Monday, December 22, 2014

Joy to the World

**This post was inspired by my dear friend and my honey.  I love you both.**

I once had a close friend say to me that she did not know how to write in her times of happiness.  I never understood her; how joy could leave a writer, usually so verbose in her language and descriptive in her text, devoid of the lexicon to express her bliss.  She is a writer by trade, which confounded me even more.  Her blog consistently keeps my fervid attention and fills me with curiosity.  A few years ago she had gone through a deep depression after sour medical news turned her weeks into monotonous days of mindless work and bottles of wine into blurred nights.  A depression which had her torn, and as her friend I tried desperately to keep knitting the pieces together.  Her blog and writing flourished then; it was a conduit for her grief.  Less than a year later, she succumbed to the “institution” (as she called it) of marriage, and unbeknownst to her at the time, her husband was her buoy.  He turned her wounds into wings, allowing her Venus-like beauty to flourish in ways only Botticelli could depict.  She was reborn into herself again.  It was during those times that I would refresh her website hoping for a new blog post to get a glimpse of her newfound emotions and partake in her life journey, yet her pages went empty for a few months as she reconciled this novel feeling she was experiencing.  It was when she was truly happy and at peace where she struggled most to find the words to place the sentiments.  Her emotional resurrection left her mute.  She admitted this to me on of our monthly wine and cheese outings.  I was frankly, shocked.  Why?  Wouldn’t this be when your emotions run high?  When the words spill out vehemently and a renaissance would take place?

I too, am a writer of thoughtful, inquisitive, and often depressing prose and poetry – of unrequited love, of relationships lost, and of familial tension.  It has been months since my last poem or blog, more than a year since my last painting, and even longer since my last choreography.  It feels as though the right side of my brain is decomposing.  I can’t help but question why: Is my new relationship changing me?  Am I balancing my time correctly?  Am I losing my touch?  All self-deprecating deliberations my mind is mediating on lately.  The answer came to me after remembering my friend’s comment.  The words simply do not come anymore.  I, like her, find myself in a healthy, steady, honest relationship.  One that makes me smile, allows me a peace in my heart, and a calmness when I lay my head to rest.  He is unlike my past – tumultuous, destructive, and inflamed.  He is composed, wise, sympathetic, and welcoming.  Our relationship is unlike any I have ever experienced; I sought out the impassioned relationship, full of extremities of emotion.  The emotions during those times fed the right side of my brain for an outlet to process the excess which my heart could not.  My writing developed and my artwork became the canal I used to sieve my emotions into a healthy instrument.  To be honest, for years my canal was flooded and overwhelmed with mood swings, sensitivity, rage, and most of all, vulnerability.  My levees could not withstand the dramatic force of this inflamed pressure. 

When I moved to Miami a year and a half ago to find my inner nirvana, my canal experienced a waning of pressure.  The ocean breeze and warm translucent waters filled my spiritual core.  Less than two months into my stay in Miami, I met a man who also kept my waters even and sought to abate the lingering waves from my past.  He was gentle, reassuring, soothing, loving.  A love that persisted and covered me in his strength.  My canal was no longer agitated, but the water ran through it steadily, comforting my days.  My artwork diminished and my words also quieted, but my waters were full of a calming caress.  I now can understand and appreciate why my friend’s blog went on a hiatus during those blissful relationship and newlywed years.  She was no longer trying to quell the fiery waters, but instead enjoying the tranquil and idyllic ride as she floated through these new emotions.  They were unfamiliar, but received with a colossal embrace.  Part of life is to enjoy the journey.  Our happiness is one we are still learning to process, but embracing fully as we travel through this voyage.  Our words have stopped and our lexicon put on pause, but our bodies, minds, and souls are very much involved.  My creativity will return once I have formed the intellect to comprehend my senses and the novel expressions of tranquility and love in my heart.

In the meantime, I’m following the waters to my happy...

Friday, August 1, 2014

Organic Chemistry

The energy between two locked eyes brought me back to the nucleus of fervid passion, lustful desire, and an uncomfortable vulnerability.
My balance of protons and electrons suffered an immediate magnetic moment – spinning its epicenter of mass at cosmic haste.
My internal equilibrium could not rationalize itself nor keep up with the electrifying tremor that permeated into my marrow.
The trauma assaulted my red blood cells as its white counterparts failed to preserve my health from the raid;
A violent and forceful invasion which left my body feeble, limp, and borderline anemic.
My pupils wanted to erase the image, look to another target, and distort the figure in front of me into an illusion incapable of retrieving.
But my optic nerves resisted the deception and refused to blur his likeness.
All it took was his eyes... 
A steadfast, intent gaze which created a vacancy in my electron cloud, allowing him to bond ionically to my heart, soul, body, and mind.
Ionic bonds exchange their electric charge with each other to adhere their atoms together. 
Their opposite attraction keeps them together as a unit.
His charged eyes grabbed mine, magnetically pulling me in with no prospect of resistance.
Chemistry, they call it.  Passion, they say.
Terrifying, hypnotic, and unquestionably debilitating, I say.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

A Heaving Hurt

I ate my words as soon as they spewed out uncontrollably and haphazardly.
Vile words that invaded the room – words full of insensitive bile, undigested fragments, and aggression.
Much like the putrid smell of vomit, my words raided the air space and lingered restlessly. 
They attacked the recipient of my words with a stench of decomposition,
And decayed his outer layer of trust, affection, and confidence.
The words that spilled out in a moment of frustration, a moment hoping to entice and force the receiver of the words into action, instead pelted across his aura with an acidity damaging to his heart, mind, and very being.
An act of desperation, of a woman fishing for words, for answers, for a fight, instead threw the most critically lethal words which in turn finished the battle without a single confrontation.
The piercing sting of my words is not easily reparable nor is its biting acidity something I intend to overcome quickly.
The rancid odor of vomit undeniably loiters before restoring its victims to normalcy.
And while the fabric layers of a damaged loom of carpet will take steaming, deep cleansing, and special treatment to clear its contamination, with enough love, grace, and will, I pray my words will also be forgiven.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Slow: Proceed With Caution

Tears.
This time, tears which reflect my fears of being unworthy…
Fears that have compounded through years of failed relationships and a youth full of domestic violence and abuse.
As a woman I have been taught that I am a man’s unequal; that as a woman I need to adapt and submit to his needs and his dreams.  I am secondary.
The tears that tremble down my face now at hearing that he loves me, scare me knowing how deeply that he means it.
Tears that know that this man is here for the long haul; that he is fully invested in our relationship and future.
Tears that force me to question my own aspirations, hopes, and worldly desires.
Tears that know he is the “real deal”; a man so genuine, honest, loving, and giving that his open heart and unassuming mind give me peace, happiness, and a calm love.
He is more than what I have imagined, more than I could have dreamt, and more understanding than any thoughts I had of the man for my future.
I can see us sitting on the beaches of Phuket laughing, planning our next trip, our next life goal, and our next step together as a couple.
I can see us touring the streets of Rio drinking caipirinhas and dancing samba with the locals.
I can see us living together in a beautiful home in Miami pushing each other to succeed, grow, and move higher professionally, emotionally, intellectually, and spiritually.
“I have your back 100%,” “I’m not going anywhere,” and other affirmations of love and affection overwhelm me and allow me to  break down my walls of distrust and confinement.
I have used my strong demeanor, personality, and attitude as my partition to fend off men.
This man has listened, understood my inner emotions, and the catalysts for my reactions.  He is first my best friend, my teammate, my partner, and more importantly, my equal.
My tears reflect my nerves, anxiety, worries, introspection, and most of all my vulnerability.
You have my heart teetering precariously. Please proceed with caution.

Monday, March 31, 2014

Comfort in an Uncomfortable Realm

In 2005 a Spanish professor at my high school by the name of Senor Luis Gomez took me on my first international trip which would be the catalyst for my insatiable desire to travel the world.

I have always been interested in my own culture, history, and past but like many other children, I knew only what I heard in my house – Fidel Castro was a murderer, Che Guevara was his accomplice, and though Cuba was my “home,” it was a home that I could never visit.  A country that held my past, my family who never sought refuge in the United States, and a life that I would hear anecdotes about growing up but never be able to experience for myself.

Being 100% born and raised “American” (what is the appropriate word for someone from the United States?) is a cultural mystery to me.  Who I was growing up was loosely defined by a set of anecdotes, old family tales, salsa music, my first tongue (Spanish), nine years of Catholic school, and pollo guisado con arroz, frijoles, and platanos maduros.  As a baby I was not given your all-American Gerber baby food, but instead Mami would feed me her own concoctions of blended rice, beans, and whatever meat the adults were having that evening.  Chef Mami will one day teach me her tricks of the trade when I have a child.  My cultural identity was being defined before I even had the chance to object.  This undeniable “Latina” girl would soon lose her native tongue as her parents had decided it would be better to assimilate than to endure hours of ESL courses and missing important English literature classes.  Personally, I wish I knew what was happening as I could have stopped them and at least given myself some chance at being fluent in Spanish (not just colloquially but professionally) but also giving myself the opportunity to be seen as a “Latina” beyond the curly brown hair.  When I went to high school at a predominantly all-white preparatory school in New Jersey, I knew nothing about what it was like to be around others of different cultural backgrounds.  I had gone to a Catholic school for nine years where diversity was not something that was discussed, and we were too young to know the significance of such loaded terminology.

High school was a blur.  I remember joining volleyball in the fall of 2002 and being embarrassed that I had never met a black person before so I couldn’t tell the difference between two of my now closest best friends when we first met.  I had no idea that I was teetering on the edge of offensive when I would ask questions regarding their hair.  All I knew was that they were my best friends and I was curious.  I am grateful now that they were patient and understanding.  Needless to say, my parents were not happy that I was not “assimilating” the way they had hoped.  I was banned from joining any cultural groups –therefore was not a part of Umojaa like the rest of my friends were and was not allowed to join Mi Casa (the Spanish club) for my parents’ fear that I might stick out like the refugees we were.  I never fully understood their view and still struggle with it these days but I know we have come to a mutual understanding between us.

I ended up having a variety of friends – my boyfriend in high school was a white football player who introduced me to his artsy friends who came from all backgrounds – Chinese, Indian, and Caucasian.  I naturally spent most of my time with them towards the latter part of my high school years.  Yet something always felt like it was missing.  A part of me yearned for a deeper connection to my past.  I started to seek it in my artwork.  I was part of the International Baccalaureate (IB) program in my school and I enrolled in the IB Studio Art class; a two year class focusing on advanced techniques, studies, and research to improve the depth and quality of your work.  As I scan through the pages of my old workbooks, it is obvious that culture was my missing link.  I became obsessed with creating pieces of work towards the second half of my junior year and all of my senior year with different cultural artifacts after the eight-day trip Senor Gomez took me on to Costa Rica.

I painted an oversized ox-cart wheel synonymous with those found in the farmlands of Costa Rica; a way for farmers to recognize their specific ox-carts and to show off their affluence based on who had the best designs.  I also painted an oversized matador and bull midway through the bullfights you’d see in Madrid as my father’s family comes from Spanish bloodline.  I painted my depiction of Dia de los Muertos with acrylics on canvas – a festival in Mexico to honor and celebrate the lives of those who have passed.  I sculpted a calavera, painted flamenco dancers, tango dancers, and even a samba dancer.  Culture was my muse. I never thought much about my obsession until college when I applied to live on the Latin American Residential Program in Harnwell college house (UPenn’s fancy way of saying, "dorms").  I knew I wanted to find out more about myself and much to my parents dismay, I got into the program living with two suitemates – one international student from Colombia, and another local Dominican student from NYC.  I was happy to see that there were two other freshmen males living next door to us – an Argentinean student from Boca Raton and a Puerto Rican student from NYC.  After seeing the pictures of who I’d be sharing my year with, my parents insisted on referring to the Puerto Rican and Dominican students as my “black” roommates.  I didn’t know what to say except, “But they’re Latino…” I had never met a fellow Latino that didn’t have my pale white skin color and as funny as it sounds reading this now eight years later, I am embarrassed and horrified that I was so ignorant and therefore had no response to my parent's allegations.  As I became closer with my roommates and hallmates, it was pretty obvious that I had made the right choice – I finally felt like these people understood my struggles.  They knew what it was like to always have rice, beans, and platanos with every meal.  They understood that a chancleta was reason to hide from your parents growing up.  They knew that on Saturday nights, it was Abuela’s turn to the TV to watch her weekly dose of Don Francisco on Sabado Gigante.  I had never felt more accepted and I was finally growing into my own.  This family and my Onda Latina family (my dance troupe) molded my self-perception and sense of identity more than I will ever have words for.  My sophomore year I knew I wanted to study culture, race, and identity in a closer depth.  I enrolled in race studies classes with the best UPenn professor and advisor I could find – Dr. John Jackson.  I ended up majoring in Communications with a concentration in Culture, and minored in Latin American and Latino Studies.  I had learned more about the social constructions and history of race, skin color, identity, and ethnicity in one semester than I had learned growing up in a whitewashed house.  Why had this been hidden from me?

The answer to that question is one that I am appalled to admit – I asked my mother one day why they insisted on shielding my culture and identity from me and my siblings (all of whom have not really found their place as “Latinos” in this world and who only loosely identify with the term).  Her answer frustrated me – “I wanted to raise you white.  I didn’t want you to go through the same struggles I went through growing up as a Cuban in Newark not knowing English.”  Years later, I can see as a parent why she would want to shelter her children and based on her own experiences, why she felt this was the best way.  But it wasn’t enough for me.

I met many people in college from all over the world – sparking my interest and eye in world travel.   After Costa Rica, I was afforded the once-in-a-lifetime chance to travel to Colombia with my roommate.  We lived abroad for two months.  One of the best experiences of my life; and one day I will be back to see the family that housed us as part of our homestay, relive my nostalgia on top of Monserrate, La Calera, go for a run in Simon Bolivar Parque, and finally experience Andres Carne de Res.

Living abroad or even changing locations is daunting for many, but I find it liberating in a way.  Naturally I have always been a social person, so building relationships with those around me has never been a challenge thus far.  But moving to a new location affords you the ability to fully detach yourself from your previous abode and create a new persona.  As Jhumpa Lahiri writes in her novel, “The Namesake”, it is that uncanny ability to “both fit in perfectly yet remain slightly novel.”  “Reinventing [your]self, without misgivings, without guilt.”

For the last four years since graduation, I have been reinventing myself with every trip and experience I have abroad.  I have travelled to eight different countries so far at the ripe age of twenty-six.  More than many at my age, but still not enough for me.  I find myself constantly yearning for a new cultural experience to expand my horizons, challenge my viewpoints, and push me outside of my comfort zones.  I strive to find comfort in uncomfortable places – in relationships, business, or cultural exploration.  Over a year ago I started to date a man from Trinidad and I fully embraced his culture and identity.  More than a year after we have stopped dating, I have still adopted parts of the culture as my own – in particular the music and food.   So much so that I have gotten asked the question “Are you Trini?” more than once.

I am a true cultural mutt.  In 2013 I made my longest international trip so far to the United Arab Emirates.  As I disembarked from the plane after a fifteen and a half hour flight, I landed in a space that was decidedly foreign.  The men in their thawbs and keffiyehs frightened my Western mind as I had only seen images of men covered in white on the news and media in negative portrayals.  The men came across as intimidating and I could not help but look away as the man in customs asked me questions regarding my trip.  It took me less than a few hours to realize I that I needed to get over myself and push my limits of comfort.  As I took the subway from our hotel to the Mall of the Emirates by myself, I was confronted with new cultural experiences – a train which separated men from women, the public recitation of the Qu’ran during holy moments of prayer, prayer rooms within the mall, no trace of pork anywhere, and everything coming to a halt during the time of salat.  It was so much for me to take in and absorb.  I had never seen so many women dressed in abayas, niqab, and hijabs before.  It has been a year since I pushed the bubble of my lived world, and after reading ten different books about Islam and the Middle East, I still thirst for more.  I am mesmerized by the rhythmic chanting of the Qu’ran and the level of respect I have for the religion and Allah is on par with my level of respect for Jehovah.  But then again, I believe they are one in the same.  One day I will venture the courage to ask a woman covered in hijab about her place of worship here in Miami and I will ask to attend with her.  I would like to worship my Lord in every way possible; why not give Him the joy to see me revere Him in every religion?

People like to categorize and ask me if my move to Miami was part of me placing myself back into a cultural identity with which I could associate – the life of a refugee and growing up in a country that was not our own.  Miami is undoubtedly the city of Cuban-American nostalgia and hope.  But when I quickly rebuke their statement, they are surprised to find out I actually disassociate myself with Miami Cuban-Americans for that exact reason.  It is not what I grew up with, nor do I have a deep seeded desire to belong to their exclusive cult-like clique.  Miami Cubans are very far from what I consider my own identity.  I do not enjoy speaking Spanish as my primary language and I definitely do not ascribe to their narcissistic perception of self.   The way they reproach other cultures, races, and people nauseates me.  I would much rather associate myself with a mixed cultural identity – a bit of Cuban, Middle Eastern, Colombian, Trini, Dominican, American, African-American, etc.  I continue to adopt and accept new customs and traditions into my own life with every journey to a foreign country and with every person I encounter.  It keeps me fresh, renewed, and constantly challenged and changing.  The plasticity of my identity allows me to reinvent the whitewashed customs I grew up with and color them brilliantly - just as the ox cart wheels I encountered in Costa Rica and later painted my own adaptation through my own mixed cultural gaze.  I cannot and will not be classified; a fact that gives me ambiguity, elusiveness, and allows me to retain my own variance in a world that is too concerned with classification.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

My Biography

I’m one of those people that likes to experience life fully.  I’ve never been one who is complacent sitting back, looking at the world, and watching it pass me by.  I like to fully immerse myself in the world I am living and surround myself with love, happiness, and peace.  I like new cultures, new religions, learning about race, identity, and travelling to new horizons.  God has given us an entire Earth to explore, discover, and push the limits of our own comfort level to grow and learn.  I want to be like a sponge on this planet – permeable, flexible, and absorbing everything around it. 

I will never understand people who are ok with living in a self-constructed bubble.  I want to experience every facet of life – breath in new air in a foreign country, hear rhythmic hymns and chants in a temple, bring a smile to a child’s face, and immerse myself in someone else’s shoes.  We were given the power and the love within us to transform a life and more substantially, this world.  I firmly believe that good people exist.

I am a cultural mutt.  I have been told I look Italian/Puerto Rican/Middle Eastern my entire life.  I love it and fully embrace my cultural ambiguity.  As a matter of fact, I would rather not identify with one “culture” per say as I am a bit of thief when it comes to music, food, religion, and language.  I take what I identify with; no matter if it is deemed culturally “Indian” or “Caribbean” or “African American.”  I do not ascribe to traditional categorization and I will continually rebel against labels.  I am Raquel; a cultural parasite who takes what she associates with, what calls to her heart, and is constantly learning new rituals and traditions that will expand her “bubble” of reality.  Call me Dora the Explorer, as my old coworker used to call me.

Life is a joy.  By fully immersing myself in the moment, I always try to use all five senses and commit my experiences to memory, as I know in a few years, I will be unable to recall sights, smells, and sounds exactly as they are in the moment.  Videos and pictures are my only hope.  It troubles me that I even fail to recall many of the experiences on my first international trip to Costa Rica when I was seventeen; merely eight years ago.

My college friends call me “paparazzi.”  I secretly love it.  I love capturing and remembering moments.  Some will argue that by capturing a moment, I am missing the very essence of being “in” the moment.  I disagree.  I have done both and will continue to live fully AND remember fully.

I have an esoteric mind and a depth that not many can understand.  I think deeply and critically with regard to my relationships with people, my interactions, and my love for the world.  Yes, I am a dreamer and a lover.  Perhaps I was born in the wrong decade.  I will always choose my heart and often times fail to think rationally as my heart is not a rational organ unfortunately.  But I wouldn’t have it any other way.  Regret will never be in my vocabulary.

I fully love my life.  Every day, every hour, every minute, every second.  No one can take my thoughts, my inner joy, my heart, or my hope.  Those are the seconds of my watch.  Those are the ticks that keep my arms flying and my legs sailing.

Bon voyage to a new adventure.  Dream big, keep your wanderlust fervent.

Sail away.

God's Paintings

Flamingo pink,
Lilac purple,
Faded lemon yellow,
Ocean blue,
And a radiant deep watermelon red,
Brush the sky as the sun slowly retreats behind the swaying dark green palms.
Clear skies tonight with only one purplish pink cumulus cloud interrupting the blue canvas of our atmosphere.
Sunsets are God’s daily artwork to mankind for us to relish in their glory and be stunned by their opulent colors; every day altered yet ever impressive and ephemeral. 
A quick camera snap fails to capture the majesty of His work.
Sometimes I wonder if you see the same sun setting as I do on life’s canvas and if you are as stunned with the beauty of life as I am. 
You are on my mind always.