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Mexico
Five years old,
 I jumped off a bus in Mexico
 and never looked back.
 
 I could say “thank you,”
 and “tea and a hot dog, please,”
 and that was all I needed.
 
 I made friends with the quetzals
 and listened to the iguanas’ secrets
 while we were buried deep in the dark
 of the pyramids of Chicken Pizza.
 
 I bought belts and wooden turtles
 from the dirty-faced children
 who held them out to me
 without asking “kooanto kwesta?”
 
 They took me with them to a lady
 who kept treasure in the folds of her skin
 and fed me sweets made of caramel
 and the stickiest words I’d ever heard.
 
 I wove dresses from her stories
 while she braided sunlight into my hair.
 Days lost meaning, and minutes stretched
 to fill in all of the gaps.
 
 Then I got on another bus,
 but the doors wouldn’t open this time,
 wouldn’t let me back out
 to where I belonged
 
 until the sunlight came out of my hair,
 until the words unstuck themselves,
 until I gave back the turtles,
 
 until the secrets of the iguanas
 were no more than a whispered code
 that I couldn’t remember.

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