Dos Corazones: After Papo Colo
My second heart got an email
about My First Heart at The Museum of Modern Art.
My first heart tells my second heart
that now is her chance to say something important,
Something for the archives about who she is.
About who her mother never got to be.
My second heart immediately gets to work
on the administrative portion and compiles a list
of possible exhibition titles.
Proud Diasporican. Diasporican Gang.
Lonely Diasporican. Diasporican in Distress.
My first heart is always Diasporican
but never quite knows how to feel about it.
My first heart doesn’t trust museums,
she heard they be stealing people’s hearts.
My second heart tells my first heart that things are different now.
These days they ask the heart for permission.
It’s for educational purposes only.
My first heart tells my second heart she isn’t anybody’s teacher.
She’s still trying to learn her own history.
That’s why my first heart became an anthropologist
and found out she was a rare artifact.
I’m talking wild vintage and shit.
Records trace her back all the way to 1898
but my first heart says that’s bullshit.
My first heart has a memory long as a Yuca root
and she demands you acknowledge that she existed way before that.
My first heart is a complicated machine
that breaks down in multiple languages.
My first heart knows Spanish is a colonized tongue
so she doesn’t feel bad about speaking it terribly.
My first heart knows English is a colonized tongue,
so, for fun, my first heart pisses off strangers by telling them
“In America, we speak Spanglish.”
My first heart knows where she is from
but still asks Puerto Rico for forgiveness for being born in Brooklyn.
My first heart knows where she is from
but still asks Brooklyn for forgiveness for moving to New Jersey.
My first heart can’t afford the rent anywhere,
so my first heart finds home wherever Boricuas are.
Wherever Boricuas have had to be.
My first heart has a plan to birth Boricuas on the moon.
My first heart has big dreams
that involve an avocado tree,
a 15-piece orchestra
and an aluminum tray full of relleno de papa.
My first heart doesn’t tell my second heart
about any of these plans because my second heart
is too busy trying to make it as a poet in America.