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    The Poet X


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      Dedication

      To Katherine Bolaños and my former students

      at Buck Lodge Middle School 2010–2012,

      and all the little sisters yearning to see themselves:

      this is for you

      Contents

      Cover

      Title Page

      Dedication

      Part I: In the Beginning Was the Word

      Stoop-Sitting

      Unhide-able

      Mira, Muchacha

      Names

      The First Words

      Mami Works

      Confirmation Class

      God

      “Mami,” I Say to Her on the Walk Home

      When You’re Born to Old Parents

      When You’re Born to Old Parents, Continued

      When You’re Born to Old Parents, Continued Again

      The Last Word on Being Born to Old Parents

      Rumor Has It,

      First Confirmation Class

      Father Sean

      Haiku

      Boys

      Caridad and I Shouldn’t Be Friends

      Questions I Have

      Night before First Day of School

      H.S.

      Ms. Galiano

      Rough Draft of Assignment 1—Write about the most impactful day of your life.

      Final Draft of Assignment 1 (What I Actually Turn In)

      The Routine

      Altar Boy

      Twin’s Name

      More about Twin

      It’s Only the First Week of Tenth Grade

      How I Feel about Attention

      Games

      After

      Okay?

      On Sunday

      During Communion

      Church Mass

      Not Even Close to Haikus

      Holy Water

      People Say

      On Papi

      All Over a Damn Wafer

      The Flyer

      After the Buzz Dies Down

      Aman

      Whispering with Caridad Later That Day

      What Twin Be Knowing

      Sharing

      Questions for Ms. Galiano

      Spoken Word

      Wait—

      Holding a Poem in the Body

      J. Cole vs. Kendrick Lamar

      Asylum

      What I Tell Aman:

      Dreaming of Him Tonight

      The Thing about Dreams

      Date

      Mami’s Dating Rules

      Clarification on Dating Rules

      Feeling Myself

      Part II: And the Word Was Made Flesh

      Smoke Parks

      I Decided a Long Time Ago

      Why Twin Is a Terrible Twin

      Why Twin Is a Terrible Twin, for Real

      Why Twin Is a Terrible Twin (Last and Most Important Reason)

      But Why Twin Is Still the Only Boy I’ll Ever Love

      Communication

      About A

      Catching Feelings

      Notes with Aman

      What I Didn’t Say to Caridad in Confirmation Class

      Lectures

      Ms. Galiano’s Sticky Note on Top of Assignment 1

      Sometimes Someone Says Something

      Listening

      Mother Business

      And Then He Does

      Warmth

      The Next Couple of Weeks

      Eve,

      “I Think the Story of Genesis Is Mad Stupid”

      As We Are Packing to Leave

      Father Sean

      Answers

      Rough Draft Assignment 2—Last paragraphs of My Biography

      Final Draft of Assignment 2 (What I Actually Turn In)

      Hands

      Fingers

      Talking Church

      Swoon

      Telephone

      Over Breakfast

      Angry Cat, Happy X

      About Being in Like

      Music

      Ring the Alarm

      The Day

      Wants

      At My Train Stop

      What I Don’t Tell Aman

      Kiss Stamps

      The Last Fifteen-Year-Old

      Concerns

      What Twin Knows

      Hanging Over My Head

      Friday

      Black & Blue

      Tight

      Excuses

      Costume Ready

      Reuben’s House Party

      One Dance

      Stoop-Sitting . . . with Aman

      Convos with Caridad

      Braiding

      Fights

      Scrapping

      What We Don’t Say

      Gay

      Feeling Off When Twin Is Mad

      Rough Draft of Assignment 3—Describe someone you consider misunderstood by society.

      Final Draft of Assignment 3 (What I Actually Turn In)

      Announcements

      Ice-Skating

      Until

      Love

      Around and Around We Go

      After Skating

      This Body on Fire

      The Shit & the Fan

      Miracles

      Fear

      Ants

      I Am No Ant

      Diplomas

      Cuero

      Mami Says,

      Repetition

      Things You Think While You’re Kneeling on Rice That Have Nothing to Do with Repentance:

      Another Thing You Think While You’re Kneeling on Rice That Has Nothing to Do with Repentance:

      The Last Thing You Think While You’re Kneeling on Rice That Has Nothing to Do with Repentance:

      Leaving

      What Do You Need from Me?

      Consequences

      Late That Night

      In Front of My Locker

      Part III: The Voice of One Crying in the Wilderness

      Silent World

      Heavy

      My Confession

      Father Sean Says,

      Prayers

      How I Can Tell

      Before We Walk in the House

      My Heart Is a Hand

      A Poem Mami Will Never Read

      In Translation

      Heartbreak

      Reminders

      Writing

      What I’d Like to Tell Aman When He Sends Another Apology Message:

      Favors

      Pulled Back

      On Thanksgiving

      Haiku: The Best Part About Thanksgiving Was When Mami:

      Rough Draft of Assignment 4—When was the last time you felt free?

      Rough Draft of Assignment 4—When was the last time you felt free?

      Rough Draft of Assignment 4—When was the last time you felt free?

      Final Draft of Assignment 4 (What I Actually Turn In)

      Gone

      Zeros

      Possibilities

      Can’t Tell Me Nothing

      Isabelle

      First Poetry Club Meeting

      Nerves

      When I’m Done

      Compliments

      Caridad Is Standing Outside the Church

      Hope Is a Thing with Wings

      Here

      Haikus

      Offering

      Holding Twin

      Cody

      Problems

      Dominican Spanish Lesson:

      Permission

      Open Mic Night

      Signed Up

      The Mic Is Open

      Invitation

      All the Way Hype

      At Lunch on Monday

      At Poetry Club

      Every Day after English Class

      Christmas Eve

      It’s a Rosary

      Longest Week

      The Waiting Game

      Birthdays

      The Good

      The Bad

      The Ugly

      Let Me Explain

      If Your Hand Causes You to Sin

      Verses


      Burn

      Where There Is Smoke

      Things You Think About in the Split Second Your Notebook Is Burning

      Other Things You Think About in the Split Second Your Notebook Is Burning

      My Mother Tries to Grab Me

      Returning

      On the Walk to the Train

      The Ride

      No Turning Back

      Taking Care

      In Aman’s Arms

      And I Also Know

      Tangled

      The Next Move

      There Are Words

      Facing It

      “You Don’t Have to Do Anything You Don’t Want to Do.”

      What I Say to Ms. Galiano After She Passes Me a Kleenex

      Going Home

      Aman, Twin, and Caridad

      Divine Intervention

      Homecoming

      My Mother and I

      Stronger

      Slam Prep

      Ms. Galiano Explains the Five Rules of Slam:

      Xiomara’s Secret Rules of Slam:

      The Poetry Club’s Real Rules of Slam:

      Poetic Justice

      The Afternoon of the Slam

      At the New York Citywide Slam

      Celebrate with Me

      Assignment 5—First and Final Draft

      Acknowledgments

      About the Author

      Praise

      Books by Elizabeth Acevedo

      Back Ad

      Copyright

      About the Publisher

      Part I

      In the Beginning

      Was the Word

      Friday, August 24

      Stoop-Sitting

      The summer is made for stoop-sitting

      and since it’s the last week before school starts,

      Harlem is opening its eyes to September.

      I scope out this block I’ve always called home.

      Watch the old church ladies, chancletas flapping

      against the pavement, their mouths letting loose a train

      of island Spanish as they spread he said, she said.

      Peep Papote from down the block

      as he opens the fire hydrant

      so the little kids have a sprinkler to run through.

      Listen to honking cabs with bachata blaring

      from their open windows

      compete with basketballs echoing from the Little Park.

      Laugh at the viejos—my father not included—

      finishing their dominoes tournament with hard slaps

      and yells of “Capicu!”

      Shake my head as even the drug dealers posted up

      near the building smile more in the summer, their hard scowls

      softening into glue-eyed stares in the direction

      of the girls in summer dresses and short shorts:

      “Ayo, Xiomara, you need to start wearing dresses like that!”

      “Shit, you’d be wifed up before going back to school.”

      “Especially knowing you church girls are all freaks.”

      But I ignore their taunts, enjoy this last bit of freedom,

      and wait for the long shadows to tell me

      when Mami is almost home from work,

      when it’s time to sneak upstairs.

      Unhide-able

      I am unhide-able.

      Taller than even my father, with what Mami has always said

      was “a little too much body for such a young girl.”

      I am the baby fat that settled into D-cups and swinging hips

      so that the boys who called me a whale in middle school

      now ask me to send them pictures of myself in a thong.

      The other girls call me conceited. Ho. Thot. Fast.

      When your body takes up more room than your voice

      you are always the target of well-aimed rumors,

      which is why I let my knuckles talk for me.

      Which is why I learned to shrug when my name was replaced by insults.

      I’ve forced my skin just as thick as I am.

      Mira, Muchacha

      Is Mami’s favorite way to start a sentence

      and I know I’ve already done something wrong

      when she hits me with: “Look, girl. . . .”

      This time it’s “Mira, muchacha, Marina from across the street

      told me you were on the stoop again talking to los vendedores.”

      Like usual, I bite my tongue and don’t correct her,

      because I hadn’t been talking to the drug dealers;

      they’d been talking to me. But she says she doesn’t

      want any conversation between me and those boys,

      or any boys at all, and she better not hear about me hanging out

      like a wet shirt on a clothesline just waiting to be worn

      or she would go ahead and be the one to wring my neck.

      “Oíste?” she asks, but walks away before I can answer.

      Sometimes I want to tell her, the only person in this house

      who isn’t heardis me.

      Names

      I’m the only one in the family

      without a biblical name.

      Shit, Xiomara isn’t even Dominican.

      I know, because I Googled it.

      It means: One who is ready for war.

      And truth be told, that description is about right

      because I even tried to come into the world

      in a fighting stance: feet first.

      Had to be cut out of Mami

      after she’d given birth

      to my twin brother, Xavier, just fine.

      And my name labors out of some people’s mouths

      in that same awkward and painful way.

      Until I have to slowly say:

      See-oh-MAH-ruh.

      I’ve learned not to flinch the first day of school

      as teachers get stuck stupid trying to figure it out.

      Mami says she thought it was a saint’s name.

      Gave me this gift of battle and now curses

      how well I live up to it.

      My parents probably wanted a girl who would sit in the pews

      wearing pretty florals and a soft smile.

      They got combat boots and a mouth silent

      until it’s sharp as an island machete.

      The First Words

      Pero, tú no eres fácil

      is a phrase I’ve heard my whole life.

      When I come home with my knuckles scraped up:

      Pero, tú no eres fácil.

      When I don’t wash the dishes quickly enough,

      or when I forget to scrub the tub:

      Pero, tú no eres fácil.

      Sometimes it’s a good thing,

      when I do well on an exam or the rare time I get an award:

      Pero, tú no eres fácil.

      When my mother’s pregnancy was difficult,

      and it was all because of me,

      because I was turned around

      and they thought that I would die

      or worse,

      that I would kill her,

      so they held a prayer circle at church

      and even Father Sean showed up at the emergency room,

      Father Sean, who held my mother’s hand

      as she labored me into the world,

      and Papi paced behind the doctor,

      who said this was the most difficult birth she’d been a part of

      but instead of dying I came out wailing,

      waving my tiny fists,

      and the first thing Papi said,

      the first words I ever heard,

      “Pero, tú no eres fácil.”

      You sure ain’t an easy one.

      Mami Works

      Cleaning an office building in Queens.

      Rides two trains in the early morning

      so she can arrive at the office by eight.

      She works at sweeping, and mopping,

      emptying trash bins, and being invisible.

      Her hands never stop moving, she says.

      Her fingers rubbing the material of plasti
    c gloves

      like the pages of her well-worn Bible.

      Mami rides the train in the afternoon,

      another hour and some change to get to Harlem.

      She says she spends her time reading verses,

      getting ready for the evening Mass,

      and I know she ain’t lying, but if it were me

      I’d prop my head against the metal train wall,

      hold my purse tight in my lap, close my eyes

      against the rocking, and try my best to dream.

      Tuesday, August 28

      Confirmation Class

      Mami has wanted me to take the sacrament

      of confirmation for three years now.

      The first year, in eighth grade, the class got full

      before we could sign up, and even with all her heavenly pull

      Mami couldn’t get a spot for Twin and me.

      Father Sean told her it’d be fine if we waited.

      Last year, Caridad, my best friend, extended her trip in D.R.

      right when we were supposed to begin the classes,

      so I asked if I could wait another year.

      Mami didn’t like it, but since she’s friends with Caridad’s mother

      Twin went ahead and did the class without me.

      This year, Mami has filled out the forms,

      signed me up, and marched me to church

      before I can tell her that Jesus feels like a friend

      I’ve had my whole childhood

      who has suddenly become brand-new;

      who invites himself over too often, who texts me too much.

      A friend I just don’t think I need anymore.

      (I know, I know . . . even writing that is blasphemous.)

      But I don’t know how to tell Mami that this year,

      it’s not about feeling unready,

      it’s about knowing that this doubt has already been confirmed.

      God

      It’s not any one thing

      that makes me wonder

      about the capital G.O.D.

      About a holy trinity

      that don’t include the mother.

      It’s all the things.

      Just seems as I got older

      I began to really see

      the way that church

      treats a girl like me differently.

      Sometimes it feels

      all I’m worth is under my skirt

      and not between my ears.

      Sometimes I feel

      that turning the other cheek

      could get someone like my brother killed.

      Sometimes I feel

      my life would be easier

      if I didn’t feel like such a debt

      to a God

      that don’t really seem

      to beout herecheckingfor me.

      “Mami,” I Say to Her on the Walk Home

      The words sit in my belly,

     


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