Wednesday, September 9, 2015

I write, right?

Today someone asked me, "are you a writer?" Well, I thought- I write, but I also swim- does that make me a "swimmer"? I cook, does that make a "cook"? By professional standards, no- not at all. I mentioned this blog and then had to roll my eyes since I have really been neglecting it this summer. I was aiming to write here every Thursday- then I thought maybe every other Thursday would be better and nope, I haven't even done that as of late. I also said that at the moment, I do not write for anyone or anything... I don't even write for myself as it were... well... except for now. Now I'm writing. But am I a writer? Ehhhh... I feel like I should use that term loosely, or with caution... grains of salt come-a pourin'. I usually describe it in that way I did a few lines back- "I write". That offers more of a range somehow. It's the truth without assuming a professional title that I really do not have. But it doesn't belittle what I do either- I write, that's what I do. that's what I'm prone to do- often. Ever since I was 12 and used my first diary I received as a gift.

I have a lot of my old diaries around. I've moved a few times over the years and still the old journals travel with me. My latest move has me right back in the neighborhood where I grew up- I am now living in the house I used to go to after school while my mom was still at work. The friend I bravely made in kindergarten one day prompted our mothers to meet and become friends as well. I had 'scored' myself a babysitter unknowingly. I would wait for my mother to come back from work on the staircase, the very same staircase I now go up and down every day to go to work, the store, to throw out the garbage or to let company in. Anxiety and what therapists refer to as, "abandonment issues" would wash over me as I waited for her- this would happen so frequently that those feelings, or those sensations within my belly became the norm. Nowadays I challenge myself to think, "oh wait, I don't have to feel this anxious! This isn't necessarily the norm!" And from there I can track my feelings better, the root of whatever problem is at hand and strive for a more calm, peaceful me. Being able to do that feels very liberating to say the least.

In this blog I've written about the dangers of falling into saudade, of getting too caught up in the past. Well, this summer has thrown nothing but saudade curve balls my way and what can I do- I enjoy the nostalgia, and it can amuse me, but I'm also pained by it. What I do is see it as a challenge. All my talk of not drowning in saudade has brought me to this old neighborhood of mine- with some of the old landmarks still in tact, and some torn down and replaced. The old park I used to go to, it was renovated in the 90's when my sister was growing up and it looked so new and bright. So 90's- when playgrounds here started to have more safety features and have friendlier, vibrant, "children" colors installed. Today, all its colors of that park have worn out terribly- the greens, yellows and reds- faded.  I could pull out more examples but right now, I really need to try and sleep. I just wanted to put something out there tonight, to get back into the swing of writing on my blog regularly, to be able to say and mean, "I write".

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Vizzini

These past couple of weeks had me moving and not in touch with the internet much. I could write about what’s going on at this time, but it’s still too “now” or too close for me to really step back and form anything. Today I’ll post something I wrote earlier this year, something I recently came across and can’t get out of my head. If I can’t get something out of my head in terms of writing, that’s a good place to start, like a “sign”. I feel the ending here is too abrupt but at this point, I don’t know how else to end it or where to go from there. Perhaps that’s for another time.

Vizzini


Years ago, my father got me Ned Vizzini’s book, Teen Angst? Naaah! I liked it well enough. He writes about growing up in Brooklyn, going to Stuyvesant high school, playing Magic: The Gathering and there’s a funny piece about his take on the original Super Mario Bros theme music. He also wrote for the NY Press from time to time, the free, weekly, writerly newspaper mostly available in Manhattan. My sister and I once saw him perform in an East Village café, I can’t remember the name now. Arlene’s Grocery? The Sidewalk Café? He appeared in a burlap sack, announced to the mic, “he’s back in the sack!”, audience laughing in encouraging response, and then read from his new book at the time, Be More Chill, which I haven’t read yet. I emailed him a kind of fan letter and inquired about getting him to speak in my sister’s junior high school, "Shallow JHS 227" since he did that sort of thing. He thanked me and marveled at a school actually called “Shallow”. It was named after an Edward B. Shallow, so the joke of “Edward be shallow” was inescapable, poor guy. He was also impressed that someone from Bensonhurst read the NY Press. Well yeah, I happened to reside there at the time, it didn’t mean I was confined to that 18th Avenue neighborhood, I still went to “the city” often.

We never arranged for him to speak at Shallow for whatever reason, but as luck or fate would have it, he spoke at my sister’s writing award ceremony when she was in high school. This was called the Silver Key Awards and it took place in NYU.  Esmeralda Santiago was there as well, an author I absolutely adore and will be sure to write about more in this blog eventually.

“You can write, you’re all good writers!” he energetically assured the young adults.

In Teen Angst…, he wrote something curious about Stuyvesant. He pointed out that it had escalators, unlike most NYC public schools, because he thinks the mayor or the city thought it’d be wise to invest in schools that had New York’s smartest students, something to that effect. It makes me wonder if he really believed that, that it wasn’t just a question of entitlement. Of having parents who invest more in your education and/or a secure environment growing up. In my opinion, it’s not necessarily New York’s brightest students that attend, the biologically more intelligent or anything, sometimes it’s the ones who get their intellect nurtured and encouraged more. He wrote about how much he liked Hunter College (probably in the NY Press), its Oasis room, the fact that it wasn’t corny enough to be advertised on a subway. I went to Hunter as well, but before that, I went to BMCC, the two year community college which totally did and does advertise on the subway like many other CUNY’s. What is wrong with doing that? With reaching the masses for education? Did he have an elite complex? I wonder if Vizzini ever considered these things. He was very young when he wrote Teen Angst… so I wonder if his opinion or perspective changed with time… throughout his very short life.

Unfortunately, he recently committed suicide. He was 32. I’m sad that he’s gone, that he took his life so early, with a wife and kid to boot. It makes me sad because I once tried taking my own life at 15 and I was able to get a second chance. So anyone who doesn’t get that second chance, part of me thinks, wow look at you, you really set out to do that, you weren’t playing, you really committed to that shit, unlike me who bitched out and told my mom to get help because omg look at what I had just done… and now there’s no more suffering on your part, you turned yourself into a void. And there’s that other part of me who’s more like, duuuude, you could’ve held out maybe! Maybe it was just a bad episode, a bad wave, maybe you needed different meds, a better therapist, maybe give less of a fuck of this molehill of a problem that you think is a mountain and "fuck the Red Knight" (as someone apparently tweeted this "Fisher King" reference in response to Robin Williams’ death). Just tell that Red Knight to fuck off already.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Moving and taking a seat

Between the business of moving as in, packing and boxes and address changes, and the current events that have overtaken my thoughts this week, events that really just stem from the already existing pains and horrors of racism and white supremacy, I found it hard to write. I’m considering the possibility of posting every other week instead of every Thursday, though two weeks may be too big of a window, I don’t know.

I started trying to recap what was going on in DR, the open letter signed by Junot Díaz, Julia Alvarez, Mark Kurlansky and Edwidge Danticat, which caused a rebuttal from Dominican writer Giovanny Cruz. I’ve tried sorting out my own perspective on the matter, what writers Diaz and Alvarez have meant to me, and the message of Cruz's response. I started writing about what took place in the Emanuel AME Bible study room in Charleston and weighing out the concept of forgiveness- the struggle to do it, the problems with it, the amazing-ness of it. But it all seemed to go off in too many directions and I haven’t yet been able to tie it up into a nice, little cohesive bow in terms of essay and words, or finding “my point”, or at least to the point where I put it down on paper. Or screen. You know what I mean..

A lot of writers/bloggers and people in general seem numb at this point and tired of seeing his face, discussing the same hatred, tired of defending and explaining rage, emphasizing what should be obvious, that black lives matter. What I’d like to do here instead is share this vlog by ray(nise) cange.

I’m sure I’ll elaborate in other posts and find that nice, neat way of tying it all up for you, and for myself. But this week I felt that this was a voice and message really worth sharing and hearing out.

Peace.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Beauty and the Boricua



The National Puerto Rican Day parade was on Sunday. I didn’t get to go this year because of another commitment I had made awhile ago, but I was there in spirit. I checked up on it through hashtags on Facebook, Twitter and a few minutes on TV before heading out the door with my son.  As I’m writing this, I’m blasting my salsa music on Pandora radio; mainly Puerto Rican/Nuyorican artists, like Willie Colón , Frankie Ruiz, Eddie Santiago, Hector Lavoe, the Fania all stars, Tito Puente, but of course some Cuban and Colombian artists como Celia Cruz y Joe Arroyo and it makes for good fuel for me to write about my brush with past parades.


The first Puerto Rican Day parade I attended was in ‘93 and I had just turned sixteen. I went by myself which wasn't uncommon, the way I often went to the movies alone (masturdating before it became a word). My hair was worn back and up somehow and I probably wore a big pair of shiny, gold hoop earrings and some 90’s style denim like a sleeveless button shirt or denim skirt.


I remember us the spectators more than the actual floats. But I do recall a performance artist in the parade marching or staggering in a “drunken stupor”, bottle in one hand, life-sized street light (prop) in the other, clothes disheveled, tilted fedora. A display I thought was so clever and disrespectful at the same time. More towards the Upper East Side a little white girl in a limo popped out from the sunroof, inspecting her surroundings.

“Boooooo! Spoiled brat!” some teenage boys yelled out to her. I was embarrassed at how they so blatantly attacked a little girl’s lot, so obviously and painfully jealous they had to have been.


I also remember seeing so many beautiful people, happy to be there. One young woman in particular looked to me like a glamorous fashionista but simplified, à la Audrey Hepburn. A stylish bob, maybe bangs, clean, fresh looking makeup. I remember her laughing, so full of joy and it looked so carefree. I remember thinking how gorgeous she was and that wow, she’s Puerto Rican like me, that we share some kind of history, some kind of culture, which in turn just made me feel better about myself.


As a pre-teen I saw my dark hair and olive skin as drab. My boring, brown eyes? Dull. Eric, the boy of Ukraine background who I had a crush on, had captivating eyes that switched from blue to green depending on his mood, his shirts, and the lighting. Most of my friends from school shared the same kind of sparkling sea blue/green eyes, strawberry blonde highlights in their soft hair, their fair skin, coupled with the relative ease in which they carried themselves. They were well understood by their elders, didn’t struggle with a second language when communicating with family from what I could gather. I could be completely off on this assessment though.


Michelle, my close childhood friend of Irish, Polish, and German descent, wrote to me one summer while I was in the Dominican Republic. She wrote that her mom showed her where DR was on the map and that she colored it blue. This made me feel very special and “visible”, if you can understand my meaning here. I found my friends’ European background diversity so interesting- Greek, Russian-Jewish, Italian, Irish, German, Polish, Ukraine… why didn’t I feel the same way about my own home countries of PR and DR? Sociologists and activists can probably explain it more accurately, throwing theories of imperialism, and white supremacy in the mix and I wouldn’t argue that but I think there’s also a gender driven insecurity at work here...I dunno. I’m still exploring this.


For the most part, the white girls at my junior high school seemed to look down on or get weirded out by girls who wore “too much make up” or put “too much” gel in their hair, or who wore bamboo earrings, or the triangle (more like trapezoid) ones which made me think of Egypt. I told Salina, a very friendly, stylish, Colombian-American, how beautiful I thought hers were and she smiled and said, “thanks!”. Those earrings were fabulous but looked too grown up and out of place on me. The same thing with bright, red lipstick. I loved that look but in no way could I decently pull it off. I also thought it was cute when the “Spanish” girls kissed each other hello and it left a little mark on the other girls’ cheeks, and kind of romantic when it was to their boyfriends, like a branding that both parties seemed pleased to exhibit. I kissed my hellos and goodbyes with family but not friends, and I didn’t have a boyfriend yet. Eric teased Salina about it saying, “What’s with all the kissing and lipstick stains? What, are you a lesbian?” Whereas she would laugh and reply, “shut up!” with no apparent hurt feelings, just a laughing kind of,  haha yeah whatever, dick!


Since she didn’t seemed to be offended, I didn’t step in and speak out. I let him make fun of Latino customs and implications of being gay. It seems as though any chutzpah I might’ve had growing up as a somewhat spunky little kid greatly dissipated in my ‘tween years. Some of the Chinese girls in our school also had their own style, which were bold, stark, black and white colors and patterns, sharply cut jackets and chunky, purple/blue/red streaks to complement their silky black hair.  So sophisticated and cool as they listened to their Depeche Mode... but I never came to their defense when the white girls would tease them behind their backs. In my head I was all like, “and you guys think you’re so much better? With your corny pastels, lanyards (but I had lanyards too and loved them, who are we kidding), teased hair, crispy bangs, and acid wash jeans? I don’t think so!” How I wish I were able to get those thoughts from the inside to the out but again, I didn’t speak up.


At around 14, my eyes started to take on the almond shape of my mother’s, which had a more bewitching appeal. Around that time too, I started appreciating the more “Latina” kind of beauty, even though in reality, Latina encompasses pretty much every skin tone, complexion, hair texture, eye color, etc. I guess I mean more my own olive skin, dark hair kind of beauty. And it’s “funny” because I often pass for white, so even little white passing ol’ me wasn’t immune from white beauty standards and felt insecure about anything “less than” that.  But diversity seemed to become more popular and represented in the media as we grew into our adolescence.


The next time I went to the parade was either in ‘94 or ‘95, this time with two friends I met in church who both lived in the Chelsea projects (Chelsea-Elliott houses). We had so much fun and kept yelling back, “Hooooo!” to anyone who sang out,  “A-Puerto Rico!” over and over again. An aunt on my Dominican side found my budding Nuyorican pride annoying. “Ay, porque Tennille is like, very proud of being Puerto Rican!”, she once explained to someone, saying the word “proud” as if it were a defect of some kind. I would never refer to it as a defect myself, but I can see how my pride can be perceived as a little ‘off’, or something curious. For starters, I’ve never been to PR,  and if I did, it was only due to airplane delays en route to DR, my Spanish ain’t exactly what you’d call on point (it is my second language but if I were to do this blog in Spanish for example, it would take me a lot longer to complete!), and whenever I answered someone’s question concerning my ethnic background, I would get surprised looks and responses like, “you don’t look it!”. I probably still do and will continue to. That’s fine though. People are entitled to their opinions and impressions. It still doesn’t define me nor my identity. Not anymore.


Two more scenarios pop up as I’m writing here. In Santiago, DR on my grandmother’s front porch (not an elevated porch, just the area in front of the house where rocking chairs rest. Patio?), we were dancing to the radio one night for fun, being silly. She laughed and said that I move my hips like a Puerto Rican when doing the merengue. Xiomara, my Dominican mother-in-law (I’m not married, but she’s practically my mother-in-law at this point) says that I add milk to my coffee like a Puerto Rican. I didn’t know that was something exclusive to Boricuas pero, okayyy!


In ‘97 or ‘98, I went to the parade with my Titi Janis and her girlfriend at the time, who was documenting the event with her video camera. On my way to meet up with them, I remember some guys trying to touch a girl and she was not having it. The incident came and went, we all moved along the metal barriers and kept walking. It was nothing like the misogynist, violating incidents of harassments in 2000 that I read about and saw on the news. I haven’t gone to the parade since. But that’s more an unintentional doing than something deliberate on my part. Something else always seems to come up on the same day, like it did this year. And I actually think I did go again in ‘04. Either way, my sister and I plan to go next year. We’re not letting the fear of getting harassed take over our enjoyment and pride. There are so many other reasons why we want make it out there, and to the Dominican one as well in August. Beauty, appreciation, pride, family, a sense of a common history, representation. Being at the parade really helped bring out a lot of those things to light for me, and it is something that no one can take away.



****************************************



As I was writing and rewriting this entry this week, the NY Daily News decided it would be a good idea to represent the parade in this way.


These women were NOT:
  • in the parade
  • photographed the same day of the parade
  • Puerto Rican



So basically, they have blatantly lied. There was a protest today concerning this, something again, I tried to make but couldn’t because of various commitments. So I do the next best thing/s. Checking updates, sharing relevant articles and links, and phoning the Daily News to let them know how much they messed up on this. Here is some more info and insight on this issue. Peace.


http://www.nprdpinc.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Letter-to-Daily-News-.pdf





Thursday, June 11, 2015

Reunited, and it feels so...

TW: suicide attempt, racism

My 20 year reunion at La Guardia High School of Music, Art, & Performing Arts was last weekend and I already can’t wait until the 25th one. As I was leaving, fellow alumni gave me the family ‘guilt’ trip of, “What? You’re cutting out? So soon?” I hugged them goodbye like we were long, lost brothers and sisters in a family reunion. Since I didn’t graduate there, the gratitude I have for their welcoming attitude, their insistence that I’m still family, is held so dear to my heart and something I wouldn’t have felt as deeply had I not attended this reunion.


Some pre-reunion talk

There are however, reasons I left midway and finished elsewhere a year later. There were a lot of things I put myself through at the time, as well as shit that straight up happened to me without my consent; I was both victim and perpetrator. There was the church I became involved with at 13 that mentally set us apart from the rest of the secular, “sinning” folks outside. This disillusioned and isolated me and eventually led to my suicide attempt at 15. I delve into this more in other writings and I feel the need to get on with other points here, so forgive me if I seem to be glossing over certain things.

At 16, I was prescribed meds, curled up in my bed a lot and at one point wrote the words, “I will hurt myself” under my wooden table nearby. My mother likened me to an ostrich who buries their head in the sand but is still seen by others and therefore, is not hiding or escaping much. I was also assigned to see a social worker once a week who stopped working after having her baby, so as helpful as those sessions were, they didn’t last long.

Later that year, coming out of the NY Public Library on 42nd and 5th, I met an older man, about 30, who was on in his way inside. He bumped his head against part of the revolving door and joked that it was my fault because he was too busy looking at me, admiring my beauty. He had sort of a French accent and as he kept talking, gave me his number. He suggested it was fate and in my naïveté, went to see him one afternoon. He seemed so nice and friendly. He immediately started having sex with me and believe it or not, it was not something I was expecting. Statutory rape was not a term I understood until years later. At 17, I had my most horrific experience that winter. I was walking home one night, two houses away from my own, and was suddenly grabbed from behind, thrown into a car and sexually assaulted by a man I never saw before or since, not even in the mug shots. I definitely explore these things more in my writing and continue to do so.

My point here is that when I take these trips down memory lane, they are far from pleasant. It’s more like walking through hot coals being very discerning over where I’m stepping, where I should linger, and of course as always, when to move on.

When I was 14, the high school of my (first) choice accepted me, thanks largely due to the monologue rehearsals with my Titi Janis, my dance rehearsals with the after school programs, “Song and Dance” and “Once Upon A Time”, and some serious, down on my knees praying. Though I didn’t get into Dance, the Drama department took me in after a callback which made me an official Drama major in this very special school, one borough and 3- 4 trains away (the R to the E to the D to the 1 was one of the ways I was able to commute). I had culture shock (and thrill) on a few levels. Coming from the pseudo suburbs in Queens to super urban Manhattan, the “city”, from being with older kids who smoked and got high right in front of the building and in the bathrooms, to the creative ways many of them dressed and expressed themselves, from the constant singing from the Vocal majors, belting out their talent in hallways and the cafeteria, to the actual demographics. The schools I attended before were mainly white middle class and a working to middle class immigrant populationElmhurst, Queens resides in the most crowded and diverse district in the world, district 24.

“But no black people!” my friend Dave half-joked as I described it to him one day. He was right though. Elmhurst schools are diverse, but La Guardia’s range is just as incredible, if not more so- from rich to poor, light to dark, straight to queer, hailing from every nation I’m sure, everybody walks those halls. It is truly brag worthy.

My first week of drama class consisted of an acting exercise where everyone would walk around in a circle mimicking each other’s movements. Whenever the person in front of us changed what they did, we were supposed to follow suit as the person behind us was supposed to do, and so on. Aisha, the girl behind me, made fun of the way I moved. Raw, nervous, and defensive, I put up a front, sucked my teeth and retaliated with, “Well, I’m not into that black shit!” As I said it, I immediately felt its stupidity.  My real intention was not to try to develop any bigotry in me, but to ruffle her feathers somehow. Hurt people hurt people and a person’s race and gender are the most obvious targets, especially among strangers. I didn't know her well and since we're both girls, the only outward thing I saw left to pick on aside from her being tall, was being black. So I reacted to let her know not to fuck with me. Well, the joke was on me because all Aisha did was laugh, while anyone else who heard me laughed along too as if to say, “Hahaa, this stuck up bitch went too far!”. I was effortlessly shunned. I was a fly they easily flicked away.

But what did I really mean by “black shit”? Moving well? I wasn’t into that? Did I prefer to move awkwardly?? Was I implying that black people only move well? That there isn’t a single black person whose moves are less than stellar? And only black people move well? It makes less and less sense the more I break it down. Yes, I felt hurt by being mocked and yes, that hurtful garbage came out of my mouth in return, but there is no way I can honestly stand by its meaning. Ever. Not when black is present, if not in my skin tone, then in:

my family,

my roots,

my blood,

my history,
my friends,

my countries (USA, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic),
my culture,

my teachers,

Even if blackness weren’t so prolific in my life and this world, it's still a shit remark I have to kick to the curb, so that it can rot and obliterate.

I didn’t get to see Aisha at the reunion that night, I don’t know if she attended. I saw one of her old friends who told me that she didn’t keep in touch with her anymore. I apologize for what I said. If the ones directly (or indirectly) involved that day do not understand or forgive me, I realize they have that right. I’m not after those coveted ally cookies. My job as a human being is to put it out there, fess up and own up to what I’ve said and done. To learn, grow, transform, and take it from there.

Even though not everyone remembered me that night last weekend, it was alright. I didn’t remember every single person there either. Even when they reminisced about their prom and the senior dance festival, I was fine, and comfortable enough to walk slightly apart from the crowd from time to time during the building tour. I just found my way back into conversations when it became relevant, or I initiated my own. I considered it a triumph of some kind to be able to make it out that day. Everyone was happy and reveling in the nostalgia, and some were able to acknowledge how weird it was too. But we all had “spirit” and knew how to enjoy ourselves without getting bogged down. Our saudade is a spring board that can develop, spread and help us take flight and the past is a time we can always return to, even when we’re by ourselves, but it helps when we’re all there for each other. Despite the endured and inflicted pain, it is still possible and miraculous in some cases, to feel a true sense of joy, camaraderie, and sentimental goodness that comes when you revisit a time, or in this case, old classmates and friends.












Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Saudade and my Heavy First Week of June




The word “June” looks like flowers to me somehow. I also love the way it sounds. June evokes flowers, blue skies, fresh air, and kites, even though lately it’s been riddled with April-like rain for years here. June is fun, Gemini energy.


For me the first week of June is crammed with bittersweet significance. It kicks off with my own birthday on the 1st, and then my dear cousin Joanne’s birthday the day after, someone I used to live downstairs from. June 5th is triple loaded for it’s my son’s father’s birthday, a man I’ve known for about 5 years and haven’t seen in the last four, my paternal grandmother’s birthday, and the day my mother died. June 7th is my cousin Yvonne’s birthday, someone I’ve always considered to be my “long distance sister”, and the day my maternal grandmother died. Finally, my 20th high school reunion falls on June 6, this Saturday (no idea what to wear yet).

On my birthday I wake up feeling so goddamn special, it never fails, no matter what I’m going through in life. June 1 seeps into my mind, a happy, reflective thing, and I feel as if I’ve climbed another rung in the  ladder of life, I got to reach the next number, the next number this year being 38. This year, thanks to my sister putting the upbeat, get-up-and-go “Spoon” song, You Got Yr Cherry Bomb on my phone, it was in my head as I woke up and it propelled me throughout the morning of getting the kids to school and on my way to work. I have no problem making it “all about me” on this day, if not externally then in my swelling head. The triumphant thought of, “Yayy, I got to revolve around the sun once more!” swirls inside me all day.


Inevitably throughout the year those feelings turn more into, oh nooo I am really up there, aren’t I and I start to long for the days of being younger. But I always do this, and it’s so stupid. I remember freaking out when I turned 20! No more teen years to live out! It didn’t help when my friend Liz teased me about it, her having months over me before she turned the same age.


There are things I wish I could do over in my life or re-live, but when I learned about the Brazilian term for nostalgia, saudade, as much as I thoroughly understood it, saudade is ultimately something I don’t want to be stuck in. I have friends who seem to glorify its heartache and a father who is content in his own time warp in terms of taste in movies and music. I love a lot of the old movies he’s gotten me into and I like older music, and not just in a distant, appreciative way but in an embarrassingly, out of touch, obnoxious, geeked out level.  And I know I'm not alone in this or anything, but still

I’m aware of the dangers of getting lost in yesterday and drowning in them so I try to tiptoe over those saudade puddles. Maybe that’s why I like my birthday so much at first because it's proof that I’m still moving ahead.


My children help me with this too, in a way. Eventually I have to get pulled back up onto the surface of today and get on with it because of them; the lunch boxes, appointments with the pediatrician, putting the toys away and getting them to do the same. And I get to look forward to the more beautiful things like the excitement they get when they lose their baby teeth, noticing them articulate their ideas more, their facial expressions developing, and being a part of their affection and understanding.


When I told my father and sister about my 20th high school reunion they both reacted with, What? That long? Yeah, that long. A second grade girl at the school I volunteer in thought I was turning 21, 23 the most, not 38. I’m telling you, our perceptions of time can be so terribly warped. You can press on and still appear to be staying in one place.

These June dates provoke so much in me and I know it’s fine to sit with that, and reflect on what they mean. But I can’t let it dictate my “everything”. They are after all, just dates on a calendar. I can honor my mother anytime, for example. I can also remember my ‘Grandma’ and ‘Mami Ana’ whenever I want to, or show some love to my fellow Gemini cousins. It’s all within reach and not bound to that one annual date. But this is a glimpse of my first week this month and what it means to me.

Thursday, May 28, 2015

My City, My "Kids"

This is the essay (with some additional tweaking) that had my friend tell me that my writing needs to be longer and seen outside of facebook.


I wrote this last year when I was mulling over the fact that the 1995 film, ‘Kids’ was going to turn 20. I usually write what haunts me, freaks me out, and tugs at me one way or another.  And it’s usually best for me to jot things down as soon as possible and plow through those “shitty first drafts”. That’s okay. Polishing comes later. So does feedback. And new perspectives. And spell check. All those come with time. The important thing I think, is to get your angst-y rant down on paper somehow (or canvas, or song, whatever art medium works for you). It doesn’t just have to live in your head. It can be a ‘thing’ that reaches others. I can tell you that the more I write, the less I am haunted.


Here is my take on ‘Kids’ getting up there in years- and how it relates to me.


My City, My ‘Kids’


My city, my real city, is Manhattan.  I'm referring to it as "Manhattan" and not "the city" or mention any particular neighborhood because... well, it's the overall love of the borough I'm trying to convey here. It's where I was born and slightly raised before we moved to Queens. We moved when I was still a baby in 1977 because in the 60’s my mother’s father rented out a 3 level apartment house in Elmhurst and also because one day as my father was having a smoke out on his Manhattan fire escape, he looked down and noticed a couple of little boys beating up on another little boy out in the street.
“You better leave me alone or I’ll tell my mother on you!” the poor boy defended.


“Your mother? I’ll FUCK your mother!” one of the other boys mercilessly shot back with a laugh.


He either said that or, “I fucked your mother!” Either way, it was a “motherfucking” issue and it disgusted my dad enough to consider moving us to his in-laws in Elmhurst, borderline Maspeth, where balconies/terraces replaced the fire escapes. As if kids weren’t as bad in the outer boroughs and three level apartment houses. Out of all the boroughs I’ve ever spent time in, whether living in Brooklyn, visiting family in the Bronx, staying with family on the Upper West Side, or staying with boyfriends and friends in Brooklyn and the Bronx, it was in Elmhurst borderline Maspeth, Queens where a man had captured me from behind one night, shoved me into his car in order to continue assaulting me, and flung me back out into someone's driveway, only a block away from home. So much for chasing security. Have stupid, not so nice things ever happen to me in Manhattan? Sure. But the worst, most violent, frightening event that ever took place in my life happened in that nice little Queens neighborhood.


I prayed to get accepted to LaGuardia High School of Music, Art, and the Performing Arts, to get out of Queens and back into Manhattan, even if just as a student. My prayers were granted most likely because I got down on my knees in my bedroom floor one night pleading, looking up at my 2nd floor ceiling, imagining an open minded, merciful God to hear me out. To me, Manhattan was club music with MTV's Downtown Julie Brown at the Palladium.







And cool club kids, not Queens Center Mall gals with 80's teased hair and New Kids on the Block pins on their acid wash denim jackets and school bags. 




Even the more bad-ass Guns-N-Roses iron patches were too provincial for my taste. Or too whitewashed. My dad once emphasized to me that New York will always be the center of the world. Since then, I've felt a kind of worldly privilege walking on those glittery midtown sidewalks, especially by myself, as if I were touching great Hollywood monuments and where Life trembled and happened.
The film ‘Kids’ is actually 20 yrs old next year. I had just turned 18 when it came out so I was about 2- 3 years older than the Kids. And I think it technically took place in the summer of '94 or '93 so I might have been even closer to them in age than that. As degenerate and neglected as the ‘kids’ are in this film, as dreadful as the story unfolds, as exploitative as I think the director was, particularly in the blunt tutorial scene and the little 8 year old's getting high, what makes me feel at home or nostalgic about that film, is its authenticity. The people involved in this movie were not Hollywood transplants working in a fake studio with New York accent lessons from their voice coaches, this was the real deal. Okay so Leo Fitzpatrick's from Jersey, and Chlöe Sevigny is from Connecticut, but still.


But I slammed it back then at the Children’s Express interview, a syndicated newspaper that often held roundtable youth discussions. I was so up and arms about its negative representations of NY teens "today". A few days later, a reporter from a British newspaper called my house to discuss my opinions more. I paced around, in and out of the rooms in Queens and told him that the fight scene in Washington Square Park was in a way realistic even if it did blow out of proportion. I said that in subways especially, accidentally bumping into someone can potentially cause a hot blooded, riled up response, that escalated violence from an innocent bump was not exactly unheard of. The interviewer chuckled in disbelief. If I had the chance to do that conversation over, I would also try to convey my initial feelings after seeing a movie so raw but so unmistakably “Manhattan” and "now”. That afterwards, taking my long walk back home, crossing the 59th Street/Queensboro bridge, I took in the air, that skyline, those skyscrapers. I passed a painter halfway into the bridge working on his skyline landscape and with such inner confidence told him how nice his painting was coming along. He thanked me and I said you’re welcome as I continued walking. The side effects from watching ‘Kids’ aside from aching over the sad horror of the characters and plot, included an eerie sense of connection to my city that day.



And there in the front is Rosario Dawson, Lower East Side/East Village, born and raised :)