Super-Sized Chicana Blog

A capirotada of thoughts, comments, and observations sometimes telenovela style.

Archive for October, 2007

Billy

All day I have been thinking about my childhood friends. I have been wondering what has become of them. I had several good friends when I was a young girl.  All of this reflecting  started with a conversation I had with D. this morning about Billy a boy who I used to hang around with when I was six years old. I would see him just about every Sunday when I would go visit my aunt.  His grandfather was a veteran.  He was a WWI vet.  Around this time, I used to worry about the Russians bombing the hell out of us.  John F. Kennedy was president.  When I was supposed to beore preoccupied or occupied things that pertained to six year old girls, I was more worried about when my father was going to start building a bomb shelter.  I wanted a bomb shelter for my birthday or Christmas; it didn’t matter as long as my father would build one that would house my parents, my brother and my aunt and her drunk woman-chasing husband.  Billy’s grandfather would confirm my fears because he had a pantry full of cans of food, water, and other stuff you would need in case our town got bombed.  He told me that those supplies were for emergencies and a direct hit on our town was one of them. I went home and told my dad this and he just kept reading the newspaper.  After awhile, he looked over the newspaper at me and said, “We are not going to get bombed and I am not building a bomb shelter. If I find out that we are getting bombed, I will go to your school and bring you home. We will all go to Mexico.” I was so relieved to hear that my father had a plan.  Mexico was twenty-four miles away.  That was far enough for me to feel safe. My family’s first language is Spanish, so we would be fine living in Mexico.  The Russians were not going to bomb Mexico.  Then I started worrying about whether or not I could make friends, would I have problems in school, where would we live and other things related to moving to a new place.

I was amazed by my friend because he knew so much about football, baseball, and all sorts of stuff my father never talked about.  It was obvious that Billy spent a lot of time with his father; this was something I never did at the time because my father worked twelve hours a day, six days a week.  He, his grandmother, my aunt, and I would sit under this huge tree and talk about all sorts of things.  I remember the two women treating us as if we were adults.  I never had anyone pay that much attention to what I had to say.  I remember those Sundays fondly.  Later I would find out that these afternoons kept my aunt sane because her husband would be gone for a few days drinking his paycheck away.  I just thought my aunt was very tough and I admired her very much.

Billy and I never had a fight.  I remember being a little jealous because he had met a little girl named Linda on the first day of school. We would talk about toys, horses, and cats.  He would describe his house out in the country and how some day soon he would get a pony.  Back then, I wanted a pony so bad but my chances of getting one were as good as having a bomb shelter built. Billy would tell me that when he got a pony, I could go over to his house and ride it. He would talk about all of the places we could go exploring and how we could take a lunch and water so we could stop somewhere to eat.

The last weekend that I saw him, I remember telling him about my birthday party that I was going to have.  I was just going crazy with excitement because my mom had actually bought invitations, filled them out and delivered them to our neighbors.  I wanted to invite Billy but my mom said that he lived too far away. I had saved an invitation so that he could see it. He liked it very much and said that when he turned seven, he would get some invitations like the one I showed him.

I had a fabulous time on my 7th birthday.  It was on a Wednesday, after school, that I had several of my friends from the neighborhood come over.  My mom bought a  chocolate birthday cake at the supermarket, some paper plates with Barbi on them, sugary concentrate for punch, icing-covered animal cookies, and two half gallons of ice cream.  My aunt had come over to help my mom with the party.  After my party, I went with my father to take my aunt home.  When we arrived to her house, my uncle was standing at the gate in front of their house. I could tell there was something wrong because he never greeted my aunt when she got home from being at our house because either he was too busy reading the newspaper or watching television.  He came up to my dad’s truck and he told us that Billy’s father had been in an accident.  He was a gunner at the army proving ground.  They had been testing some kind of new artillery and it backfired.  In the explosion, Billy’s father along with three other men died.  My uncle had to help my aunt out of the truck because she looked like she was about to faint.  I remember that we left as soon as my aunt made it into her house.  She had left the two pieces of cake she had brought home for my uncle and Billy’s grandparents. I thought maybe I could take their piece of birthday cake to them but I looked over at his grandparents house and I saw that the lights in the house were off and their car was gone. On the way home, I had a bunch of questions about people dying and Billy’s dad for my father, but he just kept looking straight ahead  hardly answering me.  I had never seen him appear so serious.

The Sunday following Billy’s father’s accident, I didn’t go to my aunt’s house. In fact, it was over a month before I went back to visit her.  My father had been spending more time with us on Sundays.  Billy never went back to his grandmother’s house after his father died and my aunt gave me strict instructions not to ask Billy’s grandparents about him or his father. Later, I would learn that his mom didn’t get along with his grandparents and she would not allow Billy or his sisters to go visit them.

I didn’t see Billy until several years later when we were teenagers.  He went to the same school as I did, but we didn’t hang out.  He was in a gang and I was a total nerd. Billy and I would sneak glances at each other and kind of signal a “Hi” to each other.  Several years later, I found out that he was in the sheriff’s department.  I wish the best for him.

Here I am again…

It has been a busy, busy week.  But that is good.  I have been dieting to some extent.  I decided to cut down half of what I eat.  I checked out some websites on exercise and diet.  I had originally planned to follow a website’s diet plan, but I have decided not to because I didn’t like the recipe’s that were recommended for the diet.  I need meals that I can prepare in thirty minutes to an hour.  I eat simple foods and I like spices but do not like haute cuisine sauces etc.  Elegance in regards to food is nice when I am dieting but convenience is better and more effective.  I enjoy cooking a lot, but I really don’t have much time for it when I am working.  During the weekend, I can prepare some time-consuming dishes.  I have been culling some recipes for magazines which feature light meals and also, the Epicurious website has a wonderful section on light recipes.  I am excited about preparing these.

I have been taking Wellbutrin for depression.  As I had mentioned in another post, my mother passed away and it has been tough dealing with grief.  I like the effects of this medication.  One of them is that I have been able to eat less.  Apparently, it is a med that is good for quiting smoking, or obsessions.  For me, I am obsessed with eating.  I eat when I am stressed, happy, depressed, bored, lonely, socializing.  Also, I will eat when I am working on a project.  This is the most dangerous type of eating because I will be totally mindless about what I put into my mouth.

I have lost 19 pounds in a haphazard way.  By haphazard, I mean skipping meals, eating ice cream for dinner, and  junk food.  But I was counting calories and fat grams. I started cutting back on my food intake in August. I have lost this weight in six weeks.  It is making a big difference.  My knees do not hurt and I do not get sleepy.  My sleep apnea has reduced significantly.  I have 81 pounds to go.  My starting weight was 268.  That was tough to admit on this blog, but even tougher to accept when I saw the numbers on the scale at my physician’s office.  Thank God, I have a wonderful doctor and her nurse is an angel.

I decided that I will take this diet one step at a time.  And I have made a list of things I will do.

 1.  Exercise twenty minutes every day and work up to an hour five days a week.

  2.  Not condemn myself if I miss a day of exercising or if I overeat.

  3.  Will not call this a diet, instead it is a change of lifestyle.

  4.  Decide that all foods are bad, instead that I can make good choices

        regarding food.

  5.  Drink as much water as possible.

  6. Have a glass of wine a day.

  7.  Take breaks from projects every hour. (Before, I would sit until I finished)

 8.   Remember that this process is going to take time.

On Columbus Day

I didn’t realize that today Columbus Day is being celebrated until I read the newspaper. I thought it would be next Monday when people got time off in honor of this sin vergüenza.  Although he is considered a hero to some, he is a shameless man because in his letter to Luis Santangel, the treasurer of Spain, he embellishes what he sees so he can get more money for more expeditions.  In this same letter he describes how the Indians that “he found” on the island could be enslaved.  Instead of Columbus Day, some Latinos celebrate “Día de la Raza”  which makes waaaay more sense.  Dia de la Raza in Spanish means The Day of the People.

Thinking about Columbus day, has taken me back to forty-four years ago when I was first grade.  We used to celebrate Columbus Day.  “In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue.” lalalalala. My grade school teachers would go on and on about how CC sailed across the Atlantic and he discovered America.  Also, he met some very nice indigenous peoples. Back then, way way before the era of political correctness, the word indian was used instead of indigenous. We kids would get so happy that we were assigned to draw ugly little pictures of the three ships, la Nina, la Pinta, la Santa María.  With a crayon in my fist, I would scrawl the three galeons plus a little figure who was supposed to be Columbus; He would be on the first boat because he was the very brave man who decided to take this trip. Being a first grader who loved school,   it was exciting for me to learn who actually discovered America. It almost made me crazy to find out that in November we would get to learn about the Pilgrims on Plymouth Rock and how they had a big big banquet with the Indians. The Pilgrims were responsible for Thanksgiving Day! I had not clue what Thanksgiving Day was about since I came from a Mexican family that didn’t celebrate this holiday. My older brother must have kept this information to himself and didn’t share it with my parents or me. Go figure, maybe he didn’t like turkey and all the trimmings.  Anyway, I was incredibly happy because I would get learn more about the people who “were here first.” In my six year old way of looking at things, people who were first at something had to be some kind of badasses. That is how the Columbus and the Pilgrims were to me.  There was no words spoken about Columbus almost being thrown overboard because his crew was fed up with him nor how the Pilgrims starving to death, just that they just had a very tough winter and the friendly Indians helped them.

Our teachers left out some very important information or maybe they just had no clue, or they were just teaching us the bit that they knew about CC’s landing by mistake on some little islands west of the United States.

I believed this version of history and felt kind of awkward at how I could not make a connection with this.  I thought, ”I am a US citizen, but I don’t fit into this history.  When I learned about how the Spaniards got to Arizona and the rest of the Southwest, this started to make a bit more sense.  I go home and ask my parents if we were  Spanish or Indians and my mom and dad look at each other, then turn to me and say “NO!”  in unison. But you are an Indan because you were born in Arizona.  Then, they would laugh as if it were some private joke between themselves. This just made me believe that I was not part of the family, but I didn’t care because I just loved to see Native Americans on television with head-dresses, wearing clothes made from buckskin, and riding on pinto horses. Little did I know then about misrepresentation of underrepresented groups in Hollywood.  But, I had finally made a connection with US history. This lasted for a year, until a girlfriend who is Quechan informed me that I was not an Indian, but a Mexican. I kept believing , to myself, that I was Native American and would read all the childrens’ books about Native Americans that I could. Little Blue Cornflower which was a story about a little Pueblo girl was my favorite.

Flash forward to 1992. After my divorce, I had gone back to college and enrolled in several courses in Mexican American history.  I was appalled at the one-sided version of history that had been taught to students. I remember being so angry at learning the true history of the colonization of indigenous America. The words colonial, colonies, colonizers, took a whole new violent meaning. I was so pissed off, but my anger wasn’t really directed at anyone because the men and women responsible for the upheaval of the Americas  died a long  time ago.  I felt like I was in first grade again, but this time, I had another version of history with which to deal.

On October 12, 1992 marked the 500th anniversary of Columbus bumping into indigenous America. This would initiate the violent envangelization of the people who were first here and the beginning of the hostile takeover of lands that actually belonged to someone else.  That day, students held a protest at the university I attended.  I joined them and it was exciting to hear speeches and chants. I felt that in a figurative way my anger was justified and the missing piece of my identity was found. This symbolized a circle for me from being a little kid excited because Columbus landed in America to a very angry Chicana protesting CC’s arrival to a world as old as what supposedly was uncivilized according to the European perspective.

 I choose to celebrate this day as Dia de la Raza. It is appropriate in the sense that symbolically this day commemorates the beginning of the blending of Indigenous and European blood and thus, initiating a new race of people.  As a result, several cultures, ethnic groups, registers of Spanish, and rich traditions emerge from this blend and this is very worthy of a celebration. Columbus Day? For us whose ethnicity originates from the union of Native American and Spanish blood, let’s not celebrate this day but remember to celebrate our day, “El Día de la Raza.”

Sunday!

I am not going to blah, blah,blah, about how boring my Sunday is turning out. It’ll get better because I will be meeting my boyfriend, partner or whatever you call that man who occupies part of your house, later today. Life companion would be suitable…when you are fifty years old like I am, what do you call them?  Boyfriend sounds like someone half my age. I  use the word partner and people ask if I am in business with someone or if I am a lesbian.

We will be watching a football game at a local bar because our satellite dish is still laying abandoned out in our backyard. No we are not hillbillies, well D. my male unit is kind of one.  I guess we are just waiting for the dish to find it’s way up on the roof again. D.’s house got re-roofed and the dish didn’t get re-installed.  So, after D. finishes Halo 3, maybe he will find time to call the satellite people to come and install it.  He is 52 years old and gaming is one of his hobbies. Fifty-two is a bit mature for playing video games, but our society is going through a craze in which D. got caught-up. I prefer him having this hobby because I decided that this would be better than having to put up with a mujeriego; a man who chases women.  Not that he has ever been like that but this video stuff will keep him at home.  It’s either this or football when the television channels are available. D. is stuck on a certain stage of the game because he keeps confusing the  good and bad non-human life forms and running out of ammo because he engages in friendly fire too much. When he gets his butt blown out of the water, D. has to start over again from the last checkpoint.  Hell, I have been watching D. play too much of this. I’m not interested in playing because I tried one time and I got dizzy plus my stomach got very upset.  Stuff on the screen moved around too much. All that movement just made me sick. Fortunately, D. games sporadically, he is not hardcore…well only when he gets a new game. I am glad that it will be a long time before a new version of Halo comes out.

  We have been TV free for almost three months. In a way it has been nice because I have time to do other things, but I am starting to miss my Mexican soap operas.  People get caught up in all of the sizzling drama.  They start to talk about characters as if they are a relative or a neighbor.  My mom’s friend used to cry at the end because usually the couple that had been kept apart for the entire telenovela was getting married.  She was not only bawling her eyes out because of the wedding but because she would never see them again. They would go off into an imaginary perfect life without villains, rich in-laws, and jealous boyfriends and girlfriends.

 For now, until the tele gets fixed…I will settle for local channels, reality TV, shows about big people like me losing weight, and sports. I think D. will finish the game tonight.  I am keeping my fingers crossed that he does not decide to go up to the hero or legendary level of Halo 3 because his butt will be grafted to the sofa for another week.