Gueritas came into my life on December 12, 2004. My fianceé at the time, Ricardo, and I had just bought a house on the southside of San Antonio and like any good new Chicana/o southside homeowner, I thought we needed a dog to protect the house. I had heard chihuahuas were vigilant watchdogs - that they were once guardians of Aztec temples. I heard female dogs are even more vigilant. So, of course it made sense to get a female chihuahua. I had it in the back of my mind and figured if the opportunity presented itself, we'd find one.
So one day as we were driving down Southeast Military Drive during the usual weekend "parking lot flea market," I saw a pickup with a cage in the back and a sign that read: "Chihuahuas for sale." So we pulled over. There were a few puppies in the litter. One chocolate brown male was puffing out his chest and wagging his tail at us as if saying, "Pick me! Pick me!" But there was a little beige one lying curled up in the back that caught my attention. "How about that one?" I asked the seller. "Is she a female?" She was. "Can I see her?" So he pulls her out of her comfortable curled up sleep and I saw her little face for the first time. She was cute as a button and so tiny. When I held her in my arms, I knew instantly that she was mine. I drove to the nearby ATM for the cash to buy her. I remember her being curled up in her comfortable little ball on Rick's lap as I drove her to her new home on W. Whittier Street across from Roosevelt Park. For me, her name came easily. What else would you name a beige chihuahua with the cutest white markings? "Guera."
We soon found out that my predictions were right - Guera was a spitfire (not to reinforce Mexican stereotypes). She was a vicious little b! Her ears were always perked at attention on alert for any would-be predators. At times she would bark seemingly at nothing and when I'd look out the window, I'd see a dog being walked a block away. "How did she know?" I'd ask myself. She was on it.
She was also a nipper. Family and friends learned to stay away from "the mean one." See, a year later, we had gotten a chocolate male chihuahua, Pilón, as a companion. "She needs a playmate," I said. However, I should have known that Guera was a loner, a rebel. She was so mean to poor Pilón. (As any older sister would be.) When Pilón was allowed on the couch because he didn't shed as much fur as her (and because he didn't act a ass like she did), Guera would get mad and nip at his feet when he was let off, as if to say, "If I'm not allowed up there, neither should you!" Pobre Pilón. He's the sweetest puppy. We used to say the only harm he could do to anyone was to lick them to death.
Meanwhile, everyone stayed away from Guera, who would bare her teeth at the sight of anyone coming too close. My younger brother Thomas, a grown ass man, once flinched like a little kid, when he saw Pilón round the corner of the living room. "I thought it was Guera," he said and we laughed. Yes, Guera was "the mean one" - the cutest one, the one all the people wanted to pet on walks, but also the "meanest."
But her "meanness" was misunderstood. The "meanness" was her protectiveness - of herself, her space, and those she loved...a lot like how people describe me. Guera was always on guard, as if to say, "I'm little, but I'll fuck you up." She would attack a pit bull to protect me. I remember one time when I took Guera to the dog park for the very first time. It's like she was totally out of her element. She barked at every dog she saw as if they were intruding on "her" territory, as if the entire park was her yard and they were not allowed on it. We sat on a park bench and I was amazed to see Guera pee NINE times (yes, I counted) to mark a circle around me. And any time a dog walked into her "circle" she'd attack them. Thing is, the communal water bowl was in the circle, so that made for numerous attacks on several unsuspecting, thirsty victims.
About two years later, I moved out of our house and into an apartment on Guenther Street. I needed space to write my dissertation and get my head together...the pressure to write turned into anxiety, that ever-present monkey on my back. I figured it would be best to leave her in a house with a yard. I was away from her for about a year. It was hard. I didn't visit her often because I didn't want her to get upset/confused when she saw me. On the occasion that I did visit, she would get so excited that she'd have her little "attacks" that were like reverse sneezes. I'd have to pet her to calm her down. "It's okay, Mama. It's okay," I'd tell her. She loved me that much.
After completing my Ph.D., I obtained a postdoc at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign. I decided to take her and my cat, Kitty Witty, with me. Poor Gueritas. Little did she know that she was moving to the great white north. When the first snow came and I tried to take her out, she ran to the door with her usual excitement, but when she saw the white mountain of cold hell right outside the door, she quickly put on the puppy brakes and high tailed it in the other direction. It took several layers of hoodies and parkas (and firm coaxing) to finally get her to step out into the snow...on which she normally stood like a tripod, with at least one paw in the air. The look she gave me was unbearable, as if to say, "Mommy, why are we here?" And I'd tell her, "I know Gueritas. I hate it, too." And I did. Moving away from home and everyone I loved was hard and Gueritas was all I had. I didn't transition well. I got physically sick on the drive up and upon arrival, my emotional well-being was also negatively affected. I felt so isolated and out of place. I felt judged for everything I did/didn't do at my job. Word of how I was doing always got back home to my mentors...and it always seemed I wasn't doing something right. I tried hard to make it work, to feel invested. But mostly, I was sad.
About a month after moving up to Urbana, at the suggestion of my best friend, Natalie, I drove up to Chicago to work on a community mural project that her friend, Ernesto, was leading. Knowing of my volunteer work back home with San Anto Cultural Arts, she felt this would be a good way to feel a sense of community again. I went to Chicago and soon brought back Ernesto.
Guera did not seem pleased with this. She would growl and nip at him...an intruder in her home. But Ernesto, thinking himself the Dog Whisperer, told me that what Guera needed was to be dominated. She was acting like she was the boss of us and that had to stop, he said. So he decided to have a stare-off with her, thinking she would avert her eyes, see him as her master y ya, problem solved. Knowing Guera's aggressivness, I was transfixed by Ernesto's attempt at a close face stare-off with this crazy little beast. I watched as he went in with eyes wide open, closer, closer... Then, snap! She bit his nose. I couldn't help but laugh and say, "I told you so." Secretly, I was like, "Good job, Gueritas. You stand your ground." Later on, after she bit him while fighting with Xochi (her new stepsister) over a rawhide bone, he sat over her in order to dominate her. After squealing like a pig for what seemed like an eternity (which made me cry) and fighting a good fight, she finally submitted and accepted Ernesto as a new stepdaddy.
And so we became a new "happy" family in the midwest. But I wasn't happy. I was always questioning why I had been taken all the way up to places like "Urbana, Illinois" and then the following year even further up north to Minneapolis for a job as assistant professor at the University of Minnesota...where winters there make those in Illinois seem like summer (okay, maybe that's a slight overexaggeration...but not really). I was constantly questioning. Questioning my new relationship, questioning my career, questioning where I was supposed to be and where I was supposed to go. It never felt quite right. It seemed that as soon as I got to Minneapolis, negative energy surrounded me. Now, I'm not a "touchy feely spiritual" kind of person. I'm not one of those people who can "feel" someone looking at them and I don't necessarily believe in mal ojo...okay, maybe mal ojo yes...I've had quite a few earrings fall apart after someone commenting on how pretty they are. Point is, I've always been more the analytical, headstrong, get outta my way I got business to take care of kind a gal. But the negative energy in my new place was so strong, even I couldn't deny it.
Within two weeks of moving into our new place, my car was broken into. On the night of my department reception as new faculty member, my car got hit by another driver on the way out of the parking lot. When I returned the rental that I was given in order to get my car repaired, Enterprise accused me of damaging it and tried to sue me (on my birthday). My relationship with my boyfriend was shaky and I was not fitting into my department or my community. My physical and emotional health were "not well" to put it lightly. I honestly couldn't take it anymore. So I decided to enlist the help of local friends/danzantes to do a limpia on me and my home. Afterward I heard from someone else that the friend who lead the process said she had never felt so exhausted after doing a limpia.
And I trudged along. I tried to tell myself that the limpia worked (although I knew that it hadn't). Visits home were my only refuge. Friends and family asked when I was coming home and why I hadn't found a job in San Antonio yet. "I'm trying," is all I could say. And try I did. You see, I always thought that after getting my Ph.D. I would somehow work in the community, to use my education to help people like me achieve opportunities like I did. This is what I believed to be my destiny. The academia gig was what would lead me to my destiny. For me, it's a means to an end. The visits were never long enough and when it came time to leave, I'd always make the joke that it was time to go back to "hell," aka Minnesota.
My morning rituals here often involved waking up, crying, eating breakfast while crying and then maybe a little more crying after that. The sad thing is that Guera often looked at me as I cried as if to tell me, "Don't be sad. When you're sad, I'm sad." (She had very expressive eyes.) She would come to me, stand up on two legs, and scratch me with her front paws...as if trying to comfort me. Guera was always anxious, too. She never seemed to be able to relax. She always had her "concerned face" as I called it. Always looking, but really looking...as if to try to figure things out. Ears perked up, eyebrows up into her forehead, and her head tilting from side to side. So when I was sad, she expressed concern for my sadness.
The day before yesterday was an interesting day. What started as a sad morning with breakfast tears, turned out to be relatively good day. My therapist urged me work on "feeling" to help with my current depression and anxiety. After this hard session, I went home to repot plants to take to my office. I told myself that this would be the day that I finally moved things into my office after over a year and a half of having only my name on the door and a few paintings to indicate that the office was mine. On that specific day, I finally moved in my books and plants as if making the statement, "I am doing this." (Or at least going through the required motions.) I checked my mailbox and got a little Sanrio care package from a friend and a newsletter and virgencita sticker from another friend and colleague at ASU. When I got home, I got a letter from my friend/pen pal and two magazines that an unknown friend(s) had subscribed me to. I told Ernesto, "Aw, people are sending me love." I should have remembered the pattern of one step forward, two steps back.
The next morning was like any other. We let out the "doggie bears" as I affectionately call them and ran an errand. When we came back, Ernesto went to work and I started to make myself some coffee. It was then that Guera bumped into me. I thought she was just being her usual nuisance when I noticed she had pooped herself and was stumbling awkwardly. I picked her up and there was foaming on her little mouth and her tongue was protruding. Her eyes were dazed and she couldn't even focus on me. "Gueritas!" I yelled. I panicked. I Grabbed the keys and ran out the door. I looked up the nearest animal hospital on my phone and drove like a crazy person. "It's okay, Gueritas!" I told her as I pet her and tried to keep her conscious. "It's okay, Mamas." Construction, slow minivans... "Come on!" I yelled. We finally got to the hospital and we checked her in. Ernesto got there a few minutes later. She was still dazed when they called her in to the examination room. When I picked her up, I realized that she had pooped on my bag that she was sitting on. The doctor wiped her and found there was blood in her stool. She could barely stand. The initial examination showed she was relatively okay, except that she had low temperature and some liver issues. The doctor said it was possible that she had some sort of trauma (from a sting or something) and that she just needed to be on an I.V. for a while to get better.
So I left her and went back home to clean up her bed - that had poop and vomit in it - for her return home. I knew the vet bill would be high, so I decided to return a couple of things I had bought at Old Navy and then next door to Pets Mart to return Guera's new snow boots that I knew she probably wouldn't wear (she alway kicked them off...she had a plethora of clothes, but the boots she couldn't handle). I ran to the grocery store (also in the same shopping square) to get a few things for dinner so that I wouldn't have to leave once Guera was home and so we could watch her.
Then the doctor called and said that Guera wasn't doing better. She had started having seizures and one eye was dilated significantly more than the other, which was a sign of neurological damage. She said she had given her valium for the seizures and that she was becoming less and less responsive. "We might lose her," she said. My heart fell to my stomach. I started crying and told her I'd be right over. The drive seemed like an eternity. Construction, school busses, pedestrians... "Come on! Are you serious!?! Go!!!" I was frantic. "Wait for me, Gueritas. Please wait for me!" I cried out. And "Please, God. Please, God." I drove into the parking lot like a crazy woman, ran through the door and said, "I'm here for my chihuahua." They took me back where three people were around her. "Here's momma," one of the women said. She was lying there staring, with a ventilator in her mouth. "She stopped breathing," the doctor told me. I threw myself over her crying and hugging her, "Gueritas, Mamas. Momma's here, Gueritas. It's okay. Momma's here." Then they asked me to step back. The doctor checked her heart again and told me, "Her heart stopped. I'm sorry." My heart stopped, too. I couldn't believe what I was hearing. There she was, staring at me. "She waited for me," I thought. "She waited for me."
Just then Ernesto called (I had been calling him on my way to the hospital) and asked what was going on. He hadn't heard any news since leaving earlier that afternoon and, like me, thought she'd be fine by the end of the day. "Guera just passed," I sobbed. "I'm on my way," he replied. I continued to cry uncontrollably as she looked at me and I closed her tired little eyes.
They took us to the "sad room" as we called when we sat in the waiting room earlier in the day, saying we hoped we'd never have to be in it. Little did we know. In it was a Kleenex box, a "sky" ceiling and a tapestry of sad puppies looking at us. Then they brought her in in a little blanket. I couldn't believe it. My little Gueritas. As I held her and cried, I told her how much I loved her and how much I'm going to miss her. But I still couldn't believe it. It was like she was sleeping. And I remembered the moment when I first held her and knew she was mine...in her comfortable, curled up little ball. The way I found her is the way she left me.
The moments after that were and have continued to be surreal. The vet offered a little clay imprint of her paw with her name on it. A few minutes later, she returned with the imprint, Guera's collar, and a box with her body in it. We took her to the University of Minnesota animal hospital for a doggie autopsy. I at least wanted to try to know what took her. I owe it to her. I felt as though I was in a dream state on the way there. She was in a box on my lap. It was a beautiful fall afternoon and the hospital was along a lush green plot of land with trees whose leaves were turning bright orange and yellow. "Look at what a pretty day it is, Gueritas," I said.
Leaving her there was hard. But I knew Guera wasn't in that box anymore. Her spirit had left it already. I sat outside the hospital on a bench with Ernesto and cried and cried...and cried. I can honestly say I've never felt so much loss in my life. Bouts of crying come intermittently between staring off and wondering what it all means. Guera wasn't just a dog or a pet. She was part of me. She was the doggie embodiment of me and all my craziness. She had anger issues and wanted to fight the world. Like me. She had constant anxiety and always seemed concerned. Like me.
Guera was my doggie soul mate. She felt my anxiety, my depression, my frustration. I can't help but feel guilty for not being happier and for not being more grateful for her companionship, which oftentimes felt like she was being a nuisance...always getting caught up in my feet, always wanting to be where I was sitting. Looking back, she probably knew that my soul was uneasy and wanted to help comfort me. Instead, I saw her as "bothering" me.
She also had tons of personality and weird little quirks, like taking one mouthful of dog food at a time to her bed, eating it each kibble slowly and meticulously...then returning for a second mouthful. It took her forever to eat a meal. She slept in a cat bed (as in a bed shaped like a cat) and often did weird little flips and eye scratches with her paws while making crazy little grunting sounds. It looked crazy to us, but it made perfect sense to her. She had so much personality, I felt like she talked to me all the time. And so she inspired my story of Guera the Internally Colonized Chihuahua, which many have come to know and love through the comic and the Rasquachis videos of which she is the star.
I often stare off into my own thoughts, wondering what it all means - why the spirits would take away the one constant in my life, the one thing that I loved and that loved me unconditionally in this god forsaken world. And while feeling like a part of my soul has been ripped out, I also feel that Guera's passing has taught me to not be afraid to "feel" (as my therapist suggested) and, more importantly, to not be afraid to live.
After years of depression, anxiety and trying to fit into this foreign world called the midwest, and an academic job that simply doesn't fit, Guera has opened my eyes to just how unhappy I've been. Since leaving home, I had gained over 20 lbs. and sprouted tons of gray hair. I almost don't recognize myself anymore. My sadness here has been intolerable and Guera's passing now makes it unbearable. The years of the one-step-forward-two-steps-back has culminated in Guera's passing. I have no doubt that this is a clear message - that it's time to go home, that life is too short to be miserable. There are family members and friends who I love and who I take for granted like I did Guera. And I don't want to look back and regret living miserably for a job that I didn't feel invested in. The years of "well, maybe it can work" and "maybe if I just think positive" are finally at an end for me. I had to feel this immense loss to also find liberation from the confines of the life I'm "supposed to" live. I loved Guera...like I love home, my family, my friends, my community. And I can't stay here "hoping" for the chance to get back home. Gueritas was my companion on this crazy ride and her passing is now sending me back home. As if the spirits are saying, "You've done your best. You've proven yourself. Now come back home."
Guera was my spirit guide. She took on the burden of my sadness, anxiety, feelings of loss and desperation. It's like how they say chihuahuas are good for taking away asthma...because they actually take the asthma on themselves and often die from it. Gueritas took my doubt, anxiety and fear from me, as if finally lifting the heavy burden I'd carried with me for so long. She's a doggie martyr. And her passing to the spirit world has opened my eyes to what really matters in life. This is why I say that it is through her death that I have learned to live. And I will take both her spirit and ashes home with me. Back home where we both belong.
My heart is broken and will need time to heal. The hard part is that Xochi looks for her constantly and doesn't understand why Guera, her sister/partner in crime, is missing. That continues to break my heart a little. I guess over time Xochi will stop looking for her and I, like Xochi, will learn to live life without her.
Right now, I like to think of Guera as my guardian angel in doggie heaven, peeing a circle on her cloud and attacking any other dog that dares to tread on it.
Rest in peace, Gueritas. I love you and thank you.
A Chicana-Tejana feminist perspective on life, politics and popular culture...but really mostly me just complaining about sh*t.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Friday, July 9, 2010
My First Children's Book...and Why I Don't Own Anything from My Childhood
This was one of the first books I learned to read and I believe it explains everything. Funny thing is, I looked like that little tomboy on the cover and am an avid cat lover. On the website, the blurb at the bottom of the cover reads:
"Lots of things make me mad - when somebody breaks my best toy, when it rains and I can’t go swimming, when the kids tease me. This book illustrates how these feelings are normal."
I think I misunderstood the message in thinking that being angry is an acceptable emotion ALL THE TIME. But I digress...
This book and "Henry Goes the the Doctor," about a cat named Henry who is afraid to go to the vet, were my two favorite books.
Then I started to wonder where those books are. I'd love to see them again, with their torn up pages and my nonsensical pen drawings as I tried to learn to write in them. I thought to myself, Why don't I own them or any other memorabilia from my childhood? See, we moved a lot as my father drank a lot (and who has now been drink free for a good 10-15 years or so) and we ended up packing up and moving regularly when my father's drinking and abusiveness became intolerable for us (but mostly for my mother). We moved from apartment to apartment...then he would inevitably show up and the "honeymoon stage," (of which I learned during my stint doing domestic violence volunteer work) would give us false hopes that he would finally change "this time for real."
Subsequent moves indicated differently and so with every move, I could take less and less items with me. We once lived for a bout two years in a two bedroom apartment (me, my mom and my two younger brothers) where the walk-in closet served as my bedroom. My brothers still ask me if I remember when I lived in the walk-in closet and we have to laugh at the humor of it while also recognizing the fucked-up-ness of the situation we were placed in.
We finally ended up in a single wide mobile home - "single" for those of you not versed in the language of trailer parks, is the single, rectangular mobile home with one bedroom on each side of the trailer with a small living room, kitchen and bathroom between the two. The double wides are the "nice" mobile homes in that they essentially are twice the size of a single. In this single mobile home, my closet was tiny...a little bigger than a broom closet and so, once again, I had no place to store my things.
I often watch movies where people are comforted by their favorite childhood stuffed animals or other items from their childhood and I think, "How did they keep all of that for so long?" I guess when you have a stable home with a basement and/or attic, you can keep things for "memories."
I wish that I or my mother had kept things from my childhood, as I often feel disconnected from my past. I also seem to forget a lot of things/specifics from my childhood too which I believe to be a defense mechanism. Last year, I realized that I lost my photo album of all of my baby pictures. I was saddened by this, but then I thought that maybe this means that I need to focus on the future rather than on the past, which for me often brings up pain and resentment (hence the "I Was So Mad" reference).
The irony is that my love for books has forced me to continue to move in my adulthood from state to state as I pursue a career in academia and write my own books - books which, within the context of Chicana feminism and my own testimonio, in many ways still tell the story of why still "I get so mad."
"Lots of things make me mad - when somebody breaks my best toy, when it rains and I can’t go swimming, when the kids tease me. This book illustrates how these feelings are normal."
I think I misunderstood the message in thinking that being angry is an acceptable emotion ALL THE TIME. But I digress...
This book and "Henry Goes the the Doctor," about a cat named Henry who is afraid to go to the vet, were my two favorite books.
Then I started to wonder where those books are. I'd love to see them again, with their torn up pages and my nonsensical pen drawings as I tried to learn to write in them. I thought to myself, Why don't I own them or any other memorabilia from my childhood? See, we moved a lot as my father drank a lot (and who has now been drink free for a good 10-15 years or so) and we ended up packing up and moving regularly when my father's drinking and abusiveness became intolerable for us (but mostly for my mother). We moved from apartment to apartment...then he would inevitably show up and the "honeymoon stage," (of which I learned during my stint doing domestic violence volunteer work) would give us false hopes that he would finally change "this time for real."
Subsequent moves indicated differently and so with every move, I could take less and less items with me. We once lived for a bout two years in a two bedroom apartment (me, my mom and my two younger brothers) where the walk-in closet served as my bedroom. My brothers still ask me if I remember when I lived in the walk-in closet and we have to laugh at the humor of it while also recognizing the fucked-up-ness of the situation we were placed in.
We finally ended up in a single wide mobile home - "single" for those of you not versed in the language of trailer parks, is the single, rectangular mobile home with one bedroom on each side of the trailer with a small living room, kitchen and bathroom between the two. The double wides are the "nice" mobile homes in that they essentially are twice the size of a single. In this single mobile home, my closet was tiny...a little bigger than a broom closet and so, once again, I had no place to store my things.
I often watch movies where people are comforted by their favorite childhood stuffed animals or other items from their childhood and I think, "How did they keep all of that for so long?" I guess when you have a stable home with a basement and/or attic, you can keep things for "memories."
I wish that I or my mother had kept things from my childhood, as I often feel disconnected from my past. I also seem to forget a lot of things/specifics from my childhood too which I believe to be a defense mechanism. Last year, I realized that I lost my photo album of all of my baby pictures. I was saddened by this, but then I thought that maybe this means that I need to focus on the future rather than on the past, which for me often brings up pain and resentment (hence the "I Was So Mad" reference).
The irony is that my love for books has forced me to continue to move in my adulthood from state to state as I pursue a career in academia and write my own books - books which, within the context of Chicana feminism and my own testimonio, in many ways still tell the story of why still "I get so mad."
Monday, July 5, 2010
Fourth of July in Minneapolis
So, this is the second year I've experienced the Fourth of July in Minneapolis. Last year, Ernesto and I were invited to the lake in Stillwater, MN by our landlord and her partner who owns a sweet boat. So there we were - two Chican@s in uberwhitelandia knowing that the only reason we weren't being hassled was because we were with them. The fireworks display over the lake was really cool and, surprisingly, we had a lot of fun.
This year, we had a bbq with our Minneapolis gente (mostly grad students at U of M) and afterward, headed over to our local Powderhorn Park for the fireworks display we heard happens every year. I didn't know what to expect, but what I saw was... well, unexpected. Usually back home for the Fourth, we'll bbq and pop cuetes in the driveway/street. OR we would go to one of the five local military bases where you watch the fireworks display in all its glory. However, at Powderhorn Park, it seems these two practices were combined - as in it was a participatory fireworks event. Families secured their spot on the grass and proceeded to pop their own fireworks in anticipation of the larger fireworks show. Huh. Popping fireworks out in the open in the park? I've always thought that what made popping fireworks so fun was the feeling that you were doing something prohibited, against the law...you know, "bad." But no, there we were at the park, sitting in the grass with fireworks being lit within feet of us. :-.
Now for the most fascinating aspect of the event. I've never seen so many diverse people gathered in a public place for a U.S. holiday. There were hipsters, gentrifiers, working class peeps, people of color, immigrants (Somali and Latino, mostly). And I thought to myself, "This is how they celebrate the Fourth of July here. Like a community." It boggled my mind. I've never seen such a diverse display of "community." Like ever. But it was the Latino kids running around in the park with their friends/siblings that got me thinking. Many of these kids are children of immigrants. What an interesting childhood these kids have. Latino immigrant and Minneapolis culture melding, making this interesting mezcla of culturas - Latino, green, cosmopolitan, bicycling, neoliberal, cold-as-hell-in-the-winter...
Of course this is just my outside perspective, but I find it all pretty fascinating. More to come. Oh, and the fireworks were really cool, too.
This year, we had a bbq with our Minneapolis gente (mostly grad students at U of M) and afterward, headed over to our local Powderhorn Park for the fireworks display we heard happens every year. I didn't know what to expect, but what I saw was... well, unexpected. Usually back home for the Fourth, we'll bbq and pop cuetes in the driveway/street. OR we would go to one of the five local military bases where you watch the fireworks display in all its glory. However, at Powderhorn Park, it seems these two practices were combined - as in it was a participatory fireworks event. Families secured their spot on the grass and proceeded to pop their own fireworks in anticipation of the larger fireworks show. Huh. Popping fireworks out in the open in the park? I've always thought that what made popping fireworks so fun was the feeling that you were doing something prohibited, against the law...you know, "bad." But no, there we were at the park, sitting in the grass with fireworks being lit within feet of us. :-.
Now for the most fascinating aspect of the event. I've never seen so many diverse people gathered in a public place for a U.S. holiday. There were hipsters, gentrifiers, working class peeps, people of color, immigrants (Somali and Latino, mostly). And I thought to myself, "This is how they celebrate the Fourth of July here. Like a community." It boggled my mind. I've never seen such a diverse display of "community." Like ever. But it was the Latino kids running around in the park with their friends/siblings that got me thinking. Many of these kids are children of immigrants. What an interesting childhood these kids have. Latino immigrant and Minneapolis culture melding, making this interesting mezcla of culturas - Latino, green, cosmopolitan, bicycling, neoliberal, cold-as-hell-in-the-winter...
Of course this is just my outside perspective, but I find it all pretty fascinating. More to come. Oh, and the fireworks were really cool, too.
Monday, January 11, 2010
I ♥ San Anto, or, How I Spent My Winter Vacation...
As a born and raised Tejana, finishing up my first semester as assistant professor in the great white north (aka the Midwest), I have taken in a lot of new information and experiences to help me reflect on issues relating to culture, identity, and my place in the world.
Having said that, indulge me as I take you on my much-needed and much-desired holiday vacation back home to San Antonio...land of the fluffiest and most delicious homemade flour tortillas and most beautiful winter weather this side of...hell, I don't know what side of what Tejas would be on. Suffice to say that sunny, breezy low 70's weather beats the single digits in Minneapolis any day.
Staying in my grandparents' garage apartment on the Southside was both comforting and taxing. My grandparents are getting older in age and my grandfather's health is ailing due to a quintuple bypass surgery he had a few years back. My grandfather is a living saint and one of my primary inspirations for pursuing a Ph.D. (and the cause of a close encounter fight at a friend's house over the holidays but that's another blog entry entirely). Throughout my childhood, he instilled in me the importance of an education, often sharing with me his experiences of working in the fields of Michigan during the depression, and how he would have to walk from his home on Mercedes Street off Frio City Rd. to downtown (now the Bill Miller headquarters) to collect welfare relief in the form of lima beans and flour. He had to walk to downtown and save the nickel for the bus ride back to carry the flour and beans, he tells me (more often now than before due to his ailing health and memory). I cherish his experience and his stories, but when I'm back home, I also want to visit with friends, which makes it tricky trying to sneak out of the garage apartment in the back of my grandparents' house. But I digress.
Visiting home, I had a modest handful of goals in mind: 1) Mission Flea Market on Wednesday morning, 2) eat as many flour tortillas as possible without going into dietary distress, 3) Visit with family and friends, 4) Kantina Karaoke as many nights as possible.
Mission accomplished on all counts.
1) Flying in on Tuesday afternoon, Wednesday morning at Mission Flea Market was my first stop. This is my safe space...the place where "everything is okay" if only for a few hours. Here, you can find anything your heart desires...from CD's to fresh fruit to a trendy pair of jeans to a brand new DVD/VCR player (which sometimes comes from a batch that somehow "fell off a truck"). My dad religiously attends Mission on Wednesdays (so much so that he has re-arranged his work schedule to get Wednesdays off). I, along with my partner Ernesto, met up with him for some coffee and tacos (yes, Mission does have everything). After a brief welcome and how are you, my father and I split up into our separate factions. It's a few days before Christmas and we mean business. Among my awesome purchases that day were new baby clothes for my nephew and some awesome lucite real insect key chains...one with a scorpion for my brother Joseph and another with a scorpion fighting a spider for Thomas. Awesomeness.
2) Ah, flour tortillas. From my sister-in-law's homemade labor of love to any taqueria around the city, I had my delicious fill of these wonderful, warm, tender and, if you're lucky, powdery treats which CANNOT be found in Minneapolis. Yes, corn is delicious and it is the food of our ancestors...but I prefer the colonized version of our dietary staple anytime, my friend. (And we wonder why San Antonio consistently ranks at the top of the "fattest cities" list.) My pick for best flour tortillas in San Anto? Gordo's Cafe off S. Pleasanton. Clues that this is an awesome Mexican restaurant: 1) the sharpie/posterboard menu posted along the walls, 2) shellaced and glitter pen outlined photos of Selena, Pedro Infante, and Emiliano Zapata, and 3) Christmas lights...always the Christmas lights.
3) I know I have visited with my family long enough when they start to slightly annoy me in that familiar family way. That being said, I had a great time visiting with my two younger brothers and only siblings (the older of which is back from Iraq and the younger who just had a baby boy in September). Both of them now fathers and husbands, I found it interesting/entertaining to see them negotiate their independent "men who like to drink beer" sides with their responsible husband/father sides, both of which I love equally. So, most of our time together consisted of drinking Buds and listening to obscure yet awesome gems from the genres of classic rock, country, and soul. On this trip, I realized just how large a role music plays in my life and that of my family. At the extended family's ritualistic visit to Grandma and Grandpa's on Christmas day, my Grandma was quick to pop in her favorite Alan Jackson CD (on repeat...like the hole time we were there), while my eight-year-old niece, when talking about her dog back home named, Lady, began singing the Styxx hit by the same name. "This is my Tejana identity" I tell Ernesto. "Christmas Day with Grandma playing her Alan Jackson CD while my niece sings Styxx."
4) Kantina! So, I had a blast on the Wednesday before New Year with some close friends at the most awesome karaoke spot in San Antonio (and all of the world for that matter), Kantina Karaoke, where you can sing any song your heart desires (in English and Spanish and I'm sure any other language if you so desire). That night I sang my much-anticipated (at least for me) "Don't Stop Believing" and another gem honoring Minneapolis' legendary Prince, "Purple Rain." But the night before leaving San Antonio, rather than get a good night's sleep and pack, I talked Ernesto into going for a quick drink and pool game at Kantina. As we walked in around 9:00, the early birds/regulars are watching Family Guy on the big screen TV near the bar. Soon after starting a game of pool, a couple of guys start with some hard-hitting karaoke - Marvin Gaye, Al Greene, George Strait. I'm like, "Hold on, I gotta get in on this." I tell Ernesto that we're all playing a little game of "one-up." And I'm gonna one-up 'em. So I bust out some Etta James "I Would Rather Go Blind." And, as expected, I get my props for the selection. I go on to sing some other gems from Redbone, Billy Paul, and even some Tanya Tucker (yes, when I die, I just may not go to heaven, but I sure as hell hope I can get back to Texas). I have to say, that singing amongst that handful of local karaoke enthusiasts was the best night I'd had at Kantina. I was so proud of the selections I had sung that night, that I texted my younger brother...to which he responded the next morning "Were you drunk?" Maybe I was. Maybe. I. Was.
The next day during my last day in San Anto before venturing back north, I drove my rental along I-35 from the southside to the airport with a sense of melancholy, but also a sense of grounding. San Antonio hadn't changed. And neither had I. We're like family members who are separated for only a little while doing things that have to get done before we're reunited again. Having just heard that my brother is being deployed to Afghanistan in July, I'm hoping that this will be sooner than later.
Having said that, indulge me as I take you on my much-needed and much-desired holiday vacation back home to San Antonio...land of the fluffiest and most delicious homemade flour tortillas and most beautiful winter weather this side of...hell, I don't know what side of what Tejas would be on. Suffice to say that sunny, breezy low 70's weather beats the single digits in Minneapolis any day.
Staying in my grandparents' garage apartment on the Southside was both comforting and taxing. My grandparents are getting older in age and my grandfather's health is ailing due to a quintuple bypass surgery he had a few years back. My grandfather is a living saint and one of my primary inspirations for pursuing a Ph.D. (and the cause of a close encounter fight at a friend's house over the holidays but that's another blog entry entirely). Throughout my childhood, he instilled in me the importance of an education, often sharing with me his experiences of working in the fields of Michigan during the depression, and how he would have to walk from his home on Mercedes Street off Frio City Rd. to downtown (now the Bill Miller headquarters) to collect welfare relief in the form of lima beans and flour. He had to walk to downtown and save the nickel for the bus ride back to carry the flour and beans, he tells me (more often now than before due to his ailing health and memory). I cherish his experience and his stories, but when I'm back home, I also want to visit with friends, which makes it tricky trying to sneak out of the garage apartment in the back of my grandparents' house. But I digress.
Visiting home, I had a modest handful of goals in mind: 1) Mission Flea Market on Wednesday morning, 2) eat as many flour tortillas as possible without going into dietary distress, 3) Visit with family and friends, 4) Kantina Karaoke as many nights as possible.
Mission accomplished on all counts.
1) Flying in on Tuesday afternoon, Wednesday morning at Mission Flea Market was my first stop. This is my safe space...the place where "everything is okay" if only for a few hours. Here, you can find anything your heart desires...from CD's to fresh fruit to a trendy pair of jeans to a brand new DVD/VCR player (which sometimes comes from a batch that somehow "fell off a truck"). My dad religiously attends Mission on Wednesdays (so much so that he has re-arranged his work schedule to get Wednesdays off). I, along with my partner Ernesto, met up with him for some coffee and tacos (yes, Mission does have everything). After a brief welcome and how are you, my father and I split up into our separate factions. It's a few days before Christmas and we mean business. Among my awesome purchases that day were new baby clothes for my nephew and some awesome lucite real insect key chains...one with a scorpion for my brother Joseph and another with a scorpion fighting a spider for Thomas. Awesomeness.
2) Ah, flour tortillas. From my sister-in-law's homemade labor of love to any taqueria around the city, I had my delicious fill of these wonderful, warm, tender and, if you're lucky, powdery treats which CANNOT be found in Minneapolis. Yes, corn is delicious and it is the food of our ancestors...but I prefer the colonized version of our dietary staple anytime, my friend. (And we wonder why San Antonio consistently ranks at the top of the "fattest cities" list.) My pick for best flour tortillas in San Anto? Gordo's Cafe off S. Pleasanton. Clues that this is an awesome Mexican restaurant: 1) the sharpie/posterboard menu posted along the walls, 2) shellaced and glitter pen outlined photos of Selena, Pedro Infante, and Emiliano Zapata, and 3) Christmas lights...always the Christmas lights.
3) I know I have visited with my family long enough when they start to slightly annoy me in that familiar family way. That being said, I had a great time visiting with my two younger brothers and only siblings (the older of which is back from Iraq and the younger who just had a baby boy in September). Both of them now fathers and husbands, I found it interesting/entertaining to see them negotiate their independent "men who like to drink beer" sides with their responsible husband/father sides, both of which I love equally. So, most of our time together consisted of drinking Buds and listening to obscure yet awesome gems from the genres of classic rock, country, and soul. On this trip, I realized just how large a role music plays in my life and that of my family. At the extended family's ritualistic visit to Grandma and Grandpa's on Christmas day, my Grandma was quick to pop in her favorite Alan Jackson CD (on repeat...like the hole time we were there), while my eight-year-old niece, when talking about her dog back home named, Lady, began singing the Styxx hit by the same name. "This is my Tejana identity" I tell Ernesto. "Christmas Day with Grandma playing her Alan Jackson CD while my niece sings Styxx."
4) Kantina! So, I had a blast on the Wednesday before New Year with some close friends at the most awesome karaoke spot in San Antonio (and all of the world for that matter), Kantina Karaoke, where you can sing any song your heart desires (in English and Spanish and I'm sure any other language if you so desire). That night I sang my much-anticipated (at least for me) "Don't Stop Believing" and another gem honoring Minneapolis' legendary Prince, "Purple Rain." But the night before leaving San Antonio, rather than get a good night's sleep and pack, I talked Ernesto into going for a quick drink and pool game at Kantina. As we walked in around 9:00, the early birds/regulars are watching Family Guy on the big screen TV near the bar. Soon after starting a game of pool, a couple of guys start with some hard-hitting karaoke - Marvin Gaye, Al Greene, George Strait. I'm like, "Hold on, I gotta get in on this." I tell Ernesto that we're all playing a little game of "one-up." And I'm gonna one-up 'em. So I bust out some Etta James "I Would Rather Go Blind." And, as expected, I get my props for the selection. I go on to sing some other gems from Redbone, Billy Paul, and even some Tanya Tucker (yes, when I die, I just may not go to heaven, but I sure as hell hope I can get back to Texas). I have to say, that singing amongst that handful of local karaoke enthusiasts was the best night I'd had at Kantina. I was so proud of the selections I had sung that night, that I texted my younger brother...to which he responded the next morning "Were you drunk?" Maybe I was. Maybe. I. Was.
The next day during my last day in San Anto before venturing back north, I drove my rental along I-35 from the southside to the airport with a sense of melancholy, but also a sense of grounding. San Antonio hadn't changed. And neither had I. We're like family members who are separated for only a little while doing things that have to get done before we're reunited again. Having just heard that my brother is being deployed to Afghanistan in July, I'm hoping that this will be sooner than later.
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