Hard to believe now,
but when I was a child
I spoke more
of my mom’s Italian
than English, knew
all the Russian she knew,
and could mix it with
my dad’s sprinkling
of Korean, Chinese,
German, and Apache
as needed.
I lost them all
in elementary school
where they made me
an English-only exclusive
and it worked so well that
when I got to high school,
as hard as I worked,
I could not get past Mr. Albert
and junior year French.
Never made it out of
the replacement Spanish class,
either. What little
of each language I can recall
still tangle in my mouth
when I try to use them
just to pronounce names
of people and places.
I’m as monolingual
(and thus as all-American)
as all get out,
one ossified adult
turned to stone
in the coils of
a colonizer’s words,
sentenced to
their sentences,
wondering who the hell
that kid was
who once moved
so well
among his given languages
that he felt at home
in the fullness of the world,
wondering if all the poems
he’s read and written
and spoken since
were just keys stolen
from the warden
to be tried in every lock
until he and his tongue
once again
got free.

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