REMEMBER ME
“Remember Me”
By Andrés C. López
I am calling on the voices of our ancestors
Those from the past and future
So that when I speak
I speak the words we were never meant to hear
(Repeat throughout)
Remember me Remember me
When I am gone
Remember me Remember me
When I no longer traverse the physical side of our spirits
Remember me Remember me
When you feel like you’re alone
Remember me Remember me
When you think you’re the only one
Remember me Remember me
Remember me
Remember me Remember
I belong
to a plethora of communities and identities
And yet in the politics of belonging
I am lost in the noise
because I do not exist
I do not exist
in the imaginaries of a society that thinks
they’ve already killed me
…
But I am still here
I come from a long line of people who are still here
I am the incarnation
of the blood, sweat, and tears
of groups of people never meant to survive
of communities that have been silenced and killed
of groups of people who cannot afford
to never look back
(repeated) to forget
I am here
We’re all here I am here
I am here
as the manifestation of
the lives, land, and history that was stolen from us
I am here
because other people I will never meet or even know
about
can’t
I am here
because the Academy thinks I can be their token
I am here
because of the courage of Black women to share
their vision for new futures through their words
I am here
because in the story of where I was born
I wound up receiving the paper
that afford me the privilege of passing
as someone from the U.S.
And yet the inevitable question always comes up,
“Where are you from?
I am from here,
and from there
and from a lot of different places
I carry with me
Can’t you see it in my body and my brown skin
Can’t you feel the lashes of the whip
that my grandmother took for sugar cane?
Can’t you see the silence in my eyes at the knowledge
that you stole everything?
I am from here,
and from there,
and from a lot of different places
and I’m trying to remember what you took away from us
I’m trying to remember
the lives of ancestors come to past
the ways of our people
and yet I cannot undo the fuckery that are my homes
today
I cannot undo the destruction
I cannot undo
me
All I can do is try to move forward
All I can do is remember
Remember
Remember
So that in a future soon to come
We will never be forgotten
Remember me
Remember
Remember
Andrés is a Latinx trans and queer writer, poet, musician, and scholar. His activism, pedagogy, work, and artistic projects center the lives and experiences of queer and trans folks of color. Currently, he is a doctoral student in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies with a Minor in Queer Studies at Oregon State University. Andrés is also one of the Editorial Assistants for Feminist Formations, a journal published by Johns Hopkins University Press.