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Click the play button below to listen to Alison Luterman read “Los Vecinos”
Teresa, our Mexican neighbor, climbs our porch steps on arthritic legs, carrying a plate of fresh tamales, still warm, wrapped in cloth, because they’re having a cookout in their yard with all the tías and grandbabies and we’re included in the golden circle of familia, through no virtue of our own, yet here she is again at our door with a plate of something delicious, or a big plastic bag filled with nopales from the edible pads of the giant cactus in their yard, which she has skinned and cubed and boiled in salted water. They’re slippery as okra and tart as lemons, and she swears they will cure a long list of ailments, including but not limited to cancer, high blood pressure, diabetes . . . Standing on our porch, leaning against the railing, she enumerates the benefits while I smile and nod, “Sí, sí, gracias . . .” My friend who lives in a rich neighborhood says she’s seen ICE patrolling, looking for gardeners and maids escaping over the back fences of Marin. They’re tearing apart families like clumps of seedlings, uprooting whole delicate ecosystems, but what they don’t understand is the mycelial nature of kinship, how love is a weed that travels across borders in a bird’s belly and pops up waving its arms, no matter the law. Our block resounds with spangled mariachi tunes all summer long, and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t jealous some evenings, lying awake while parties go on around us, because this land is their land, and this devotion is tough and joyous, and Teresa can’t read the red card that says “Know Your Rights” in English and Spanish, nor understand how I make a living, but she knows what to do with the guava tree growing along our driveway, whose leaves are medicinal in dozens of ways—whose leaves, as the Bible says, are given for the healing of the nations.





