La Muda (The Mute)
I’ve feared four things in my life,
But I have never told anyone, I’ve kept my thoughts and my words to myself,
Shut the lights, I’ll freeze,
Though a childish common fear, my hands turn cold, I would think they were turning blue, dripping in sweat,
I fear birds, their eccentric beaks, their cold beady eyes staring at me,
I fear their droppings plopping on my shoulder,
I fear cavities, the dentist’s disappointed face screaming “You have failed me!”
The greatest fear, one I am beginning to conquer,
Living up to expectations that I will be nothing more than where I come from,
I’m expected not to dream, not to achieve, not to be
This country thinks it, my parents make my path harder,
But until now, I am no longer la Muda,
The girl that keeps her head down, mouth shut, and opinions to herself,
No longer will I take the abuse, the violence, the discriminatory looks of privileged white faces as I walk through campus,
I don’t look like them, talk like them, walk with my head high like them,
No longer will I keep everything bottled inside,
My values, my voice, my people, the invisible people, will be heard
The fear is diminishing,
And with it,
I will flourish