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Home
is Where Mami is
by Xenia Ruíz
In
1998, my mother was summoned back home by Latin roots that were
severed long ago. Home was her birthplace Ponce, Puerto Rico, the
birthplace of plena, my grandmother and bis abuelas.
In 1958, my mother came to Chicago where she planted new seeds,
my two sisters and I. But after toiling for four decades in American
factories and offices, and having established a better life for
the next generation, she left, and in the process, left us her daughters
behind.
She left before her oldest daughter (me), would graduate from college.
She left before her middle daughter, the first to graduate from
college, began working in her garden, unable to share the green
thumb she inherited from her. She left before her youngest daughter,
the second college graduate, would marry and start a family—if she
ever decides to since she's a woman of the new millennium. And she
left before her four grandchildren would graduate from high school.
In her wake, Mami left behind memories of Sundays at her first and
only house in Chicago, where we would all congregate to talk about
current events, our boyfriends, husbands, ex's, and our children.
She left before I learned how to make arroz junto or alcapurrias
or pasteles just like hers. Back then, she was always a ten-minute
drive away, a phone call away. Now, even though she is still a phone
call away, she is a whole time zone away, untouchable. Never mind
the phone company's ad to reach out and touch someone. When we call
her, we tease her. You don't belong there, we say. You belong here,
with us. She overlooks our selfishness and laughs, the relaxed,
guiltless laugh of the retired and a mother who knows she's done
her best.
She left us with the memories of our ancestor, Maria La 'O' Franceschi,
her great-grandmother who recalled stories of her grandmother being
shackled as a slave in the West Indies. Then there was the legend
of Toño Bicicleta who was rumored to carry off women on a bicycle
never to be seen again. And she left the countless cuentos of an
impoverished childhood, how she and her six brothers and sisters
shared one bed with a hole in the middle. How they would run barefooted,
half-starved to meet their mother when she arrived late at night
with leftovers after cooking en la casa de los ricos, after the
abuelo I never got to call Welo, died. She left these stories indelible,
stitched in our minds like a quilt with hidden messages, a tapestry
of tales, so that we would never forget, and we would always be
thankful in everything.
She left before I had the chance to tell her she was right; I should
have never married so young. She left before I had the chance to
tell her thank you for allowing me to make my own mistakes, for
never saying I told you so, for all her consejos.
And even though I can talk to her anytime, I can never explain what
it feels like not being able to drive to her house, or what it feels
like when I can't think of a particular word in Spanish, or how
I will miss our debates about race relations or whether Puerto Rico
should be the next state. It is a desperation that has no name,
like Spanish phrases that have no translation into English, like
losing my voice temporarily. No method of telecommunications can
bridge that gap.
Her presence left a lasting impression on my life at the same instance
her absence left a hole in my heart. It took me a while, but I realize
now that home is not her old house in Chicago, or her birthplace
in Ponce, or her new home in Gurabo. Home is in the sweet cadence
of her Spanish on the phone. Home is in her savory sofrito and the
bittersweet cuentos and age-old consejos embedded in my memory.
Home is in legacy of the roots she nurtured—in the daughters and
the grandchildren she left behind. Home is where Mami is
Xenia
Ruíz contributed this article to Boricua.com.
She is based in Chicago, IL
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