Strange Chaos I was born into a world of strange chaos a planet built for gypsies and sojourners and those who chase vagabond dreams Everyone following their own voice dancing awkwardly to rhythms that possess the soul A world where dogs wear sweaters and children freeze to death in the streets The American Dream the stuff that nightmares are made of where evil is rewarded and good is mocked an existence of opposites and danger where the vulnerable get caught in the dark out in the cocaine rain with devils looking for shelter and angels scoring weed the sirens wail endlessly but get lost in the noise camouflaged with the silent sounds of shattered dreams and lost hope lovers that come to the end of their rope love is a luxury faith is a gamble when your life is in shambles in this world of strange chaos where everyone has the copyright on truth and the affluent get to rewrite history and erase race and erase you Thanks for playing but you’re the wrong color your pigmentation is the wrong shade for this nation they are creating or attempting to recreate built on hate and fear they love the food they just don’t love you Still, you take the chance and they send you back over the fence Who do we go to Where is our aid thought I’d reach out to my neighbors but I don’t know their names All the doors are locked and their doorbells scan my face “just leave the package on the doorstep then turn and walk away” All I want is some friendship all I need is some grace I keep looking for mana to fall down with the rain but it never came and now the shelters are closed the devils have taken their place and I keep on walking thankful for the voices in my head that have become my best friends but they keep asking for things that I can’t afford to give What is the going price on a human soul that’s been out in the cold spiritual frostbite and feels nothing no more I’m sleepy but I’m woke this strange chaos ain’t no joke It’s all I can do to stay afloat the GPS is broke I know where home is I just don’t know how to go From point a to point b Oh, say can you see that I’m crying out willingly from a modern world that is still in the stone age smearing the ink on every page written by the tender hearted outsmarted by those who have no conscience nor soul selling our faith to the lowest bidder just to feel like we belong Yes, I was born into this world of strange chaos the world that I call home
My Chicanismo The neighborhood where it all begins where it all began Everything I’ve ever needed to know I learned in the neighborhood Chicanos we call it the barrio not only khakis and Stacy’s but our kind of Chicanismo, too blue jeans, Chucks, and whatever shirt was clean enough to wear I wasn’t any different than you rice and beans on the stove although we also had days of fish sticks, tuna sandwiches, and banana pudding tortillas with cheese and chocolate milk my personal breakfast of champions I didn’t realize I was different until you told me I was creating the void inside and a loss of identity that still lives and breathes today “You speak Spanish?” “I thought you were Anglo!” “You hardly have an accent!” “But you have green eyes” “You’re so light skinned!” “You’re not Catholic?” “What’s a Methodist?” “You put ketchup on your tamales?” “You’re not a REAL Mexican!” What am I, then? Who am I? Mexican? American? Tejano? Latino? Hispano? Chicano? Latin/X? Am I even here? Do I exist at all? Am I “real?” I thought I was always just “me” I wasn’t trying to be anything I thought I just “was” I believed I was one of you in the neighborhood where barrio blood is thicker than mole I was never made aware of the criteria required to be one of you one of “us” I didn’t know the things we had in common made us legitimate Chicanos, Hispanos, or whatever things like taking mom an egg from the fridge and not Tylenol when we had bad headaches tacos, telenovelas speaking loudly with our hands art, music, poetry faith pictures of Jesus everywhere and cheap drugstore art in the house coffee and pan dulce I went to church and everyone else in the world around me went to Mass Pre-destined to be a dreamer struggling in school with my head in the clouds visions of guitars and cheering fans waking up to bad grades and esteem issues like you only wanting acceptance needing love searching for me in you but the lens is warped and the image is inaccurate compromised and the club isn’t accepting any new versions of its members at this time now, from son to father to grandfather, I have always only been “me” I don’t wear green contact lenses I don’t see the world in green my skin’s pigmentation the shade of ancestors I never knew but tattooed me with their truth my pre-mature gray hair a maternal inheritance and my grandfather’s crown whoever I am whatever I am the color of my soul is Brown my spirit sings the songs of our border people my soul was baptized in the waters of the Rio Grande River my eucharist is also blood and blue corn can’t we just have communion can’t you see that I’m your brother whatever color the box says I come in don’t look at my face listen to my voice I speak your language I sound like you speaking truth, love, and hope despite the struggles and hardships we all face I fall and rise and rise again just like you with the sounds of guitars and accordions softly playing in the background shuffling over the bean pods from the Mesquite trees that fall at my feet I believe in Jesus Christ and the practice of curanderismo the lives of the saints and the existence of brujas that there is poetry in every moment and a song in every heartache I am sold on the idea that passion between two lovers and love is the best chance that any of us has for peace in the world Who am I? What am I? I am a human being and God’s beloved creation. I am an American of Mexican decent. I am Chicano. I am a border child. I am Tejano. I am green-eyed and light skinned. I like salsa and ketchup on tamales and tortillas with butter I am a lover and a revolutionary a sinner saved by grace I am your brother and without a doubt one of “you” one of “us”
Roberto Rocha is the author of Tamarindo Dreams: A Collection of Barrio Poetry. He is a native of the Rio Grande Valley in South Texas, where most of the inspiration for his writing comes from.