fairy tales 2
I wish I could spit rhymes
with the ease of a liberated tongue,
relay my stories
minus the empty hours of self loathing
plus crumpled re-starts.
maybe its true
the birth of a poem (like much else in this world)
means more
with scars
of a worthy journey.
At an anti-racism conference in North Carolina, I got scars.
my tongue fumbling
dropping history
in their laps
her
earnest reply
wrapping my thorns
in band-aid smiles.
“Know what’s great? Those experiences have made you who you are. Congratulations.”
lipsticked words dripped heavy
burst levees in my chest
drowning her
with the flood of a thousand poorly swallowed excuses
meant to appease me when the teacher made fun of my culture
meant to keep me quiet when that man
then that one
another one
another
shattered the wholeness of my sexuality with a broken stare
rough hands
meant to make me pay for upsetting false family norms
when I fell in love with her two spirits
meant to dilute me with sexist commentary about my big ass, my “NICE TITS!”
my feminine incompetency
meant to put me in my place where my brown skin belongs
just below the authority of a boss’s white lies.
Flailing in the waves
lipsticked pleas gasped
“B-B-But…you made it.”
Im ashamed
my hands
minds of their own
held her head
underwater
til her echos bubbled silence.
The finality of being labeled
“survivor”
I cant stomach it
as if the fight is over
lay down my weapons
let my defenses rest.
I’m saturated
in emotions
choking on my thoughts.
Who might I be
if whole parts of me
hadn’t been ripped away?
If a racist teacher was replaced by Ethnic Studies
teaching me to refute the ugliness the world served up
as an example of my brownness.
Would I have built
a reservoir of confidence
to protect myself from predators
when my own protectors failed me?
Would I then
have spent that time
creating a groundwork for greatness
instead of incessantly clawing
at the evasive tools of healing?
And what of my people?
If x-rays of my girlfriend’s body
didn’t reveal the healed up
crookedness of a dozen broken bones,
each one with a child’s horror story to go with it
Would she now be leading her people as two spirit
would they
having not been kidnapped and raped
in the name of civilization,
hold her in high esteem
instead of banishment?
Would we have made it?
puddle reflections of us
wild berry stained fingers
interlaced
walking towards home through the high grass
Would it now be a river of a shared life?
Who would each of us be
if we were all afforded the same opportunity
for life, liberty and the pursuit of fucking happiness?
answers float just out of my grasp
I suspect
I would lay down my weapons
let my defenses rest
and stop drowning people with my anger.
My Father and I
my father
battle scars decades long
stretch across his brown skin.
he used to always grab me by my arm
whispering,
education.
at 15
he was king of the barrio
in San Antonio
ruling the streets
with fists and fear
50 years later
they still bow to him
when we go there
he points out dilapidated buildings
bustling avenidas
and unchanged bus lines that mark his memories
like he marked those territories.
stories like lectures
to form me
but in college
I schooled the poli sci professor
on the politics of a cease fire
see even the streets whisper,
education.
his silver streaked mustache twitches now
as he recalls the poverty
steel green government trucks
kicking up dust
as they delivered
monthly commodities
brown eyed children
pause in their play
watch their mamas curse.
right on time
pig farmers would cruise on
through
scoop up these welfare
“freebies”
everybody knew
only their pigs
could put them
to any good use.
children suddenly feel too old for games
discrimination whispers,
education.
my father’s got 65 years of stories
just like those
resting on these
narrow shoulders.
I’m here to tell you
there is a hefty price to pay
for all that learning,
he still wields a gun
his mouth shoots words
like bullets
I can’t seem to dodge.
I’m holding on to this idea
our futures
are not sealed like our histories
I’m walking through doors he kicked down for me
with my brown skin
I have climbed to the top
of these very ivory towers
I still believe
knowledge is power.
so I’ll take it
his life,
my experiences,
your dreams,
our aspirations,
so we may understand
that all of it
all of this…
whispers,
education.
_______________________________________________
Sarah Gonzales believes the intersection of art and activism is a critical place for community survival. After years of engagement in community work and youth organizing on racial justice in Arizona, she founded her own national social justice consulting company, TruthSarita, LLC which supports building collective power to dismantle inequity. Sarah also serves as Codirector of Spoken Futures, Inc developing programs including Tucson Youth Poetry Slam and Liberation Lyrics which creates space for youth to process and address issues such as the school to prison pipeline, LGBTQ rights and migrant justice through spoken word poetry. In addition to facilitation, training and youth organizing work, Sarah is an extensive haiku writer, fierce dance floor occupier and a trickster performance artist whose recent work landed her in 6th place in the Arizona US Presidential Primaries in 2012. She loves horror movies and hates peanut butter.
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