Jan 31
Inalienable Rights
Posted by Diana in family on 01 31st, 2009| icon31 Comment »

I’m writing out of what could probably be a very out-of-place anger. I know everyone has the undeniable right to pursue his or her own happiness. So undeniable and common-sense is this right, that it was included in the U.S. Passport (it’s a small quote from some forefather dude who spoke nicely enough to be quoted in a passport design). The pursuit of happiness is, in short, one of the few things that every sentient being should be allowed.

My father shipped away some years ago (I think 5, to be as accurate as possible) to the mainland U.S. to search for his own happiness. His contracting business here was not working as well as it used to: maybe a symptom of what would later become a nation-wide meltdown of the economy. I was surprised, though, that he bought into the widespread myth that “things in the U.S. are better than in Puerto Rico”. The last few years have proved that the puertorican’s inability to adapt to a recession has been the lifeboat of some U.S. franchises and  companies (Dennys, Sears – to name a few). While the American’s purchasing habits have been deeply altered by the steep fall of the market, puertoricans remain blissfully oblivious and spend entire days at the mall buying things they don’t need to make them feel better about the problems they think they don’t have. Things are fucked up all around, but Puerto Rico is trapped in a bubble of delusion that has kept the boat afloat.

So, why am I angry?, you might ask. I truly believed my dad could make it fine out there. First there was Texas, then Fort Myers, and now Orlando. The stories in all these places have been the same: he scrounges for jobs, some directly related to what he used to do as a contractor, others way below what a man with 2 Master Degrees should be doing for a living. All of this, just so he can barely scrape by… all of this just so he can pay the debts that have been piling up for months and years, all of this to follow a dream that, from where I’m standing, has been long defunct. Changing places to “have a better life” almost never works like that: the things that truly make you unhappy will follow you wherever you go.

Dad went away looking for I don’t know what, running from something that was never very clear to me. I wanted to empathize and be supportive, and I think I HAVE, most of the while. Today I received a few forwarded pictures, though, and I realized something that is clearer and stronger than any pursuit for material wellness or “peaceful community living” could ever be: Dad moved away and he took away with him the opportunity to grow old among the ones that love him. He left with his wife, who no doubt adores him (which is the only solace I get out of this situation: her unconditional love and support of him is what has kept him alive, and for that I am grateful)… but the rest of us are here. Sons, daughters, grandkids, all of us missing them terribly, and needing from them the one thing they could always muster in droves: emotional support, presence, peace, a temple, a place to come home to.

I miss that, I miss what was home: a place that no longer exists, that was left behind in “10 Years Ago”.  I miss my Dad, I miss his wife… a phone call can keep me posted on what’s going on, but it can NEVER relay a hug. I’m missing my dad growing old … I think this hurts as much as never seeing your own child grow up. And Dad, even though he knows what’s going on with us, is missing us growing into full-on adults, the true product of the seeds he planted for years.

I think that somewhere along the way he lost sight of the real wealth that counts in life: it’s not so much about having the perfect house, a job that earns well,  an organized and peaceful neighborhood. The real wealth is being able to spend your life surrounded by the people you love and who love you. The real wealth is not missing the things that will give you a richer and happier death, when you start remembering what your life was like.

Maybe this is a temper tantrum of mine… maybe I have no right to ask.

… or maybe it IS an inalienable right: the right to enjoy your parents will you can.

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Jan 3
2008 – Un Recap
Posted by Diana in family, friends, life, memories on 01 3rd, 2009| icon3No Comments »

El 2008 me dejó más lecciones que muchos de los años anteriores.

A través de penas y malratos, al fin entendí que no puedo “bregar” con mi carrera. Por más que me esfuerce por retener el interés y ser la más profesional y la más “echá pa’ lante”, definitivamente estoy tratando de caber en una chaqueta que no me corresponde. A lo mejor he logrado convencer a los demás de que puedo ejercer mi profesión de manera adecuada; pero nunca logré convencerme a mí misma, que era lo más importante. Octubre 2008 marca el momento exacto en que me divorcié de mi carrera: no más tratar de ser la Super Técnica, ni ser una ejecutiva adecuada siquiera. El intento me brinda más desgracias que lo que pueda pagar un puesto de esos. En el proceso decepcioné a algunas personas; pero sé que, los que me quieran, sabrán ver el beneficio de este cambio tan espectacularmente controversial.

Actualmente estoy trabajando en Hot Topic como vendedora por el sueldo mínimo: al igual que en invierno de 1999, soy feliz en la simplicidad de mis labores. Esta vez pretendo no dejarme descarrilar por el hambre del dinero. También estoy estudiando, ésa es la prioridad actual. Lo que termine de hacer con los estudios, es mi esperanza, será a lo que me dedicaré… cuando sea grande! :-)

Estos últimos meses del 2008 fueron plácidos en el ámbito laboral; pero, como la vida nunca puede ser 100% sosegada, en mi familia las cosas se voltearon patas pa’rriba. Mi abuela visitó el hospital dos veces en dos semanas, situación en la que me ví tan involucrada – a mí misma y a mis hermanos – que no pude quedarme callada más rato y tuve que expresarlo aquí… para desagrado de par de tíos y demás familiares periferales que realmente no vienen al caso, pero que se sintieron TAN aludidos que decidieron comentar sobre un blog que en cualquier otro momento no se hubiesen dignado en leer. Hablé originalmente sobre una familia desbandada, y fue como un self-fulfilling prophecy: mis comentarios sirvieron para deshacer la madeja de familia innecesaria que nos rodeaba como satélites muertos.

Por otro lado, el núcleo también se está afectando. Éste es el detalle que todavía es relevante, el que todavía pica, el que no pienso mencionar aún. Nos ha tocado crecer, nos ha tocado revestirnos de paciencia… me ha tocado reevaluar la situación familiar, y qué hay que hacer para que esta generación Campo-Rossy no se convierta en una maldita copia de la Rossy-Stiehl. Sería muy fácil dejarlo pasar, es la inercia que nos hace gravitar hacia ese horroroso destino; pero quiero demasiado a mis hermanos, a mi madre, a mi padre, a lo que es realmente mi familia y mi templo, para dejar que eso pase.

En estos momentos difíciles, sin embargo, he encontrado que al fin tengo un propio hogar: Ezequiel, Caprica & yo. Es un comfort saber que duermo con mi hogar todas las noches. No importa los embates, el calor y el cariño que ellos me brindan es lo que recarga mis fuerzas.

También tengo que reconocer que este año he aprendido que familia no siempre es = a sangre. Poco a poco se va estableciendo mi nueva familia. Están los de siempre: papi, mami, mis hermanos … y están los de ahora: Pepe, Jose, Mari, Julio… Eze y yo llevamos ya 4 años juntos. Cuatro años que han sido suficiente para empezar a montar una tradición… a ver si la seguimos en el 2009…

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