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Archive for March 18th, 2010

Salma’s Wants Clean Bowels

11:43 am By la Macha · salma · 3 Comments

18 Mar 2010

My Salmita is apparently starting a new food “diet” collection–operating under the belief that your kidney’s and liver are not good enough “cleaners” of the body, her food line will act as the ultimate cleanser:

Her product, Cooler Cleanse, comes in 5 gut-busting flavors — a green juice, a grapefruit mint, a red juice with beets and apples, young coconut water, and nut milk sweetened with dates.

Salma had us at “hydraulic” — problem is … the diet will run you $58 a day.

Mmmhm. My advice to you? Eat an 50 cent orange while admiring a picture of Salma on the internet. It’s what I am doing. :D

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Hm. I’m not sure how I feel about this–it is a contest for a US citizen to go to Mexico and write poetry. I’ve participated in writing retreats like this before, and I often find them to be reliant on the “exotic” tropes that often define US traveler’s experiences (i.e. Spend all your time in hotels! Drink lots of alcohol! Ignore the starving people who aren’t allowed to access the beach you’re on! etc). But at the same time, I think that this might be a really great opportunity for somebody of Mexican descent who can’t otherwise afford to “go back home.”

So do with it what you will. ANd if you win, let us know!

U.S. Poets in Mexico has announced its 2nd annual Mérida Fellowship Award. This award is given annually to one American poet (over 18 years of age) to participate in U.S. Poets in Mexico workshops with tuition and registration fees paid, a hotel room for the week, two day trips, and optional Spanish lessons.

To enter the contest, send 4-6 poems, no more than 6 pages in total, 12 pt. Times New Roman type. Do not put your name or address on submitted poems. Previously published poems will be accepted. Contest submissions will not be returned. Enclose your poems, a check for $25 (entry fee) and the Application. If you are only entering the Mérida Fellowship Award contest and not attending workshops, please check the appropriate box on the Application so that you will not receive email asking for registration and tuition fees.

Mail to:
U.S. Poets in Mexico
P.O. Box 4150
Grand Central Station
New York, NY 10163

Deadline: October 15, 2010
Winner annouced: November 1, 2010
Judge: Maureen Owen

E-mail questions to: uspoetsinmexico@verizon.net

More details available at: http://www.uspoetsinmexico.org/33.html

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The 2010 Census has appeared in my hood and when I say it has appeared in my hood I mean it. There are posters, billboards, flyers and stickers in English and in Spanish encouraging my vecinos and me to fill out the form. The 74th Roosevelt Ave subway station is lined with psa’s, as you can see by the picture attached.

My own census form arrived on Tuesday and so did my my mom’s. Last night I helped her fill it out and cringed a little when she got to the question on Latinidad (on the form it says “Hispanic Origin”) followed by race. As exemplified by the conversation after Bianca’s post on claiming Afro-Latinidad, many Latinos struggle with the concepts of race as they play out in the United States. For example, my mother and sister blame me and the way I filled out the 2000 Census for the visit by a census worker.

I don’t claim Afro-Latinidad, as that hasn’t been my personal identity experience growing up to now but I also don’t claim whiteness, as my experiences do not reflect that reality either. Rather, as a Puerto Rican I identify as mixed race, including “white” Spanish colonial roots, African roots, and Indigenous. So, I check off all three. For my older daughter, I write in Mapuche for tribal affiliation. My younger daughter, a ChileRican gets the same check marks that I do.

My mother is horrified by this. She checked off Puerto Rican and white for herself and my sister, without asking my sister how she identifies racially. This doesn’t surprise me but it makes me sad. When I was a child, the aunt that raised my mother would pull out old Puerto Rican history books and point to conquistadors with my same last name. As a middle schooler, I identified as “Spanish”, denying my Rican roots. So this is a common narrative that has been passed on in my family, a narrative that shifted directions with me through my own process of politicization. The narrative my children are growing up with is complicated but clear in it’s complexity of not denying any part of our real history.

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Hola!

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