Realmente… I
can´t tell you when it all started…. Because as long as I can remember, it has
always been…. Cuando fuimos al Huila for the second time, Jessica was already
born and I made a zoo with rocks and remembering each rock was an animal… or en
el kinder, at Holding Hands, when Danny Hertzburg grabbed a zebra wing
butterfly that had gotten trapped in Mrs. Roberta´s classroom and hastily
captured it to put it in the aquarium of a Horned Toad to eat. I went crazy,
berserk trying to set that butterfly free, mi madre was called and I was sent
home from school.
I remember
when I used to say that when I died I wanted my body to be fed to carnivorous
animals at the zoo that would have a use for my body. I can´t remember if this
was before or after I started to get sent to see Mr. Baumb, the counselor at
Miami Shores Elementary when I was in Mrs. Benke´s third grade class, but at
some point Nirza´s then partner, David, told me I could not tell people those
things because it was not right. When I told my mom she told Nirza to not let
David say those things to me and later Nirza scolded me for being a sapo, a snitch.
In Mrs. Benke´s
third grade class the bullies I feared to most were Alexis Latimer, Nathan
Haughn, and Joseph Dumbrowsky, Joseph used to be my friend but at some point
decided not to. In third or fourth grade his mother was a doctor who burned
some warts off of my knees because during elementary school there was a time
that I had over 15 warts all over my legs.
I remember
in Mrs. Sloanin´s first grade class when I always wanted to be on the girl´s
team when we played girl´s against boys and when in Mrs. Ellis´s fourth grade
glass Mills Hunter Howell called me a “Gaylord” when I tried to reach my arm
into his baggy shirt without touching him so he would not notice and I was not
successful.
I remember
at some point during all of this, I started to get in trouble cause I would
openly say that “I wanted to die” and managed to cut myself a few times.
I remember
in 5th grade the Clinton v. Bush elections where Clinton won, I
remember the group of smart, rich girls with good grades, all white except one
from India, Anjali Shaker, were all Republicans. My parent´s to this day as
citizens barely grasp politics and had no affiliation, with no set line at my
house… I remember being torn that all from friends liked Democrats but I liked
elephants more than donkeys because they were wild animals and not domesticated
ones.
My mom
would buy me speedo type swim wear which I hated cause I was teased and others
would call me fag. Opps!
The year I
was in fifth grade, was the year after the summer of Hurricane Andrew, my mom,
sisters and I were in Colombia but my dad was at the house in Miami Shores when
Andrew hit and we would find out later our German Shepard Timmy ran away from
the noise made by the electrical generator in the aftermath. At least this is
the story we were told. . Afterwards
I remember
when in Mrs. Bostick´s sixth grade geography class at Horace Mann Middle School
a girl who was in our class, her father had been in the protests in Miami
against the US backed Coup d’état in Haiti that took Jean Bernard Aristide out.
Her father was killed by the police in those protests and we had exact
instructions to be very nice and kind to our classmate when she would return in
about two weeks. It bothers me to this day that I cannot remember her name.
I remember
how the counselor at Horace Mann Middle School, Joan Hall Edwards, would let me
come to her office and remember when she found out that I wanted to die she
paid a lot of attention to me and one day even had my dad pick me up from
school early and spend the day at the his work at the closing store Mr. Santoro
and the Galleria Mall in Ft, Lauderdale. I was unaware of all the stress I was
causing I was just busy being in my head and feeling bad about the world.
I remember
the times we went to the children´s hospital to take x-rays of my wrists
because I was abnormally short and my parents and the doctors were afraid I
would never grow, I would not get my growth spurt till I was 19 or 20 years
old, already in college, but the bullying and destruction of my self-esteem
from being consistently the shortest child in the classroom, grade, sometimes
the entire school is something that marked me and sometimes I feel I have a sort
of residual Napoleon complex from soo many difficult experiences that I lived
when I was really short. I think a lot of my aloof, distant, anti social and
introverted nature comes from the coping mechanisms I developed during these
years.
Once, in
seventh grade, Mr. Russo´s Civics Class, after lunch in “spill out”…. Darrly
Polemani, Alexis Wilmot and Khalid Aquile all started picking on me, saying all
sorts of things to me and pushing me, cornering me against a fence to the point
that I started crying. Some other kids saw what was happening and told the
counselors what we was happening, we were all taken to Vice Principal’s Mr.
Dreyfuss office, I refused to speak, I refused to snitch, I was terrified what
would happen to me if I did. When we left the office to go back to class, I
even said I was sorry to them since I was not able to suck it up more and not get
noticed.
In sixth
grade our science teacher. Mrs. Edison, who was a little person, had a brown
capuchin monkey as a class pet named Franny. I loved being able to interact
with Franny, her Jack Russel Terrier Dogs, Zebra Finches and other classroom
pets we had. Our very proper, 8th grade, British science teacher,
Dr. Roy was much cooler than any credit we gave him at that age. We were in his
class when the OJ Simpson verdict was released and our entire school was put on
lock down for fear of race riots. I remember the High School students at Miami
Edison would get out of school an hour before us and would come to Horace Mann
to fight when we were getting out of school.
I remember
I had a child hood friend who I went to school with since 3rd grade,
Basil Warner, in 7th grade he became very close to Ronny Phelhm and
in fits of loneliness, jealousy and feeling abandoned I use to draw pictures of
Ronny getting destroyed by all sorts of weird crazy weapons and dinosaurs and
such, once Ronny found out, they made fun of me, eventually I got over it and
we became friends. As I look back that shit is mad loco, beyond strange.
I remember
in 8th grade, for winter break, we took a road trip to Washington DC
and NYC. In DC we stayed with my mother´s eldest sister, Maria Eugenia and her
two daughters, Johana and Monica. My mom drove our huge van the whole way up. I
remember many things from the trip but one thing post trip sticks out. After
the trip in Miami, my mother sat us down and told us that she wanted us to have
friends of a different “class”, we didn´t understand, she said she wanted us to
have “more white friends and less latino and black friends”… my sisters and I
went beserk, we told her she was wrong, I cited MLK, shit got tense. Years
later I would learn that my classist, racist aunt had a talk with my mom and
told her that she was not raising us right for different reasons. My uppity
aunt was trying to bring the backwards, classist and racist culture of Garzón,
Huila, Colombia to our Afro.Caribbean.Latino reality in Miami and we were not
having that shit. Many and many a times in the future, each and everytime my
aunts would speak their negative opinions about me to my mother, she would turn
around and verbally attack me and try to force me to change to be different, to
this day, her well-intended suggestions based on her narrow view of the world
and her chosen values only cause more rift between us.
I remember
wanting to go to the agriculture program at Turner Tech High school to be able
to work with animals but my mother made sure I went to MAST Academy the
special, blue ribbon, excellent school. I remember saying I didn´t want to be
with rich kids as my main argument. I remember for the first time interacting
with light skin, moneyed and entitled white and latino people from Coral
Gables, Key Biscayne, Aventura…. I never really formed a group of friends in
high school but would hop between cliques and crews but on the bus rides home
when I use to take the school bus, which we called the Cheese Wagon, I was on the back of the bus every day with
the kids from Liberty City, Lil Haiti, El Portal and Miami Shores.
I remember
always being super self-conscious of my body for being short, skinny and light
skinned. I remember being bothered each and every time to the point that to
this day I still do not know how to ignore it when people doubt, question or
even tell me that I do not look latino, that I am not latino and that I could
never be mixed or part Native, even though they know nothing about Huila. I
know it is not important but it still stings, I keep in that shit cause it does
not need to take up space.
I remember
my high school summers in Garzón, Huila, when I befriended a group of people
that in our adolescence, they were referred to as Los Pirobos, the fags, to for
once start to feel a sense of belonging, even though they were all older and it
was something of the moment.
I remember
the perpetual desire of wanting to belong and how when I started to form a crew
in middle school, we read the Outsiders, my imagination was taken aback about
olde school gangs, socs and greasers, meanwhile my own neighborhood was in the
middle of the early 1990s gangs of urban US and as Bloods, Crips and Latin
Kings become common urban house hold terms, though I was living in Zoe Pound
territory.
I remember
all of my crushes... I think…. Katherine Herring, Maria Gutierrez, Vanessa
Maya, Stephanie Kerston, Tarra Cooper… all the women crushes faded out by later high school…. I remember it
being exactly one week before thanksgiving in 1999 and being triggered by the
MTV specials after the one year anniversary of the killing of Matthew Shepard,
I realized I was bisexual, but refused to tell anyone until someone asked me if
I was bi, cause I wasn’t gay. A week later Natalie Jordi was the first person
to ask and after I told her I started telling everyone as I was properly
colonized by white, middle class gay America and thought that was my reality.
When my mother confronted me, it became an argument, my mother with openly gay
friends, was telling her bisexual son that he could choose, and he should
choose what is acceptable, had to choose to be straight. When she found out her
initial response was, “No one in Colombia can know”.
In some
ways, that was the beginning of the fracturing of our relationship… that since
her hypocritical homophobia, her lies about her romantic relationships, her
incapacity of acknowledging when she is mistaken and being able to apologize and
her continual caring about what others think has strained that bond to just us
being distant, as I am with nearly everyone in my life, loving but distant.
I remember
not liking my dad. I felt he was always on edge, anxious, stressed, up tight,
exhausted and over worked…. As I write this I start to reflect on my own
personality issues. For some reason, today, I am not really that hard on my
dad, growing up, nearly any time we had to spend with him was a drag. Whether
it be car shows during one of his two days off each month or after him and my
mother divorced a year after Hurrricane Andrew him taking us for 10 days of
camping to the Smokey Mountains in North Carolina. My sisters and I always
fought a lot, but my father had not patience for this. There were always
arguments. I always felt tense around my dad. When he remarried I hated my
stepmom Maria, I thought she was cold, frigid, mean, her kids we got along with
them, sort of, but just something else. At some point…
I remember
my math tutor who was also Christian Garbayo´s math tutor, Silvia, a really nice
Cuban lady was shot and killed by her drunk boyfriend in an argument in their
hallway apartment on a Saturday night. Chrisitian and I did not go to the wake,
we stayed at my home talking alone. I remember being in 9th grade PE
classes and admiring probably evening crushing on a really nice, handsome
swimmer and surfer who was a senior, Lance Hall. With his twin sister Lori,
they were the youngest children of my middle school counselor Joan Hall
Edwards. April 20th, 1997, Lance Hall and two other students
including Melahn Parker who was driving, were returning back to Miami on
Alligator Alley. At some point Melahn
falls asleep at the wheel, veers off, the ford explorer flips and Lance is
ejected from the car, he is the only one who dies. Everyone at MAST was
crushed, I remember visiting Joan at her home in Miami Shores across the street
from Jonathen Simas´s parents, more than once, I remember her telling me it was
my time to support her. At some point I saw Joan once in High School, she came
to visit me for lunch, we chatted it was real nice, I lost contact with her
after that, and as I write this, I become overwhelmed with how many important
people impacted my life in a positive way and life is such in this day and age
where time and space and drift make us loose these relations that when our
memory brings them back, one feels bad as for not having been better in
maintaining them. One feels fault.
Jorge Arana
was a weird, always shaved head, Miami Cuban kid who was part of our class. We
all knew Jorge had health problems but he kept it low key. Jorge unexpectedly
passed during the fall of our senior year, 1999. He was the only one we lost.
He really like sci fi, magic the gathering and read a whole lot. I don´t really
know what he had, if it was leuquimia or what… the Class of 2000 of MAST
Academy rolled out for his funereal. I can´t remember how long the line of cars
was, but its Miami culture so you know there were a shit ton of cars.
Jorge
Castro was Nirza´s first husband. They got married in our house. Nirza´s oldest
child, Chrisitian was already born and Jorge who was much younger than Nirza
had no issue´s taking Chrisitian as his child. Jorge was pure love, and was
huge, he had been a high school football player and I loved wrestling and
pillow fights with him. I remember once watching Star Wars New Hope for like
the 100th time in my living room I fell asleep and wake up was he
had me carried as a baby and taking me to my bed. I was probably 16 or 17.
Jorge passed from heart failure. He was younger than 25. His heart was huge but
apparently his body was too big for his heart.
While I had
many special teachers in high school, and most were brilliant, my most
important lessons were not about schools subjects like literature, chemistry or
algebra… from my chemistry teacher, Mrs. Jones-Roberts I learn patience and
discipline, from Dr. Hood the physics teacher I learned to go with the flow, to
be accepting and have a sense of humor, not take everything so seriously, from
Mrs. Ulman, I learned to express myself through written words, I guess her
creative writing class did teach me how to elaborate my thoughts and feelings
through written word but more so, I learned to create my own refuge, a haven
with writing, even if I don´t share it later on and just re read it alone and
use it to study myself when I feel alone and in despair with my own
existence.
I remember
during my High School graduation crying, crying way too much. For some reasons
on stage, luckily somewhat in the back I started bawling as I though how this
had no reverse, how shit was about to get serious and all the important
relations I had created this far would fade out. For the most part I was right,
and I get mixed up about this. When it is not entirely my fault. Robert
Gonzales even scoulded me for drying like someone died. But I guess in a
certain way, the person I was, that my family and my schools and my city had
raised me, started to die, started to transform and become something way
different. I look at everything I am from and all I can feel is alienation, a
deep not belonging, not understanding, having deeply different values. Social
media makes it such where I have nearly everyone from my past accessible with
the push of a few keys but is that staying connected?