Olga García Echeverría
It’s Sunday, crack of dawn, and I have a crisis. I can’t post the blog I wrote the night before. My finicky Internet at home isn’t working again. I pack my writing gear and venture out in search of free Wi-Fi. I visit one, then two downtown cafes. I drink strong coffee and eat buttery croissants, but when I try the Web, all I get is Unable to Connect. Unable to Connect. Unable to Connect. Later, Office Depot confirms my worst fear—computer virus.
Finding a computer work station on a Sunday morning proves
challenging. Libraries are closed. Friends are sleeping. Kinko’s doesn’t open
till noon. I text my brother, my computer guru and guardian angel, but he’s out
of town. Bummer.
Moreno’s Dollar Plus in Boyle Heights is my girlfriend
Maritza’s idea. She’s been there before and recalls several computers for
public use. Blogging at the Dollar Plus? Vamonos, why not?
Mario Moreno, the owner of the Dollar Plus, is standing at
the counter when we enter. On several shelves behind him are Band-Aids, bottles of body lotion, deodorant, Colgate. A plush brown teddy bear
dangles from a red ribbon. On the wall between
the shelves: computer cables, headphones, batteries, razor blades, an array of electronic gadgets. This is the good stuff at the Dollar Plus.
Mario is dark-skinned with a mustache, broad shouldered,
wearing a baby-blue dress shirt and black slacks. He’s a 40-something-year-old reformed
homeboy who used to do drugs and steal purses from vulnerable viejitas, he
confesses later, but thanks to Jehovah, now he’s here.
The Dollar Plus in Boyle Heights smells just like it sounds.
Like dollar plus items. Like something new and something old. Like plastic
doused in labor exploitation. Like musty moth balls and lead elixir. The white
linoleum is clean, but it’s full of thin zigzagging cracks that look like fault
lines and borders on a huge map. The fluorescent lights fall harsh against the
room and everything looks brighter than it should be. I regret not bringing my sunglasses.
Near the entrance of The Dollar Plus are a few small, fold-out
tables with three computers, the old-school, bulky dinosaurs that I remember
from the 90’s. But who cares, they have Word and Internet access. $2 la hora, Mario says proudly. I’m
sold.
When I pull up one of the nearby aluminum folding chair,
Mario rushes over, rolling out a torn pleather chair on wheels. Use this one, he insists. Luxury in Boyle Heights, my girlfriend jokes.
Ghetto Heights, corrects Mario, and
we all laugh. Good times at The Dollar Plus.
I get to work. My blog is already written. I just have to
transfer data and pictures. It should be a breeze. But the dinosaurs are
sluggish. The mouse has a mind of its own. My flashdrive won’t open. I switch
computers several times. The screens freeze.
Mario fidgets with the plugs and restarts the computers
several times. Maritza paces the aisles, yawning. I rub my sleepy eyes and scan
the signage on the windows in front of me. Between the neon-yellow ATM sign and
the red Digicel ad is Jehovah. Jehovah, I
am Lord. Jehovah, Dios Todopoderosos. He looks dreamy in the posters.
Light-skinned, long-haired and bearded, like a White hippy from the 70’s. In
one picture, he’s wearing a silky white robe, sitting in lush-green nature by a
stream, stretching out an arm as if welcoming us all to paradise. Only I hear
that this Jehovah sneers at queers. I sneer back, thinking, How could any God not love a queer? Shame on you, Jehovah.
A customer waltzes in and greets Mario as hermano. To which Mario responds, Buenos dias, hermano. Another customer
follows. Buenos dias, hermana. Everyone
who comes into the store appears to be a Witness. Surrounded by Jehovah images
and Witnesses, I can’t help but think of Doug, my friend Liz’s husband, who
calls Jehovah Witnesses Testículos de Jehovah instead of Testigos de Jehovah. Spanish
is his second language. Los Testículos de
Jehovah came knocking on my door.
I think also of Joy Castro and her two works I recently
read, Island of Bones, a collection
of poetic essays on identity, and her memoir The Truth Book, where she exposes the hypocrisy and the abuses she
experienced at the hands of her Jehovah Witness family. Aside from being great
reads, Castro’s books taught me two Jehovah Witnesses words I’ll never forget:
1. Defellowshipped. He
was defellowshipped for smoking cigarettes. He was defellowshipped for adultery.
2. Apostate. I’m an
apostate. She’s an apostate.
An apostate, explains Castro, is a person who has been
exposed to the Jehovah Witness truth and has consciously rejected it. Both
those who have been defellowshipped and those who are apostates are shunned by
Jehovah Witnesses, the latter being the more terrible of the two. If Mario or
any of these JWs starts preaching, I think defensively, I’ll stop them in their
tracks. Thank you, but I’m an apostate.
I’ve been defellowshipped. They’ll have no choice but to shun me.
Finally, the Google bar appears. Yay! I clap. Mario smiles
triumphantly and hands over the keyboard, returning to his checkout counter, where
a few hermanos y hermanas are lining up. I insert my flashdrive and copy my
blog, ready to bust out my post in 10 minutes. That’s all I have needed for the
past 10 hours. 10 minutes!
But it’s no use. The Blogging Universe seems to be
conspiring against me today. Every time I try to paste the blog into Blogspot,
I get thrown off the Net and I have to start all over again. I look up to see Jehovah staring at
me. Is he punishing me for the Testículo or apostate thing? Sorry Jehovah, I think. I was just kidding. And then out of
desperation, Andale, no seas gacho, help
out a queer here. Pretty please. He
shuns me. After what seems like 100 failed attempts to post my blog, I give up.
An aborted blog is a terrible, terrible thing. One feels
like a complete failure. All seems empty and bleak. At the counter, as I’m fishing
out my quarters, Mario says, No, no, motioning
with his hands that I don’t need to pay. He seems just as disappointed as me that
his computers have failed. Ay, disculpa,
he says. Dejected, I shrug. I believe in nothing.
What were you trying
to finish? He asks. I sigh, telling him about La Bloga and what we bloggers
do on a regular basis. Yes, for free. I tell him about the current blog I
cannot post, the one on Weaving Words,
Creating Worlds, the writing workshop series that celebrated Women’s History
Month by way of offering mujeres the opportunity to write and create poetry
chapbooks. He nods sympathetically as I speak. I want to tell him about the
poem Big Fat Pussy Girl that we read
in one of our sessions and how it inspired several women to write about their
panochas, but the Jehovahs on the walls stop me.
It’s an offer I can’t resist. I balance the keyboard, reach
my arm over to grab the mouse, drag, click, and boom! I’m on the Internet. Wow,
how simple the online world is when it’s functioning. I quickly cut and paste.
I upload pictures. It’s moving, it’s moving, but it isn’t perfect. The inserted
pictures go berserk and make a jumbled soup of the surrounding text. The links
I’ve copied onto the story are, for some unknown reason, dead. Click y nada. 10
minutes quickly turns into 20, then 30.
As I work, I hear Mario dishing out the JW gospel to
Maritza. The moment I’ve been fearing has arrived. I have to speed it up. Maritza’s
not one to shy away from a discussion or debate. She’ll listen to what someone
has to say and then dissect and argue with precision, rarely holding back her
tongue. It’s one of her strengths, for sure, but right here, right now, I dread her
getting into a religious match with Mario. She’s a queer pagan with an attitude
and he’s a straight Witness with a cause. This could get ugly.
But it doesn’t turn out like that at all. Maritza listens
but does not debate. That’s how much I
love you, she says later. In the absence of debate, Mario opens up and bears testimony to what he's lived. He was born poor in Juarez, Chihuahua. His
father was an abusive alcoholic who spent all his earnings on
booze. Feeling lost and loveless, Mario started sniffing glue at the age of 9. An
ex-crack and cocaine addict for twenty years, Jehovah saved him one day, gave
him a second chance. If it weren’t for Jehovah he’d be dead from drugs or a bullet hole, he's sure. He was
born again through Jehovah, Mario says. I'm not religious, but his story
touches me. I think of my nephew Sergio in a state penitentiary, how his
addiction got him there, and my heart cracks like a huevo in my chest. I want
to blog about him, my lost nephew and the Prison Industrial Complex that houses
so many of our Black and Brown hermanos. It’s a world shut away from the public eye, where
the shunned go. We have tried to reach my nephew through the years, at times the
pull of drugs and the streets seemingly stronger than our love. If Jehovah or
any god could reach him, I would say thank you. I momentarily feel bad about
making fun of Mario’s religion.
And that’s when I see them--two baby roaches on Mario’s
computer. They’re crawling slowly on the screen, all over my blog, their little
antennas swaying back and forth. Are they waving? Maybe I should be grossed
out, but I find their presence fitting. I grew up battling roaches. We go way
back, las cucas and me. Despite my repulsion for them, I fell in love with
Kafka the first time I read the Metamorphosis. In El Paso, Texas, while getting
my MFA in Creative Writing, flying roaches followed me around, tortured me.
They were my trauma and my muse, always finding ways to crawl into my poems and
stories.
The tiny roaches seem to be applauding their antennas when I
hit “Publish” on the blog. And then I realize here’s the story I really need and want to write. The one about how
blogging is an adventure, each blog a journey of its own. How don’t judge a book by its cover is a
lesson I’m still learning. Jehovah
Witnesses in Ghetto Heights can be cool, esa. The Dollar Plus can save the day.
Tiny roaches on the screen can be metaphors. Blogging isn’t glamorous, after
all. There’s no glory here. Sometimes the words we blog strike a cord and we get
a pulse--someone leaves a comment--that’s gold. But in the end, the blogger
blogs to simply blog. To share a story. To review a book. To discuss an issue.
To explore a question. To rant. To promote. To protest. For love of words. Always for the
love of words. Sometimes it is a joy. Other times, though, it can be a pain.
Imagine La Llorona as a blogger. Ay, mi
bloga, mi bloga. Tengo que escribir
mi bloga. It can be like that sometimes too. Yet, a blogger blogs along. Because
blogging is a force that forces creation and release, creation and release, creation
and release. Like a ritual. Like a discipline. Be it beautiful
or mediocre or full of flaws, we hit “Publish” and set the blogas free. ¡Adios bloga, ojalá que te vaya bonito!
I laughed and laughed.
ReplyDeleteOrale Olga! Your blog is a wonderful philosophical meditation on interminable "waiting," el Jehovah, Joy Castro, nosotras queers, las cucas, and the supreme razón en el "porque" we write blogs. And you impart these words so beautifully. Gracias hermana.
ReplyDeleteI laughed and my heart beat like the rattatating of a keyboard. Engrossed, entertained and uplifted. Luv it! Adriana
ReplyDeleteNice! Thanks Olga! A great read! :)
ReplyDeleteAy Olga! I loved it.
ReplyDeleteWonderful, Olga!
ReplyDeleteLoved your Blog!
ReplyDeleteLove your words, your insight, your heart. Muchisimas gracias on this anniversary morning of mine. A gift like no others. Amor.
ReplyDeleteLoved it! I just tweeted your blog post.
ReplyDeletethanks for the laughs Olga! i needed that. great blog. where else but ghetto heights do jw's, cucas, y la bloga come together?
ReplyDeleteAn example of clear passionate dedication. Your words, your words. Thank you for taking us on your Sunday mission for the love of words with patience and consideration.
ReplyDeleteFinally, who doesn't love a good Dollar Plus or even Tree story. They fill all my Composition Book needs.
Thank you for your Blog adventure and tender insights.
Blessings,
Diana
Olga, You make me want to blog again! I love your adventures and love you even more for taking us with you. You pack so much depth, and insight in to your column. My heart also cracked like a huevo. You are brilliant. always.
ReplyDeleteLiz
Beautifully written. Thank you for sharing your words and your adventure!
ReplyDeleteThis was excelente, Olga.
ReplyDeleteMay the flying cucarachas force always be with you.
RudyG
Gold! Gold! Gold! Thank you for reading and for all your wonderful comments.
ReplyDeleteOlga, you are so funny!!! Thank you for your uplifting humor, inspiring social commentary, and awesome writing!!!
ReplyDeletei'm waiting for the blog book you're writing, eh? what a funny and telling piece about the life of a blogger...so enjoyed this!
ReplyDelete