On Belonging
/I/
My parents and I were born to parents
Who told stories of a homeland left behind
In a language trickled down.
One generation’s nostalgia turned
Into another’s endless summer vacations.
Some of these tales I forget. Some I let trickle further down -
Those were the ones, I think
They told more than once.
/II/
I speak to a delivery man who hears an accent.
He tells me we share two other languages
So I needn't go to the trouble of talking to him
In what I grew up thinking was my
Mother-tongue, language of a land I’d never known.
All I’m capable of coming up with
Is an unaccented laugh.
/III/
To claim the land I grew up in as my own
Is acceptable to none. For I've belonged
Elsewhere all the time I've been here
And elsewhere when I'm there; elsewhere
All the time I speak my language,
And elsewhere all the time I try to belong.