las-aguas
y la tierra no se la trago
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las-aguas · 4 years ago
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violet/amethyst
Describe a color with all five senses
Light exposing neon, 
iridescent caresses from
twilight clouds
on skin. Lilac’s sweet kiss 
summons thunder 
in the spring.
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las-aguas · 5 years ago
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Hola Abuela
hola abuela
nunca te conoci but
everyone says i’m pretty,
que me parezco a ti.
so thank you, for this heart
that yearns to be somewhere far. 
Thank you for my love of
canela y cafe,
of doing todo the old-fashioned way;
thank you that i’m slow and thorough.
Papi said you liked plants,
he told me so after I started buying them.
He said your home was filled with them
inside and out.
In my nostalgic day dreams I saw lush gardens
now I can imagine you tending to them.
My own plants are getting stemmy
me va costar que se me haga fazil, like you.
On the wall hangs my B.A.
I imagine my abuela shaking her head
at what I find difficult today.
I will do the work
to make my environment one where I thrive
Y mi abuela will live here, too.
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las-aguas · 5 years ago
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Y la tierra no me trago
Ya murió mi historia de antes
porque hace tiempos decidí
que yo soy la que dirige me vida
Y la tierra no me trago.
He aceptado que soy co-creadora
que mi historia es mía cada día;
Las mañanas me encantan
por que traen puras esperanzas.
Para que preocuparme por lo que
ni se que pasara,
si mi dicha es vivir hoy?
Hace tiempos, decidí tomar un riesgo
Y la tierra no me trago,
como me dijeron que lo haría.
Mas bien, encontré que a las aguas yo caía
la tierra no me trago
pero las aguas si me aguantaron.
A las aguas me avente
Encontré gracia y también me acorde
Que somos co-creadores
Me atreví y la tierra no me trago. 
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las-aguas · 5 years ago
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Mi lengua, mi cobija
I feel myself being folded into the warmest and most welcoming blanket when I hear the 'hola' followed by my name with the letters pronounced how they're supposed to. 
Terms of endearment are much sweeter when they're the ones you've heard all your life, mija, amor, chiquita, amiga, I know I'm welcome here.
We make home out of each other cuando se conoce el dolor de dejar un pais, todo lo que sabes. Community, affirmation, that's how you make it through.
Yes, I live in the 'bad' area, but I am happy because I am with my own. What good is a 'good' area if you're going to be isolated? Who are you then?
Many forget themselves and where they came from, or maybe they don't know where they came from because their parents have chosen to forget, have exchanged their culture for the dollar. 
Our own culture becomes commodified, as some of us just get used to the jokes and stereotypes and we eat up the brownie points for being the token, frida-fying our homes because communism and art are trendy now, just hold the pesos and the poverty.
Palatable, watered down, cracked pepper for seasoning, saying spanish words in english, palatable. Stay out of the sun, find a man with blue eyes so your kids will be lighter, palatable, teach them english only so their spanish accent won't betray them. Palatable. What else does the home country have to offer anyway?
Saying my name the way it's supposed to be said has been so affirming, and I don't care if it's not palatable. The confused faces I get, eyes and mouth open in anticipation for me to say an easier, anglicized version of my name... those moments used to make me embarrassed but I relish them now. And find so much satisfaction whenever I'm met with a person saying it back to me, and we can share our blanket.
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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diosa
then I thought, what if I’m God? Goddess.
yes, what if I am Goddess, what then?
I would live for myself? good! finally!
I would lose society’s approval? good riddance, society kills.
I would learn to value myself,
my time,
my energy.
I would build an altar to myself
and treat the time I spent bettering myself
as time spent with God.
then yes! I believe! what is this religion?
the religion that discovers Me!
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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Calling All Latinx
Start with the basics right? So here we go, from the top. Why is it important for this work to be for Latinx? It’s something about the feeling you get when you see your people being themselves, doing something big and sharing their gifts and insights that makes you realize this experience isn’t the same for everyone. Not in this country.
In the US there are constant messages hurled at us from all directions about why our existence here is illegitimate. It’s how one kind has been able to remain superior. People believe they are illegitimate because they are forced to buy into what being an American is.
These messages are especially affective because they infiltrate Latinxs’ perception of themselves. Latinx in America must battle self-hatred as we find ourselves assimilating in spaces, being taught to lie low by our parents, to not be so obvious. Especially if we’re light skinned enough to get away with it.
Not like I ever felt normal to begin with. At school I felt my point of view was wrong for believing immigrants should be helped, not persecuted for being “illegal”. I never said this though because I didn’t have the words for it. I could never manage to find a way to mention it ‘correctly’ until I went to college and learned the term was ‘immigration reform’.
College was where I first met people who were not only open but loud about their immigration status. My reaction at first was confusion at why they would tout that. Didn’t they also know to lay low? The rule I had always adhered to? But it was like ‘duh’, we shouldn’t have to lay low. We���ve done nothing wrong. We’re here, too, and we’d like to be acknowledged.
It’s important to cater this work to Latinx in the US because we’re like finding each other right now. It’s like we went through years of growing up through all this shit and now as we’re naming what we went through, we’re looking for other survivors to hear what it was like for them. And realizing our lives are all touching on similar themes.
Some people have been able to be in community with people like themselves but others of us may have been displaced from our communities, so finding each other is especially important because we’ve been depraved. Reasons for displacement could be family, drifting apart, religion (changing religion for me meant losing friends, it was the only Latinx community I had), or beliefs instilled in us by family and by our culture and by American culture that Latinx culture has nothing to offer if you want to be successful.
And a lot of Latinx I know from my hometown haven’t been able to take it, so they move to places where there are more Latinxs. But for the people who stay and give into it, they become ashamed of illegal immigrants, they’re ashamed at DACA and at protestors and activists. “This isn’t your country, you’re making a fool of yourself.” “Be thankful you live in this country, lay low and let your success be what makes them eat their words”.
My own Honduran mom thinks protesting is communist activity that you could be killed for, so there’s trauma linked to it, too.
I’m calling out to Latinx because I love my mom, but I’ve had to move away from her and home because I couldn’t let her self-deprecating ways get to me any more. And I want to know how do you balance and hold these things? And even though my dad said he was disappointed in me for choosing to become a “qualquiera” for moving to another city with my boyfriend, he’s my papi and everything he’s done has been for my sisters and I. How do you balance loving your family and continue to separate the chaff from the grain in your upbringing?
I’m calling out to Latinx in the US because I think you can relate the best. I’m calling out to Latinx in the US so we can get together and share what and how we’re healing from taught to us by our families and cultures. We know best what we need and we can build together from there.
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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Latino Tumblr reblog this so we can find each other.
😛😛😛
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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reblog if you’re a writeblr!
It’s come to my attention that I barely follow any writeblrs! Reblog and ill follow you ! Tell me about your wip and poetry! Tell me about your stuff! Ughhhh your minds
My name is Sydney and I am mainly a poetry blog, but I do have two wip pages. One is a soon to be novel (hopelfully) and one is in the works. They can be seen here and here ! I haven’t posted much but I plan on doing more soon!
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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funny lovey
Who knew such a goof
would be my muse?
My funny love, such a stud
with the most beautiful hands
my eyes ever did saw
Laughing to myself,
loosening up, yeeeee-hawwww!
AHAHAHAHAHA!
I love how you are, like
going off the rails
I know I’m the air sign but swear
sometimes you’re the wind in my sails.
Maybe I’m more like the sea,
we both know I cry enough.
Sometimes it feels like
I alone am keeping the ship up.
But then you lift the weight of the world
off my shoulders, remind me
I don’t need to be as tough
as a boulder.
In a way, I may cry more now because of you
But it’s good.
You know how I tell you about the tears of relief?
Of those knots going away, of finally saying what I need to say?
It’s like that
This love, with you, is a breakthrough.
Thanks for everything, Baby
Thank you.
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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mis mañanitas
La madrugada me llama
despertandome de mis sueños
as if a gallo were yodeling
in my head.
Sometimes when the morning called 
I checked the clock and rolled over 
back to sleep.
Others I stayed awake to see what la madrugada would bring.
Morning dew, I walk through the grass
in the morning, early June.
My feet crush the dew
crystals scattering, the splashes singing my mañanitas as I walk through,
“She’s awoken!” The dew drops glittering as the sun’s rays hit them 
and the rays greet me warmly
“Good morning, good morning”
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las-aguas · 6 years ago
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to 15 yo me
Ten years ago today I was a fifteen year old girl working on the final preparations for her quince. I was thankful to have the quince as something to do that summer (instead of the usual boredom and sitting around) and to have an excuse to see friends so often since I had recruited them to be my damas y chambelanes. It was awesome to have that little community in the months leading up to July 12th 2008. 
A couple weeks later my sister, friends, and I went to camp for the third year and met Ben and Franky that summer.  I can’t believe I didn’t feel comfortable with sex until ten years later. Also back then my expectations for my self ten years into the future were higher than what I have actually been able to accomplish. Fifteen year old -Me wanted to have traveled to India by then, but now-Me thinks France/Europe/Hawaii fit the bill pretty good. I also wanted to live closer to the ocean, which I sort of am now. Back then I wanted to live in Portland when I grew up, but I really like Washington now.
I think me from ten years ago would be happy to know I’ve had (and continue to have) sex, I’ve gotten out of my head (not entirely but not as bad as back then), I got my bachelor’s, I learned a third language, my sisters are okay, I’m on birth control, I love my parents, I drink tea, I still collect rocks and shells, and I don’t care as much about what people think. I would also tell her to let go of that fear, to let go of that standard other people put on her. To move because she can. To smile because she can. To explore and set her boundaries. To follow Zach to the “No Trespassing” signs and leave every rock unturned and face today with a smile and relaxed shoulders. Do yoga. Read more. Keep writing. Don’t stop writing your poetry. It’s beautiful. 
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las-aguas · 7 years ago
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I remember an image I had of Jesus from when I was little. It was kind of cartoony and it was of Jesus on his throne in heaven, wearing a golden crown and ‘judging’ people, souls trying to get into heaven. In this image Jesus pulled a lever that caused the floor to disappear from beneath the current person facing judgement and he was cackling as they fell to hell.
I knew God and Jesus meant love, but they have also always equated with guilt. My salvation was never safe so I had to follow the rules. No sex, no parties, no alcohol, no disobeying, and if I found out you did it I kept my distance. ‘Guard your testimony’ was a phrase my parents used a lot, what would other people think of Christ (or of my parents) if they saw me doing secular things? How could I bear witness if I can’t be an example? I was on the worship team at church, too, a point person in the congregation. As far as I was concerned I was not allowed to sin.
On the other hand, movies like Veggie Tales and The Prince of Egypt taught me about a warrior god who looked out for his people and who was the god of second chances.
My favorite images of God were the ones portrayed in worship music. There was a song I remember all about how God makes things new and beautiful out of old things.
You make beautiful things
You make beautiful things out of the dust
You make beautiful things
You make beautiful things out of us
Or old hymns like “As the deer”, where Jesus is described as a friend and brother even though he’s a king.
As the deer panteth for the water
So my soul longeth after thee
As a child going to mass, I remember thinking of God as mystical. Mass was a beautiful place to be. There were statues and images of Jesus and God’s servants everywhere. It was God’s house, and where he resided; the smell of incense pouring from thuribles, the latin phrases, the robes the priests wore, the pews with the kneelers all made me sure of it.
My family and I accepted Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior when I was 8, we converted and became a part of the protestant denomination, the Assemblies of God. We also attended Hispanic churches, and went as far as hosting church in our home way back before our Hispanic church had its own space.  Our church was very active in the spirit or allowed the spirit to move in the congregation. There were raised hands and crying at service. Nearly every Sunday either the pastor or someone in the church received a message in tongues from God for the congregation. There was also an interpreter for the message.
These days, having a connection to the divine or to the sacred has a more self-centered or inward focus. I believe that understanding myself more will lead me to understand others more, and visa versa.
Understanding others became more important to me in college, out of the house and free from my household’s version of Christianity. It was discouraging at first to go to a college church and see people worshiping God who I was pretty sure were recovering from their Saturday night. It enraged me. It wasn’t fair to me that they didn’t have the guilt that I did. Didn’t they know their praises wouldn’t go past the ceiling if they were living in sin?
A pivotal switch in my thinking happened the summer going into my sophomore year of college. I’d accompanied my dad on his trucking job and I was sitting in my dad’s truck somewhere in the Midwest, reading the Bible. I came upon Mark 10:17-18, which reads “As Jesus started on His way, a man ran up and knelt before Him. “Good Teacher,” he asked, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?” 18“Why do you call Me good? Jesus replied, “No one is good except God alone.”
The verse brought me back to a conversation I had with a friend the previous summer. My friend wasn’t Christian, but I had a crush on him so I let it slide. We were walking in the park when we came upon an outreach tent that had the question “Are you a good person?” printed on a banner. I spouted off and said something to the effect of ‘I’m a Christian, I keep God’s word. I know I’m a good person’. My friend responded by hanging his head and saying ‘I’m not a good person’.
Sitting in that truck I was broken. I started crying. How dare I call myself a good person when Jesus, the person I thought I was emanating, wouldn’t even admit that he was a good person? How many people had I hurt by judging them in this way? How much damage had I done to myself and my spiritual life by constantly measuring my ‘goodness’?
These days, I believe relationships are sacred, real ones. Relationships are sacred because they foster love. Yoga helped me understand and appreciate myself more because it helped me slow down and build a relationship with my body. I’d say I think of the divine as more pragmatic. Spider webs are divine. Conversations that spark something in you are divine. The way that ocean waves soothe is divine. The fact that I’m made of the same stuff as the stars is divine.
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las-aguas · 7 years ago
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sacredness and divinity
I believe relationships are sacred, real ones. Relationships are sacred because they foster love. Yoga helped me understand and appreciate myself more because it helped me slow down and build a relationship with my body. I’d say I think of the divine as more pragmatic. Spider webs are divine. Conversations that spark something in you are divine. The way that ocean waves soothe is divine. The fact that I’m made of the same stuff as the stars is divine.
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las-aguas · 7 years ago
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las-aguas · 7 years ago
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Celebrating women revolutionaries, rebels, and fighters of Latin America: El Salvadoran FMLN Rebels; Nicaraguan Sandinistas; Mexican Zapatistas; Chicana Brown Berets on the last day of Women’s history month. 
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las-aguas · 7 years ago
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She seems to know Death as a life-giver as well as a death-dealer. She is certain Death is the cause of all tears and all laughter.
Women Who Run with the Wolves, 1995
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