A Dream in the Ashes
gibel andrea amador
I wonder when her light flickered,
when her ideas were so grand—
light bulbs bursting,
and now I walk on that broken glass.
I wonder when the lights dimmed.
Was it your parents, my father, or your role as a mother
that told you not to dream?
When did thoughts become suppressed, swept away?
Was it too unbearable,
the mind forced to forget?
That thick aroma of Fabulosa
so many Hispanic children remember
slowly replaced by the smell of the unkept.
I played with my toys, wondering when you would wake up.
Sometimes not until night,
then it was my turn to dream.
I close my eyes, wondering:
Is this what you see, Mom?
A world where women can dream?
Is this hell disguised as sanctuary,
locking us away from surfacing?
You can’t swim to the bottom
and not expect to gasp for air.
We were born to walk on this land,
to forget about this asylum of dreams.
Mom, breathe, I beg of you.
I awake to see my mom cooking.
A small flame on the stove keeps our food warm,
but my mom’s dreams
will always
remain
cold.
Aliah Candia es estudiante en su último año en la Universidad de Texas en El Paso. Estudiando Escritura Creativa, ha publicado dos poemas en la revista creativa Windward Review 2022 de la Universidad Texas A&M y presenta el Writer's Theatre en Aaron and George's Film Cafe cada último sábado del mes. Como cronista, Aliah se inspira en sus emociones y curiosidad por la vida, el amor y el anhelo por su pasado.


