Sometimes, the only vindication for this train is that it rides through the sunset so damn well.
Hi, my name is Clarita.
I grew up in New York City.
I found my way into the world via my mother, in a Brooklyn basement. She was a postal worker for 30 years. She's seen the most of the least, and the least of the most. Me? I've been crying on a stoop in Stuyvesant for every night of sacrifice, for those lives who aren't even mine.
that's the thing about New York. our tears are never our own.
They roll out of us, often in silence, into the vortex of skyscrapers and brick bones, lifting into the atmosphere before they find another host.
it's easier to find a drunk host.
the way we work, is the way we live.
sometimes its not even alive, it's a daily death, of someone we were the day before. a daily loss of relationship to self, and the finding of the self sometimes only exists in a split second,
when you've caught the sun over the Brooklyn bridge, piercing your lids as you're falling asleep on your way home.
I'M ALIVE. BUT I'M DEAD.
a flowering and beseeched narrative.
crown me, while crowning my mother. she looked into all the faces, of natural new yorkers, who grew up here and non-natural new yorkers, who create charms....but sweep away the charms every day, because they can't breathe
in their own
space...
because, their landlord
won't fix
the filter.
my heart bellows the sounds of popping
lite working
Dominican boys
hanging off the rails
insisting
showtime.
it's
SHOWTIME
SHOWTIME
SHOWTIME
SHOW ME MINE
GIVE ME MINES
I related and religioned with the best of them. I married boys with inner city workings, and boys who were ripe new to the city streets. so there were more flowers and peaches.
there were a hundred times take outs,
but take outs in the silence
but not silence.
there was clicking of
the radiator
that shared more warmth
than we wanted
or that we were willing
to share
with each other.
because there were too many bricks laid
already.
you would think that a project means
its constantly unfinished
but finished
and this time, it's both.
that's new york.
I was crying that night on my stoop
in stuyvesant
because
there were no more words
after i left my body
and saw myself
from above
and the whole city
laughed
because i was an angel now
and they thought they had seen
it all.
because that's the new york.
everyone thinks
to forget to feel
then they feel way too much
all at once
and it lifts
out of our bodies
above the most
to find a new host to befriend
a new job to date
a new boyfriend to work
a new family to rush in
and cry out
STABILITY
WHERE IS IT?
IN WHICH, TO WHICH BURROUGH, IS IT HIDING?
be rough, she said.
IT'S RIDING THE TRAIN
ON A SUNDAY NIGHT
CRYING ON MY STOOP
BECAUSE I FORGOT WHAT I ATE
AFTER
I DROWNED MYSELF
IN FLOWERS
TO LESSEN
the joy
i was so foreign
to feeling.
i love it here.
i hear the pigeons
daily.
i smell mildew
in that basement
where i grew.
are you sure you and i are living in the same
life? here, in new york?
what if my york be old
and york
be knew
or known
to ewe from
before
like the highline
railroad
meadow
they found so slightly
and turned it into the new york
you really wanted.
do you still want it?
did you eat,
the ice cream?
are we on top of each other, or
right in between each other
together
without boundaries
in our relationships
or the way
we speak
to each other?
HAVE YOU EVER STAYED IN A SHELTER?
i cried on my stoop that night
because my whole basement life
came to a head
when i was always fine
i was really always fine
because this city
is mine
then why are these people
TALKING DOWN MY LINE.
MY HIGH
HIGH
LINE
WHERE IM FINE
NOMATTER IF THERE IS A MEADOW
WITHOUT ANY
SIGNS
TO SAY
YOU CANT WALK HERE.
EVEN IF YOU ARE
A NEW YORKER.
WE CAN'T FIND THE TIME
TO FIND YOU A HOME
YOU'RE SUPPOSED TO DO THAT
YOURSELF.
I thought my home
was within me
i thought i knew people
really well
after all the gatherings
i attended
in everywhere
the library
the park
the circle
the square
my hair is acceptable here.
i've been to others where,
it's knot.
people smile at the extension.
PEOPLE LEAVE USUALLY TO COME BACK.
THAT'S HOW THIS WORKS.
usually a different burrough,
different woman
different fight,
different job
different truth
new awareness
new findings
in the 20's
at the trim shops
you don't have to be
atelier bound
working for free
on findings
found
INTERN
but you may not
KNOW ABOUT IT
if you grew up in
QUEENS
because thats your
KINGDOM.
THAT'S IT.
YOU PROBABLY NEVER LEFT.
BECAUSE YOU'RE A WELL SEASONED
OLD YORKER
OF SPANISH, MUSLIM
DESCENT
BECAUSE WE MELT
TOGETHER
AND AT LEAST
THERES THAT.
I was crying on the stoop that night
because I had never felt
such light
in my eyes
before I saw the truth
that i create
my relation
to you,
york
a dying
living
SIZE
OF
SCRAPERS
GETTING HIGHER
SO THE CLOUDS CAN
SPEAK.
LOUDER.
please come live in my basement
i was born there
but really, the truth is
my lies
never
reveal themselves
because my mother told me
never to trust a
"NEW'
yorker,
because they
don't know the half
of
you
you
are
the oldest
store
in manhattan
and you've seen it all
through
the foggy windows
of your own
worth.
Hello again, my name is Clarita.
I'm a new
new
yorker
because I closed the cycle
of my ancestors
who stole a life here
in the bronx
"x"
because everywhere else
made no sense
once we realized
we could own
the streets
with loudness
and no one
may enter beyond
what we allow
past a certain street
where the skins change
the knowledge change
the observers change
the babies change
if you are a new new yorker,
some nights you might cry
on a stoop because you gave
your whole life away
to someone or something
that was never meant for you.
i'm sorry,
but its true.
we are brick breaking out here
we are capsized by trials
but we grow
like roses
in tupacs concrete
because in bedstuy
biggie would
really allow it
because he really
knew
how to
crown it
not just for himself
but every step
by every brother sister
that found themselves
closely walking
that line
back into the city
so divine
no matter
the circumstance
because somewhere
someone
is
happier with time
that they have floated
above the city
and back down
to find
they were always the host
crying
with joy
to find.
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