My Mother, Who Cannot Cook
There’s no culture in the small towns.
None in the big cities either.
Not for the girl with light skin and light eyes.
It was always boxed dinners:
Mother’s microwaved finest.
Or the next trendy recipe
From 50 new ways to eat an avocado.
She never taught me how to cook, because
She doesn’t know how.
And my dad
He never taught me about God.
It was a broken family.
The kind that shines on the outside
But rots away underneath the polish.
Dreams confined to that of bachelor’s degrees
And mortgage payments.
We’ve forgotten, where we come from.
The stories that make our blood rich,
The colour, that fills our homes with love.
We are a lost people.
Grabbing at our past
Looking desperately through traditions
For warmth in the cold emptiness of what we once
So willingly sold away.
We want
Ancestors
Tales passed down
Spices in the food
But it all tastes like nothing, blended together.