Mortgaged Grinch – A Poem

All the bankers & granters loved sending bills out a whole lot
But the Hugo of Hugoville most certainly did not!
He hated all the envelopes specially at near Christmas Season!
Be sure to not ask why cause y’all know the reason.
Every turn at his ledger a reminder of how the budget was tight
so every turn to the mail box often kept him up all night.
The bills they kept coming from far, from the front and the side
They came from the company that used to be Countrywide.
The bill for Insurance
The bill from the Mechanic
The bill from the Doctor
who’d warn us not to panic.
The bill for the REALTOR dues
The bill from the house lights
The bill from the Optometrist
for the kid with questionable eye sights.
The bill for the house Taxes
The bill for iTunes
The bill from FarmFreshtoYou
they delivered us prunes.
The bill for the dogs
well actually their vet
The bill for the Violin rental
the boy hasn’t touched yet.
Bill from all places
they sent them in kind.
Even Victoria’s Secret
Though that I don’t mind.
So the kids may forgo some holiday squeals
cause we may have to forgo gifting them fancy wheels.
No floofloovers, no tartookas.
No whohoopers. No gardookas.
No trumtookas. No slooslunkas.
No blumbloopas. No whowonkas.
But don’t you despair, don’t sad-smiley face, don’t plead
The Hugo of Hugoville is quite smart indeed.
He may not like bill notes this time of year
but reserves are a plenty so we’re in the clear.
This holiday is much grand it always out-stands me
Next Torres Christmas may be brought to you by GoFundMe
.
So welcome Christmas may it bring you much cheer,

Merriment to you all the far and the near.

A Mighty Query

To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under an understanding….And hence the side eye looks my other half and I share as our kids turn ever older. 
Should we delineate? We then thus pivot towards an auld lang syne when one subscribed to an elder rotund Elf? I couldn’t, shouldn’t, wouldn’t rob him of the fantasy. Or is the time now? 
I use coded intricacy in language to mask my query. I trust other parent folk to get my meaning and share their sentiment wisely!

Christmas Gift

I rose….EXCITED. The morning finally came and I was ready for the result of the very very long wait. No…I wasn’t looking for present from Santa (though totally real) I was adjusting my eyes to the light so I could see my kiddos discover the gifts that arrived magically through the night. 
And that buenos amigos may be the best gift of all.

Eye Contact

It had been a tiring two months and at times it seemed as if every third day or so we’d made the drive to the hospital on unassuming Beverly Boulevard in Montebello and rush up to the floor where my father laid in bed after his very last episode at home.

Every time the phone rang during those weeks a rush of sensations would shoot like a bolt of lighting down my back. Why my mother’s number appeared on the tiny grayish screen of my phone I always wondered for half a second if it had finally happened. After the first four or five calls and hurried trips the calls started to become a nuisance and took a back seat to a few other pressing matters before me.

The holidays were now soon just before us. My wife and I were expecting our first child. The economy was quickly beginning to show the signs of a radical change. Things were moving in all sorts of different directions and now my father’s possible demise was becoming just “another issue to deal with”.

Our near identical temperament had kept us away for many years. Soon after my 15th birthday my father and I had quietly come to the understanding that we were not mean to be friends. At least, not for a long while. He had many demons. The alcohol, the rabid temper, his need for women other than my mother. I felt short of his ideal for a son. I was too sensitive, meek to the world and shied away from verbal or physical confrontations.

Things did not get better as I aged. My college years expanded my range of questions and I felt his frustration when he had to admit a lack of answers. He was an intelligent man who had not been well educated. He was proud of his son’s achievements but was troubled to see him pulling away. Fights and threats were frequent. I think I felt his fists on my chin, shoulders and ribs more during those times.

Then I met someone special. Someone different than the usual young ladies they had learned about throughout my first eight quarters of college. The woman I met was spirited, rational, traveled and no-nonsense. She sparked the idea of a life outside of our university and the real life tools we’d need to begin it. My time with her was magical but as we became closer life at home deteriorated at a quicker pace.

By the time the decision was made to move in together, my father and I hardly spoke. On the day I left for home and just before he closed the door behind me I heard his sendoff. “Good look to you and your whore. You are never welcomed here again.”

I made a life with Nicole. We continued to date, we struggled together, we built careers, we almost broke apart, we figured it out, we bought our first home, we planned our wedding and eventually announced that we had created a new life. The process took years of course and in that time, while my life progressed in leaps and bounds, the relationship with my father only moved in the smallest of positive increments.

It was with this history that my father and I met on that cloudy December day. The night before, I was informed by the nursing staff, he had lost the ability to speak and his weakness prevented movement. The man was trapped within his own body. My sisters and mother waited in the hall. They were exhausted, eyes red, shoulders slumped, clothes rumpled. They were also at odds with one another. Two thought he should continue fighting while one ambivalently argued that he needed to go and end the suffering.

I was briefed with options as his next of kin and the only person legally capable of deciding.

His hospital room was surprisingly well lit. He was laying on the bed nearly flat, a white thin blanket shrouded his body and his legs were apart some. It was in this moment that I came to understand how much his body had wasted away. The hulk of a man I had known as a child had imploded to skin and bones. The heavy hands with thick sausage-like fingers that had struck or held me as a baby were thin, veiny and lacked human warmth.

Then I came upon his face. His hearty cheeks were gone. Lips dry, cracked and had lost the full redness I remember my mother boasting about when I was younger. Interestingly, his hair was full and thick. It had grown fast since I had seen him last and it’s waviness caught me by surprise. I had an urge to touch it and I did. Stroking his mane back and remembering when he’d come home late and run his warm fingers through my hair as he muttered “buenas noches Hugo.”

It was in mid-stroke that his eyes opened and we made eye contact. It took half-a-second for him to focus and recognize me. I believe he did because I felt his gaze “leap” when I think he finally saw me. It seemed a long time passed before I spoke to him. It wasn’t a poignant speech and I don’t care to remember what was actually said. I do remember telling him that I wish I had made him proud. That the grandchild to come would be a boy. That I had made a decision and that I wished him the best. After that, he blinked twice and I saw his chest take in as much air as he could muster and then deflate quickly.

I stepped out of the room, signed awaiting paperwork and took a short walk.

When I returned, his body was cold. My father was gone.

Oh Christmas Tree

The skies were cloudy when the last bell of the year rang at Malabar Elementary and we were released to our parents for the holiday break. I had lost my jacket a few weeks earlier and my thin gray sweater was too thin to keep the Southern California winter breeze from jarring me when I stepped out of the school’s main building.

The fourth grade was turning out to be challenging and confusing. I had started the school year knowing little-to-no English and I was just now slowly starting to find my way around the new language and the friends that it game me access to. I said my good-byes to a few key people and made my way to my mother who awaited with my two little sisters at the corner of Fresno Street.
Her year had been interesting too. She had moved our family from Mexico City to the U.S. to meet my father who had made his way here to make a new life for us. Seemingly timid and always proper, she struggled to acclimate to the new language, currency, my father’s work hours and a culture that she considered lost. Nonetheless, her family had to be whole and she left her homeland and made East Los Angeles her new residence.
My father worked security at the local hot spot and market. His job entailed catching thieves that picked the pockets of tourists, solving disputes between the vendors and breaking up fights between sweaty drunks who had enjoyed too much tequila at the upstairs bars. He worked around the clock enjoying the physical aspects of the job. Taking pride in the baton he wore, the badge at his chest, the occasional use of his fists and the women who frequented his office. Silvio was the head of security 12 to 16 hours a day and despite his efforts his pay was just enough to cover the basic needs at home.
That day at lunch, Santa Claus (the school’s vice-principal) had visited our class and dropped off presents. I was one of the lucky ones who picked a red remote control race car from his satchel. The boys in class sighed heavily when I tore the blue wrapping paper apart and drew from it the shinny box that held my prize. They flipped over the large rugged tires on the box’s picture and most congratulated my luck. Then, above my shoulder, a boy named Freddy said, “the good gifts always go to the poor wet-backs, he doesn’t even have a Christmas tree.” The room stood quiet for a moment and then the silence was broken by a tepid round of snickering once they realized our teacher hadn’t heard. I didn’t know what a wet-back was but I knew the word poor and I knew that it wasn’t good.  
I ran to the corner of Fresno and Malabar and reached my mother holding my prize. I could hardly contain myself and she had to shush me a handful of times before I could begin to detail the day’s events. We walked the mile back home hurriedly and the cold breeze was sharp and hurtful at the ears. Then on Blanchard street I asked her if we were poor.
She stopped and reached for my shoulder so that we stood squarely to each other. She asked me why I asked and I told her what Freddy had said. She looked up and then seemed to search the streets for something. When she found it she stretched out her arm and asked me to retrieve it.
On the opposite side of the street, a small branch from a fir rested. Perhaps it could have fallen from someone transporting a tree home for the holidays. It was no more than a foot tall and some of the needles towards the wider end were starting to turn brown. I picked it from the ground, joined my family and finished our walk home.
After supper was over, my mother asked us to turn off the TV set at the kitchen table which rested against a wall. The house still had the scent of fried rice, re-fried beans and tortillas. The windows wore the steam from the boiling coffee pot and help turn the light in the room warm. From the bedroom, my mother produced about a half dozen of magazines. Inside them, she said in Spanish, are “pictures of snow globes, tree decorations and presents”. “Cut out as many as you can and make a pile.” My sisters and I worked for 30 to 40 minutes. We fought, laughed, took breaks and finally finished with a healthy mountain of cut outs. When we thought it was enough we called my mother into the room.
She came in with the branch and some clear tape. After a minute of scanning the room she asked me to unplug the television and remove it from the table. She had found the spot.
With great care she taped the branch on the wall and laid a white bed sheet on the table. She created peaks and valleys by putting two soup cans under the sheet. Then her hand took one of our cuttings and showed us carefully how to tape them to the wall and decorate our tree.
My sisters and I took the next few minutes feverishly attaching cut outs to the wall. We put up pictures of ornaments big and small. Pictures of Santa, Jesus, snow globes, shiny lights, tinsel and finally presents.
When we were done, she asked us to take a step back and brought us close together.
She then said.
“We are not poor. We have each other. This year we won’t have presents but I promise you that next year we will. Your dad and I will do what we can to make every picture of a present taped to the wall come true.”
A tear had rolled down her cheek by the time she finished her last sentence and I felt guilty for bringing up the word “poor” and winning the car. She hugged us and told us to get to bed.
Just before I did, I caught her cutting a picture of a star from a JC Penny catalog and taping it to wall a top our Christmas tree.