My Name

My name symbolizes my parents embrace of the American Dream

Even if it was only memorialized through the calling of my name

Jennifer…

In a way they would never be accepted,

I would be welcomed and assimilated

They must of thought,

She’ll be able to easily navigate spaces

With this clandestine identity,

I left no ‘illegal’ identity traces

Except in my speech,

Where I lived

and all my traditional bases

They must’ve wished that masked my dreams could be achieved

But the name always felt estranged to me

As it did to their tongue,

Always shortening my name to yeny

In my professionalization I ’d prohibit people from calling me Jen

Finding ways to disapprove because the name didn’t resonate with my roots

As if Jennifer was closer to my origin

Why couldn’t they name me Maria Dolores after my mom

I guess this settlement was for my self-preservation

But I must be upfront,

I’ve benefited from this contradiction

Except my identity has been lost in my name’s counterfeit diction

Nearly thirty years later

I’ve learned to wear this name as a testimony of the 90s immigrant generation

J.Mar

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Author: J.Mar

I was born and raised in Kern County in an unincorporated area of Kern, CA. My parents moved there in the 90s to make a living as farm workers. Watching them barter their bodies, homelands, and family for a chance at the “American Dream” has caused me to reflect. My writing here is largely the unceremonious unpacking and repacking of what was won and lost in this exchange. My version of the dream consists of completing a PhD in Public Policy. I currently study public finance, public participation, and remittances in Mexico. I am also generally interested in the Latinx public finance experience. I’ve learned to be cautiously optimistic about the future. Lastly, I love plants and cleaning is a freeing ritual to me.

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