Naranja

By: Maya Baca

summer

media naranja

i have a deep ache lingering in my heart for a land that feels like what my bones are made from; a red dust so fine that it can be sprinkled across the desert skies 

of a land that whispers the story 

of mi gente amongst the swirling wind, guiding them back to the burning blaze of their lion heart flowers blooming 

amongst the pricks of cacti 

formed into a crown of thorns 

and placed on a prodigal daughter’s 

head to bear in earnest for the world to see a blood so rich and deep and ancient 

that the earth beneath me feels 

like coming back to a home 

known long, long ago

jugó

when the citrus hues of 

sunlight finally flow in, 

it drowns the smoothness of his skin 

in glistening rays of aurelian haloes, 

encasing the delicacy of his face 

like the sun god himself has 

finally found rest between my sheets; 

i could drink his beauty in forever, 

a seasoned juice made of the sweetest fruits unlike any other 

i have stumbled upon 

on this earth, 

warming my skin and flushing my cheeks until everything in the world seems 

dull except for him 

i worship him beneath the sunlight with tongue and teeth and taste 

over and over 

until the sweetness spills across the sky and i am home 

again, in arms forged from 

the strength of pulling the sun 

for centurions without end; 

I could devour him like this 

all day long, 

for as long as 

he would allow me to

orange liqueur

like a breath of fresh air expands the 

constricting ache nestled in my lungs, 

it loosens the tension of my clenched jaw 

and uptight shoulders and my entire body’s coiled bandwidth; until my head feels like the heavenly 

sanctum my grandmother promised would 

be gifted to me if only i prayed 

hard enough to 

let the light in 

i realize now, 

there was no demand needed 

to suffer in order to repent towards 

a heaven as divine as this one is, 

one where the buzz blossoming under my skin feels like what god must have felt 

when the world became flesh beneath 

his hands and he gifted it 

his most cherished piece of himself 

despite knowing the cruel fate it 

would meet. 

i think, that if i believed in a god, 

i would find him sitting amongst my 

friends, 

giving the entirely of himself again 

without hesitancy, 

laughing over drinks instead of constructing the cross that his love would die on

citrus

it is not the sweet, chile-coated dulce 

that i thought it would taste like 

once i rolled it across my anticipating tongue, 

sensations of a peculiar flavor 

i have never experienced 

coating my tastebuds with a subliminal tingling; as if i am allergic to the 

words escaping these 

lips and tongue y boca 

it is like a green, sour limón rind 

digging its way 

under my tongue with a 

tartness that scrunches my face 

with distaste at the stuttering 

phrases burning the enamel off of my teeth 

just like when i bite hard enough into their verde flesh that the acid burns again 

will it always feel this way? 

no sabo 

whether i am more bitter about losing 

the acquired taste for knowing and breathing and living en la vida español, 

or whether it is realizing that i have learned what i can and will still never comprenderé 

enough to truly taste what was 

always meant to be mine 

a piece of me that feels 

raw and rotten and ransacked 

by the neglect of feeding a younger child the food of her soul siempre estoy hambriento 

and i don’t know how 

to swallow that

fall

at the core

rotted pit 

doesn’t matter what is festering within the internal seedling core 

so long as the supple exterior 

remains perfectly unblemished 

from the teeth marks scraping against 

its armor 

good girl 

vulnerable and tender and ripe for the picking, for whatever you want her to be 

for whatever you are looking to 

sink your teeth into 

sweet, tangy, juicy, 

good girl good girl good girl 

bruised and battered and useless 

for anything but the decaying remains 

of something that was at one time 

something so beautiful, 

nothing left except the corpse: 

the cold, hardened pit that had 

its flesh ripped mercilessly from 

the tendons, 

it’s skin shredded cruelly by sharpened teeth ravaged by Hunger 

a shriveled core left to 

rebuild its roots into 

something else, 

anything other than this 

good girl

rotted 

there is a sickness 

nestled in the crown of my thorns piercing itself deeper and deeper into the flesh of my skin, 

like a rotting 

that oozes it’s way into the crevices and festers amongst the mold growing in the darkness 

if i could be anything else, 

i would be; 

something without the 

carcass decaying into my tan earth and the death becoming the sawdust of my bones; 

i would be something other 

than the look of despair nestled in the soil of my mothers gaze, dirt that she shovels onto the oak of my freshly shined coffin pretending that it is some other body she is burying six feet under 

at times i think it is all in my head; in that rot and muck that digs into my skull and poisons the flesh left over from the rapture; 

sometimes i think it’s just something that i have always been inherently born with, 

a sickness that feels like the earth i was born from, 

a final soft return

bittersweet

the women in our life 

heal the wounds they didn’t cause 

is that what womanhood is? a sense of healing 

for any pain inflicted by hands 

not our own? 

how intimately must you know pain 

to handle others 

with such care?

winter

squeeze

i once thought peace 

would come at the End; 

i suppose i never thought 

it would be at the End of 

a little white pill 

swallowed down whole- 

(i have never been whole 

of anything 

before) 

how does someone experience so much of life 

and still feel dead inside? 

can you crack my skull open and scrape out the rot 

without pulling the flowers up by the roots? 

or is this something buried, so imbedded in me that 

to scrub it clean 

would be to wash away 

all that once held 

any shimmering of my soul glistening 

in its palm? 

i think i’m still looking for the other part of me; 

the one that could have been made whole 

instead of ripped in half 

and stitched crudely 

back together 

maybe she never existed 

maybe she only exists now

halves

i peel the fleshy skin of an orange 

and hold it out like a sacrilegious peace offering to share with 

my mother, 

ignoring the citrus rines that linger under my nailbeds like all of the other people i have held onto for too long 

without reason; 

she takes a piece tentatively in her mouth, her face souring as she spits out the fruit like it is a personal offense against her expectations 

she complains to me that it is 

too bitter 

too soft 

too messy 

for her liking; 

i try to pretend like she is 

not talking about me.

i reach out to take the delicate fruit back, placing the flesh between my teeth before shredding it to bits, 

pretending like it does not burn the fresh cuts lining the flesh of my mouth to do so 

we sit in silence, the only sound between us the harmonic melody of missed cues 

and my endless chewing of a simple little orange fruit

i think that if i could, 

i would rest my head on her shoulder, 

lean against her like i once did as a little girl, and pretend like we could share something other than the burdening weight of 

mothers and daughters 

i do not stop holding out oranges to her. 

perhaps one day we can share 

the sweetness

spring

cutíes

children who are touch starved 

never seem to know 

what it means to be 

fulfilled 

& yet, 

i somehow find 

myself digging my fingertips into 

the plump flesh of citrus fruit 

and tearing the ripe skin apart, 

ignoring the juice dripping 

into the burning cuts of my knuckles and picked nail beds, 

aching to get to the sugariness 

hidden just 

beneath the bruised surface; 

a gesture that feels 

all too similar to ripping my chest open and holding out the other half 

of my sentimental heart, 

waiting for someone to devour it whole and leave my stomach grumbling 

instead, 

your finger reaches out 

and wipes the bottom of my lip when the citrus juice dribbles onto my chin 

after the first bite, 

the nectar dripping onto the wrinkled collar of my favorite shirt 

as you suck the sap coating your 

fingers flesh clean, smiling 

it tastes just as sweet as i 

could have hoped

seedlings

since before i was born 

i knew the women 

i knew how it felt for 

their heart to rattle in their chests like cicadas mourning the daylight awaiting them 

with each bated breath 

of uncertainty, 

and how the sorrow of 

twisted, tangled dichotomies made a rooted home 

nestled into the gardened marrow of their overworked bones;

i knew their joy, 

how it was a gilded sunlight 

soaking into the vibrant blood swirling divinely through 

their beating hearts 

their unwavering smiles 

their melodic laughs, 

a symphonic harmony of 

hopes and dreams and 

every beautiful sentiment of 

femininity that could only sound like poetry coming from a women’s lips, the innate feeling of 

girlhood that never felt possible until i found it in the crevices of my grandmother’s wrinkled hands

seeds of womanhood 

planted throughout the years 

of my lineage 

that permeated the world with 

women of grandeur 

and gratitude, 

women with scars on the hands 

that braided flowers into my hair, a birthright to be adorned 

in crowns of tenderness 

and jewels of loveliness 

to share the wonders of femininity so purely

women who had been adored 

and hated 

and admired 

over and over again 

throughout centuries; 

this blood, this sisterhood 

i had known it even before i ever 

knew anything else

golden

he stands with an apron tied around his waist

spoon in his hand and awe in his eyes 

while listening to my grandmother 

confess that cooking is food for the soul 

and a love made so physical you can 

taste it’s sweetness beneath your tongue. 

he furrows his brow and gets to work, 

focused and intent and endlessly beautiful in the way he handles her words so delicately on mumbling lips, imitating her movements so reverently within his small being, 

like this precious moment is an heirloom wrapped in gold, 

placed around his neck and hanging above the drumming of his devoted heart. 

i pray to every god i’ve ever known that he stays this soft: 

remains this untouched and vulnerable, 

with a nurtured tenderness spilling out so ceaselessly from his chest that it cascades out in 

shining, glimmering 

gold.

summer

the girl who gave oranges

It started as all simple things do. 

An idea, a desire; 

a realization, that there was 

no one who remained unhappy 

when she selflessly offered up 

the small orange fruit 

nestled in the palms of her hands 

towards them. 

She found that there were many 

responses to her gifted orange tendency: some would shove the entirety of the fruit into their mouth, all at once. 

Juice splashing onto their cheeks and 

landing on her own face as they chewed the fruit recklessly, ruthlessly. 

And when they swallowed, she was always surprised to see that they simply held out 

their hands for more please, 

awaiting another treat to fall into their hands.

or 

they peeled it slowly. 

Methodically tearing the skin 

from the flesh 

as one might intricately carve an 

animal’s carcass to roast over a fire. 

She never stuck around long enough 

to see if they ever got to the core of their prey, a sickly feeling rolling through her stomach at what they would then hunt once they 

finished their initial pursuit. 

Some would hold it in their pockets. 

They would ignore its presence entirely, 

let it rot and squish into mushy nothingness until they held the squandered remains 

back out to her and admonished, 

Look what you did! Do you see? You let it get so disgusting! 

As if she was the one keeping it away from sunlight all this time. 

Others would not take the orange at all. 

She would chase them down, holding out the fruit while trying to reason that there was no price to pay, no debt to be owed 

for the fruit she offered so pathetically in her trembling hands. Those were the ones who never took anything. And who never looked back.

Until one day, she looked down into her orange basket and realized that all the fruits of her labor that she once had were gone. 

All except one. 

So she stumbled on, afraid of the possibility that she would come across someone and either give them her very last orange to curb their appetite or tell them regretfully that she could not give the last one she would ever have. Or else she would go hungry herself. She would disappoint them either way. 

She had never intended to do so.

Finally, after what felt like endless walking, she met her fate. A person across from her standing with a basket of their very own. 

Hello, she started hesitantly, what’s in your basket? They smiled widely at her, holding up the wicker to show her the treasure nestled inside. She gasped. Cherries. 

You have cherries? She gasped, looking up to them with unfiltered glee, what beauty! 

Would you like some? They asked, holding out their harvest like it was a feast she was invited to be the guest of honor at, a look so genuine that she wished more than anything that she could indulge. If only for a bite. A nibble, she would settle for. She reached her hand out… 

and froze, suddenly distraught with what the repercussions of this gift would entail. 

What she would be forced to repay if she agreed. I’m sorry, she whispered regrettably, I cannot take your gift. For, I only have one orange left. There is nothing I could give you in return. She pulled back the checkered cloth of her basket, revealing the lonely fruit that had sat withering within the covered cloak; the one last orange that she would never feel worthy of eating herself.

They looked into the basket, then up at her. And they laughed. Head back, face raised blissfully towards the sun with glee, they laughed at her words before shoving their hands into their own basket and forcing the red fruits from their palms into hers. 

Do you really think I would only offer you my fruits if I got yours in return? They teased, smiling over at her as if waiting for her to grin back at them in understanding. She didn’t. She couldn’t. Hadn’t that been how it always was? Wasn’t she supposed to gift her oranges without any expectation that the fruits of labors were to be shared? So, she stayed silent, holding out the cherries wordlessly. They seemed to read the unspoken. Their eyebrows furrowing as she bowed her head in shame, waiting for them to dismiss her without another word or chastise her for letting them believe she had anything worth offering in the first place. What she never expected was their tender hand on their shoulder, a touch so delicate that she wouldn’t have registered it if they hadn’t spoken to her in the same moment. 

You don’t have to give anymore, they whispered softly, grabbing onto the hand of her basket gently, Come. We have enough for you to enjoy. I’ll show you.

She followed them. Through the winding gardens of twisted vineyards, through the heavy swaying trees of the apple orchards, through the bushels of bursting berries that lined each of their sides. She let them lead her through all of the lands, until they seemed to find solace in a wide open space nestled within the vessel of all the varying homes and harvest. 

And in the middle was a table. 

Littered in a cornucopia of delightful offerings: crisp apples of reds and greens, grapes so large she thought she could fit them whole in her mouth. There were the cherries she had seen in their basket and every crop she could ever imagine. And surrounding the table, with its bountiful feast, she saw the others. The ones feeding grapes into each other’s mouths as they laid back with their eyes closed, tossing cherries into wide mouths awaiting the treat like baby birds. She saw the way that they cut the kernels of the corn off of the cob for one another, digging the seeds from pumpkins as they carved elaborate faces into the swelling skin. She saw how they passed the food between each other as if there was no ending and no beginning to what they each had brought forward to the feast. 

There was no payment, no trading. 

There was only sharing. 

See? They finally said next to her, We don’t need you to give anything. We just need you to enjoy.

She followed them closer, to how the others surrounded her with smiling faces and opened arms, shoving the various fruits from the alter into her hands and pulling her towards the table seats nestled amongst each other. She saw them squeeze the grapes into wine, the peaches into sangria, the limes into margaritas, passing the drinks down their rows until everyone had a glass filled to the brim with juice and jubilation. 

She couldn’t believe it. How they had welcomed her without asking anything in return. How they didn’t need her to give them anything to be happy and fulfilled, yet they included her in their bliss as if she was a part of their harvest as much as they were. She looked down at the orange still sitting in her basket, still sitting lonely despite the gathered celebration surrounding them with infectious energy. She gently picked up the fruit in her hand, turning it over as she contemplated what to do now that she could decide its fate without the fear of disappointment.

She wanted to throw it away. Destroy the part of her that had given away so much of herself without care or caution. She hated it, this stupid fruit that became everything she never knew she despised. 

Until they sat down. Tossing their cherries onto the table, laughing with the others about how the seeds were too finicky to squeeze into wine and too textured to ferment into ale. She watched them all laugh, sip from their glasses, press their chins onto each other’s shoulders without flinching away or focusing on the fruit in her hands. 

So she began peeling. Each orange surface of the last fruit of her harvest, until she split it into a perfect half. She tapped their shoulder, awaiting for them to turn and see the offering she held out to them. 

It’s not much, she murmured, suddenly embarrassed at the wilted look of it, it’s been bruised and sitting in my basket for much too long. It’s probably not that good anymore anyways. She shrugged.

You don’t have to give me this if you don’t want to, they assured her once more, there is no price to be paid back for sharing the harvest with the ones who mean the most to you. It only solidified her decision more. 

They hadn’t asked anything of her or her oranges. They had brought her to a feast that was filled with the labor of love that all of the others had brought together to enjoy without expectations. She realized now what it was that they had done. They had gifted her this. Truly, in the way it was meant to be. She pushed their hand back, nodding once. 

I want to share this with you, she admitted, because you never asked me to. 

They smiled at each other, placing the halves in their mouths at the same time. 

She had never tasted anything so filling.

Poem by Maya Baca

Luciana comes from the swamp of Gainesville, Florida, and was raised in an uncanny suburb south of Disney World. She’s been a radio intern, a barista, a PBS fundraiser, a disappointment, an ice cream scooper and a volunteer poetry editor. She reads, writes, and edits things in English and listens to the Mountain Goats more frequently than is advisable.

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