Book Read Free

When We Make It

Page 1

by Elisabet Velasquez




  DIAL BOOKS

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, New York

  First published in the United States of America by Dial Books for Young Readers,

  an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, 2021

  Copyright © 2021 by Elisabet Velasquez

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  Dial & colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Visit us online at penguinrandomhouse.com.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

  Ebook ISBN 9780593324493

  Cover art © 2021 by Fanesha Fabre

  Cover design by Theresa Evangelista

  Design by Jason Henry | Adapted for ebook by Michelle Quintero

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

  pid_prh_5.8.0_c0_r0

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Epigraph

  Introduction

  Fall 1996: Bushwick, Brooklyn

  How I Got My Name: Sarai

  Mami

  How We Got Our Names: Estrella

  Papi

  Lucky

  We Ain’t Afraid

  Neighbors

  Curiosity Killed the Catsatisfaction Brought It Back

  I Ask Questions About Puerto Rico

  Leaving Gates Avenue

  How We Got Our Names: Hookerbocker Ave

  Today in Bible Study: Trinity

  Sarai’s Got Talent

  Roster

  The Cool Puerto Rican English Teacher

  How We Got Our Names: Mami’s Job

  Off the Books

  How We Got Our Names: Homegirls

  The Neighborhood Is Changing

  Storytime with Señor Maví

  Can I Be Puerto Rican?

  If Being Boricua in Bushwick Is a Feeling—It’s the Best Kind

  Being Boricua Is Not Just a Feeling

  How We Talk: Boricuas

  Pronunciation

  Plancha

  Good Hair Days, Bad Hair Days

  God & Lucifer

  Estrella Turns Seventeen

  The Daily News Says

  Devotional

  We’re Sorry the Welfare Office Is Closed and Will Reopen When You Have No Bus Fare to Get Here

  Toy Drive

  Birthdays Are the Worst Days

  We Not Catholic

  I Think We May Be Homeless

  Things You Can’t Do to Survive: Break the Rules

  Things You Must Do to Survive: Break the Rules

  Sacrificio

  Brooklyn Wela

  Things We Don’t Talk About: Color

  ¿Pastelón O Pernil?

  Things We Don’t Talk About: Color

  When Someone Asks if You Hungry the Answer Is Always No Even When It’s Yes

  Hood Credit

  Fiao

  Mami Is Pregnant

  Baby Pictures

  God’s Not Dead, He’s Still Alive

  Hotel, Motel, Holiday Inn

  Women, Infants & Children

  How We Got Our Names: Tropical Fantasy

  Side Hustle

  Leave Before You’re Left

  How We Got Our Names: Angry Bitches

  El Bodeguero

  Good Jobsbad Jobs

  Erasure

  How We Got Our Names: Five Dollar Shoe Store

  Pork-Fried Rice Money

  How We Got Our Names: Danny

  Visiting Danny at the Group Home

  Antonio

  The Apartment on Troutman Street

  The News Says Bushwick Has a Drug Problem

  Planning

  G

  To Steal or Not to Steal

  A Real G

  911 What’s Your Emergency

  This Is the Day That the Lord Has Made, Let Us Rejoice & Be Glad in It

  Your Silence Will Not Protect You

  Today in Bible Study

  We Don’t Know Who the Landlord Is But We Know He Don’t Care

  The Corner Boys

  My Life as a Bible Story: David & Goliath

  Career Day

  In Living Color

  Estrella Wants to Get Paid to Have Sex

  Prayer

  How Mami Lost the Baby

  Good Days

  Kumbaya

  Professional Spanish Knocks on the Door

  Danny Is Kidnapped

  Bushwick Library

  Books We Read

  You Got Potential

  Ask Me Anything Day with Ms. Rivera

  My Life as a Salsa Song: La Vida Te da Sorpresas

  Code Switch

  New Words/Ironic/: Something That Is Exactly the Opposite of What Is Meant or Expected to Happen

  New Words/Preservation/: To Keep Alive or in Existence

  How We Got Our Names: Neighborhood Watch

  116th Street Festival

  Qué Bonita Bandera

  The Puerto Rican Day Parade on Knickerbocker Avenue

  We Make the News

  The Mayor Says: I Don’t Think Youth Programs Will Help

  If You Care to Look Closely

  The War on Roaches

  Graduation Day

  My Life as a Salsa Song: Un Verano en Nueva York

  Estrella Got Plans to Make It Out

  Piragüero vs. the Limber Lady

  Summer Lunches

  New Words/Affection/: A Feeling of Liking and Caring for Someone or Something

  Yellow Tape

  How We Got Our Names: Jefferson Street

  My Life as a Salsa Song: Periódico de Ayer

  The News Article Is About How Hopeless We Are: New York Times, October 6, 1993

  If the News Article Was About Police Brutality

  If the News Article Was About How Hopeful We Are

  The Block Is Hot

  Voices

  We Ran Out of Toothpaste

  Back at the Welfare Office

  Talk Proper

  How We Talk

  How Mami Talks to People with Power

  Good Jobs

  BCW from A to Z

  New Words/Addiction/: The Repeated Involvement with a Substance or Activity Despite the Substantial Harm It Now Causes

  Bell Atlantic Is Bringing Us Together

  Silent Treatment

  This Is Your Brain on Drugs

  How We Got Our Names: Cracking Up

  Fall Down Seven Times

  Get Up Eight

  Rehearsal

  My Body

  Tag

  The Magic Church Bus

  They Have Cable

  For All Have Sinned and Come Short of the Glory of God

  New Words/Glamour/: An
Attractive or Exciting Quality That Makes Certain People or Things Seem Appealing

  First Jobs

  Question for the BIC Pen I Use to Write Down Mami’s Appointments on the Calendar

  Today in Bible Study

  Needles

  New Words/Scoff/: To Laugh and Talk About a Person or Idea in a Way That Shows That You Think They Are Stupid or Silly

  New Words/Evaluation/: A Systematic Determination of a Subject’s Merit, Worth and Significance

  Medicaid

  Living the Dream

  My Life as a Salsa Song: La Cura

  After School the Piano Player from Church Is Waiting for Me

  Sarai Should Have Known Better

  The Piano Man Has a Family

  My Life as a Bible Story: Lot’s Wife

  What Estrella Knows About Justice

  Jesus Our Lord & Savior

  What Lala Knows About Justice

  What the Men Know About Justice

  My Life as a Salsa Song: Usted Abusó

  The Last Time I Call the Chatline

  New Words/Statistic/: A Fact or Piece of Data from a Study of a Large Collection of Numerical Data

  Tony’s Pizza

  New Words/Resentment/: A Feeling of Anger Because You Have Been Forced to Accept Something That You Do Not Like

  Welo

  Things We Don’t Talk About: Puerto Rican History

  Things We Don’t Talk About: What Happened to Mami

  Church Boy

  Pickup Lines

  First Kiss

  End of Summer

  I Hate My New High School

  The Cool White English Teacher

  Stranger Danger

  New Words/Investments/: Spend Money Now to Make Money Later

  Class Clown

  Second Person

  An English Quiz I Ace

  Tone Goes Missing

  Squatters

  How We Got Our Names: Raid

  The New York Times

  Bell Atlantic Is Tearing Us Apart

  Losing My Virginity

  Mami Thinks I Am Still a Virgin

  Estrella Goes Missing

  If Being Boricua in Bushwick Is a Feeling It’s the Worst Kind

  Acknowledgments

  Estrella Is Back

  Got a Secret, Can You Keep It?

  Love

  How We Got Our Names: Tag

  How to Go Missing

  Silence

  Happily Ever After

  Mami Threatens to Send Estrella to Puerto Rico

  Aguadilla

  Bori Wela Is Dying

  Estrella Goes to Live with Papi

  I Miss Estrella

  We’re Going to Puerto Rico

  Rafael Hernández Airport

  A Tale of Two Puerto Ricans

  Puerto Rican History

  The Houses in Puerto Rico

  What Happened to Mami

  How We Talk: Try Me

  Visiting Bori Wela in the Hospital

  In Case of Emergency: Learn Puerto Rican History

  Getting to Know Yougetting to Know All About You

  Tío Richie Wants to Talk Puerto Rican History

  Diasporican Blues

  What Happened to Mami

  Mami & Papi’s Life as a Salsa Song: Periódico de Ayer

  My Life as a Salsa Song: Todo Tiene Su Final

  Bochinche

  Imagination Gone Wild

  Playing Hooky

  The 411

  Estrella Gives Birth

  When We Make It

  How We Honor Our Dead

  Holy Walls

  Estrella Is Not the Same

  New Words/Postpartum Depression: A Feeling of Deep Sadness, Anxiety, Etc., That a Person Can Feel After Giving Birth to a Child

  Psychological Evaluation

  We Visit Estrella at Woodhull Hospital

  Estrella Wants Me to Know

  Brooklyn Wela Adopts the Baby

  Birthdays Are Still the Worst Days

  One Day Church Boy Starts Acting All Funny

  Gaining Weight

  I Am Pregnant

  Mirror

  I Tell Estrella I Am Pregnant

  Understanding Trinity

  New Words/Detonate/: To Explode with Sudden Violence

  Disciplina

  Breaking Up with Church Boy

  About the Author

  First Prenatal Appointment

  Sonogram

  Baby Pictures

  At the Counselor’s Office

  I Am a Dangerously Bad Example

  First Day at the School for Pregnant Girls

  Mami Said I’m a Woman Now

  There Is No Room in the Budget for Books

  The Writing Assignment Is to Imagine Future You Writing to Present You

  Baby Shower

  C-Section

  I Give Birth to Hope

  Visiting Hours

  Sorpresas Te da La Vida

  How We Got Our Names: Postpartum Depression

  Visiting Danny

  What if Making It Looks Like This

  Acknowledgments

  Resources

  Poems in Conversation

  About the Author

  Poetry is the way we help give name to the nameless so it can be thought.

  —Audre Lorde

  Poetry Is Not a Luxury

  Dear Reader,

  When We Make It is based on my life growing up in Bushwick, Brooklyn, at the height of the “war on drugs” and as gentrification accelerated. Like Sarai, I am a first-generation U.S. born Puerto Rican. My family also navigated mental illness, houselessness, and food insecurity, and lived significantly below the poverty line. Making it was often both as simple and as complicated as hoping the pantry box included a really good name-brand cereal, or having heat in the dead of winter.

  I wrote this book as a way to acknowledge these truths and to honor those who’ve experienced the same. Some of the poems in When We Make It touch upon sexual assault, abuse, mental illness, miscarriage and pregnancy. And so, there may be poems that hit close to home, poems where you might want to pause and take a break after reading in order to process. Please take the time you need.

  I also hope there will be poems that make you laugh and that fill you with wonder and hope.

  I am only here because I remembered who I was. I was born already forgotten. This book is for those born with stories already erased. May we return to them in whatever way rings true. This book is also for anyone who feels their emotions before they can name them. For anyone who still may not have all of the language but has their story. Your story is all the language you need. And of course, this is only one story of many. I urge you to write yours. All of our stories are pivotal & necessary on our way to making it.

  Thank you for reading,

  FALL 1996

  BUSHWICK, BROOKLYN

  “QUE CANTE MI GENTE”

  —“MI GENTE”

  HÉCTOR LAVOE

  HOW I GOT MY NAME

  SARAI

  Let’s start the story where abandon meets faith.

  Aight, so, boom. Check it.

  I’m named after a homegirl

  in the Bible who couldn’t have kids.

  Her man Abram was all like:

  Yo, Sarai, God promised me I would be the Father of Nations.

  Sarai was all like:

  Nah B, you must be buggin’, you know I can’t have no babies.

  Our pastor says faith is believing in something

  you can’t really see.

  According to Mami,

  we should never put our faith in men.

  Mami was pregnant with me when Papi bounced

  for some new c
hick & told Mami to have an abortion.

  Abram got himself a new chick, too.

  Got her pregnant and all that.

  I guess Mami identified with Sarai’s fear and doubt—

  & so I was born out of Mami’s faith & hope.

  MAMI

  Mami is a round woman.

  A square by any other definition.

  No-nonsense, Pentecostal

  with no patience for her own children most days.

  There are three of us in total.

  Danny, Estrella & Me. I am the youngest.

  My sister Estrella said Mami’s depressed.

  File this under “shit we don’t talk about.”

  Pentecostals, we’re just supposed to pray

  the sadness away.

  ¡Fuera! The pastor demands on prayer night.

  ¡Fuera! I imagine sadness is a bad singer

  being kicked off the show

  by el Chacal on Sábado Gigante.

  Apparently, Jesus & Don Francisco

  can save anything.

  Once during church testimonio,

  Mami gave Jesus mad credit

  for saving her from Papi’s fists. ¡Amén! ¡Aleluya!

  Now, Papi lives in the Bronx with his new wife.

  Estrella uses the payphone

  to collect call him all the time.

  She says Papi is also Christian now

  & that God forgave him

  for beating on Mami & so we should too.

  But Mami’s eyes never close right during prayer service

  & I wonder what kind of God you have to be

  to receive praise from the hands responsible for that.

  HOW WE GOT OUR NAMES

  ESTRELLA

  Estrella was named after another woman

  Papi was cheating on Mami with.

  Nobody says that out loud though. But I can tell

  by the way my sister’s name jumps off of Mami’s tongue

  like one of those side chicks

  on The Ricki Lake Show.

  On my father’s tongue, Estrella matters.

  Her name is a sloooow dance in Brooklyn.

  Her name is a bullet that didn’t kill nobody.

  Her name is the beeper alert that gets a call back.

  Estrella is three years older than me.

  She is sixteen but her body is not.

  She got that it’s not my fault,

  I thought you were older kind of body.

  She is the kind of beautiful

  that dique puts men in danger

  or that makes men want to be dangerous.

  The kind of beautiful Mami always wanted to be.

 

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