all I can think is, “shut up, nobody asked you to talk.”
 
Because let’s face it. Sometimes life just gets in the way of gratitude.
 
There’s work, and chores, and responsibility, and those family members and friends that just annoy the heck out of you, and bad hair days, and traffic tickets, and inconsiderate people and too much traffic, and accidents, and paperwork, and burnt food, and sleepless nights, and prolonged hospital stays, and everything else that keeps us too busy to even want to say thank you to anyone.
 
So I think that it’s wonderful that on every fourth Thursday of November we, as a nation, together, say, “stop, collaborate and listen– er… give thanks.” Or something to that extent. I’m sorry, I use any opportunity to keep Vanilla Ice relevant. 
 
And when I’m feeling low and sad I forget that I have so much to be thankful for. But rather than bore you with a long list of things you probably don’t care about I’ll tell you the two that are always at the forefront of my mind.
 
I thank God for my family, extended and immediate. For my parents who are supportive of me in everything that I do and for my wonderful sisters, with whom I have a freakishly close bond. I’m thankful that even though they say I followed them home from the monkey zoo, they decided to keep me.
 
And then there’s my adoptive family. My friends, near and far. They say you can’t choose your family but you can choose your friends. And I’m so happy that they chose me. And even when I’m crochety and moody and mean they still love me for some reason. What would I do without you guys? Probably sing less karaoke…
 
So on this day full of nummy nums and warm feelings, I hope you are gathering ’round the table with those who mean the most to you, getting ready to stuff yourself till your pants burst at the seams.
 
And I hope that you remember that no matter what, you are loved and there is nothing I can think of to be more thankful for.

NPM 4: Whistling

NPM 4: Whistling

Just put your lips together and blow.

I didn’t know my grandmother.

But one afternoon I stood on the steps whistling for the dogs and the hair on my mother’s body stood up.

Whistling into the afternoon.

Whistling for the dogs.

Whistling just like my grandmother.

Whistling like a dead woman I’d never met.

It’s just you.”

Yeah it’s just me.

My mother used to whistle just like that.”

Every time I whistle for the dogs my mother’s blood runs cold.

Eulogy for a Pup

Eulogy for a Pup

Nothing will ever prepare you for death.

Not time, not the knowledge of its inevitability, not illness–Death just happens.

And no one’s ever really happy about it, but we deal and that’s the best we can do.

It was a Friday evening in December. I was a freshman in highschool. I was standing in the kitchen doing God knows what (probably getting a snack after a long day at my nerd school) when my parents came home from work.
I asked my mom about the puppy she’d promised us. Her coworker owned a beautiful chocolate brown chow chow and she’d just had puppies. She was going to buy one.

Mom said they’d gone but he didn’t have anymore dogs. She tried to keep a straight face as I groaned in disappointment, but couldn’t as the front of her jacket started twitching.

I ran to her and she unzipped her coat.

There he was, this tiny, black, fuzzy, angry, little ball of fur, who smelled like death.

“Why does he smell like that?”

I still don’t know. Maybe it was the kibble they gave him? Maybe he hadn’t had a bath since he came out of the womb. Regardless he smelled pretty gross. There was no new puppy scent.

One thing was for sure, the jerk hated being held.

He was fighting against my mom and when I reached for him, the little brat hissed at me like the very spawn of Satan.

I spent the whole first week of his life in our house with him. I learned he really liked milky cereal, he hated fuzzy slippers, he liked hiding under beds, and his tiny little teeth were as sharp as needles.

But he was the cutest little evil thing.

After days of trying to think up a name my mom suggested Baloo, like the big black bear from the Jungle Book and it worked.

Eventually he faced the facts that he was stuck with us and allowed himself to be loved and squeezed and begrudgingly cuddled sometimes.

He loved long walks, using every opportunity to scare the crap out of strangers. He especially hated men. The only man he liked was my dad, and only after dad established the fact that he was the alpha and Baloo resigned himself with being the beta. But there was no room for anyone else.
He lived for car rides, sticking his head out of the window, letting the wind flow through his glorious mane. He looked like a mix between a lion and a bear. Cute but terrifying.

He loved cheese and ice cream and mangoes and pizza and hot dogs straight off the grill and all the food he was probably not supposed to eat.

But how can you deny those big puppy dog eyes?

My mom used to make sure Baloo had an enchilada before making the rest of us one.

The dog lived like a spoiled king.

He was a part of our family: the short, furry, angry kid that didn’t talk much, unless it was to bark when something annoyed him, or as he got older, when he was hungry.

A dog’s life is over far too quickly.
At best you get maybe 10, 15, or if you’re really lucky 20 years with them. And what is that compared to a human’s lifetime?

When you’re holding a puppy you don’t think about the future. You don’t think about failing hips. Or diseases. Or muscle loss. You don’t think about doggy incontinence. Or about carrying him up and down the stairs to go outside.

But it’s the harsh reality of old age.

Baloo had a good life. He was strong. He was healthy. He was happy, in a crochety kind of way.

Age crept on him and in the end we knew we had to let him go. Even

though I’d made him promise me a long time ago that I would be allowed to die first.

I loved that dog. I love that dog.

Thank you, Baloo.

You were a very good boy.

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