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A is for Abigail, who shared with you a kindergarten trauma and then forgot who you were in eighth grade, like Belinda, who left without a word one sunday morning after mass, C is Catalina, your best friend’s ex-best friend, who went with you to Daana’s book launch in texas, and Enrique, who you planned to room with in college but you hear from friends crashed his car into a tree and joined the saints, but Flores had another kid and his man bun is slicker than ever and Gumaro, who you helped teach english in fourth grade is still hitting the gym beside Hiris, even as she works at la perla full time and overtime, beside Isabella who no white girl would talk to in middle school because they said she smelled like dirt, or Juliana, punching numbers into a cash register at the dollar general thinking of falling in love with Kruz who made a perfect vanilla cupcake candle in home ec but couldn’t cook steak to save his life.   Lucio remembers kissing you on the mouth in the church nursery but he is now engaged to a white girl you’ve never met, and he remembers a particular messy Maria who would draw like her life depended on it, and a Nadia who would cry in english 11 because her parents couldn’t help her with the homework but still kiss him after her soccer games, who no longer bothers to call Olivia, even though they were teammates for a decade and now she works at her own sports shop with a daughter who could have gone pro if only. Profe, who was a migrant “helper” at your elementary school, laughs at it all, remembering yelling at parents in spanglish, although you heard her husband yelling at her on the phone at lunch, laughing when Quito broke one of the chairs that the school bought with its 4 million dollar bond that drained money and morale, who went out with Romani and started a band in seventh grade that took longer than usual to fizzle out, and the bullying stopped for a while, though Sergio would never forget how it felt to bend down for hours with bad black bruises up his back, wouldn’t ever stop reliving every labored breath spent both here and there.   And Thalia couldn’t even make a living, recalling almost forgotten days of swingsets and slurping pelon pelo rico tamarindo under the orange tube slide.   Her ex-husband Umberto everybody but the feds forgot about, and V is for Victor, the high school goalie who had to quit because he strained his wrists in the fields, like Wanita, who is trying to raise money for her second hip replacement, like father Xavier, who carves statues of woodland creatures for the children he could never have, and Yesenia, who sewed and sewed until her fingers curled and her forehead wrinkled beyond repair, and she tells you that Zaida, who made the best tamales in town, is now gone to the saints, and no longer fears anything, even the government and their obsession with small white slips of paper. So much in a name, in a hyphen, in a tilde, but no, it should be under V—“virgulilla,” and their names should be written in your address book but instead they’re in a list at some office in the States underneath “undocumented” and “illegal.”
0
Apr 10, 2024
Apr 10, 2024 at 2:40 PM UTC
Address Book
A is for Abigail, who shared with you a kindergarten trauma and then forgot who you were in eighth grade, like Belinda, who left without a word one sunday morning after mass, C is Catalina, your best friend’s ex-best friend, who went with you to Daana’s book launch in texas, and Enrique, who you planned to room with in college but you hear from friends crashed his car into a tree and joined the saints, but Flores had another kid and his man bun is slicker than ever and Gumaro, who you helped teach english in fourth grade is still hitting the gym beside Hiris, even as she works at la perla full time and overtime, beside Isabella who no white girl would talk to in middle school because they said she smelled like dirt, or Juliana, punching numbers into a cash register at the dollar general thinking of falling in love with Kruz who made a perfect vanilla cupcake candle in home ec but couldn’t cook steak to save his life.   Lucio remembers kissing you on the mouth in the church nursery but he is now engaged to a white girl you’ve never met, and he remembers a particular messy Maria who would draw like her life depended on it, and a Nadia who would cry in english 11 because her parents couldn’t help her with the homework but still kiss him after her soccer games, who no longer bothers to call Olivia, even though they were teammates for a decade and now she works at her own sports shop with a daughter who could have gone pro if only. Profe, who was a migrant “helper” at your elementary school, laughs at it all, remembering yelling at parents in spanglish, although you heard her husband yelling at her on the phone at lunch, laughing when Quito broke one of the chairs that the school bought with its 4 million dollar bond that drained money and morale, who went out with Romani and started a band in seventh grade that took longer than usual to fizzle out, and the bullying stopped for a while, though Sergio would never forget how it felt to bend down for hours with bad black bruises up his back, wouldn’t ever stop reliving every labored breath spent both here and there.   And Thalia couldn’t even make a living, recalling almost forgotten days of swingsets and slurping pelon pelo rico tamarindo under the orange tube slide.   Her ex-husband Umberto everybody but the feds forgot about, and V is for Victor, the high school goalie who had to quit because he strained his wrists in the fields, like Wanita, who is trying to raise money for her second hip replacement, like father Xavier, who carves statues of woodland creatures for the children he could never have, and Yesenia, who sewed and sewed until her fingers curled and her forehead wrinkled beyond repair, and she tells you that Zaida, who made the best tamales in town, is now gone to the saints, and no longer fears anything, even the government and their obsession with small white slips of paper. So much in a name, in a hyphen, in a tilde, but no, it should be under V—“virgulilla,” and their names should be written in your address book but instead they’re in a list at some office in the States underneath “undocumented” and “illegal.”
After John Keene’s ‘Phone Book,’ Dec 2021 hey y'all, it's been a while. I'm trying to come back from hiatus and get back into writing and also to use my voice for bigger things. I hope you like this poem and that it makes you think :)
TigerLily13
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Apr 10, 2024
Apr 10, 2024 at 2:40 PM UTC
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