{for the D.A.C.A. DREAMers and all our nation’s immigrants}
. . . my veins don’t end in me
but in the unanimous blood
of those who struggle for life . . .
. . . mis venas no terminan en mí
sino en la sangre unánime
de los que luchan por la vida. . .
—ROQUE DALTON, Como tú
Como tú, I question history’s blur in my eyes
each time I face a mirror. Like a mirror, I gaze
into my palm a wrinkled map I still can’t read,
my lifeline an unnamed road I can’t find, can’t
trace back to the fork in my parents’ trek
that cradled me here. Como tú, I woke up to
this dream of a country I didn’t choose, that
didn’t choose me—trapped in the nightmare
of its hateful glares. Como tú, I’m also from
the lakes and farms, waterfalls and prairies
of another country I can’t fully claim either.
Como tú, I am either a mirage living among
these faces and streets that raised me here,
or I’m nothing, a memory forgotten by all
I was taken from and can’t return to again.
Like memory, at times I wish I could erase
the music of my name in Spanish, at times
I cherish it, and despise my other syllables
clashing in English. Como tú, I want to speak
of myself in two languages at once. Despite
my tongues, no word defines me. Like words,
I read my footprints like my past, erased by
waves of circumstance, my future uncertain
as wind. Like the wind, como tú, I carry songs,
howls, whispers, thunder’s growl. Like thunder,
I’m a foreign-borne cloud that’s drifted here,
I’m lightning, and the balm of rain. Como tú,
our blood rains for the dirty thirst of this land.
Like thirst, like hunger, we ache with the need
to save ourselves, and our country from itself.
Richard Blanco (b. 1968) b. Madrid, Spain, and raised in Miami, the son of Cuban exiles. Earned a BS in Civil Engineering and an MFA in Creative Writing from Florida International University. Publications include the poetry collections City of a Hundred Fires (1998), Directions to the Beach of the Dead (2005), Looking for the Gulf Motel (2012), How to Love a Country (2019), Homeland of My Body: New and Selected Poems (2023), as well as a memoir, The Prince of Los Cocuyos: A Miami Childhood (2014). He read his poem “One Today” at the inauguration for President Barack Obama’s second term in 2013. On August 14, 2015, he read his poem “Matters of the Sea/Cosas del mar” at the reopening ceremony for the United States Embassy in Havana. Appointed the first Poet Laureate of Miami-Dade County in 2022. Currently associate professor at Florida International University and education ambassador for the Academy of American Poets.