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Sounds Of A Seashell

BY CIELO VALENZUELA-LARA

A Response to Finlandia

The ocean’s waves crashing in the

depths of a seashell, pressed

against a child’s ear, is

sometimes the only form of libertad.

Children are good at learning

how to drown out the noise

of their reality

when it’s the only way they feel safe.

 

It sadness me;

when a place that’s supposed to be a home

betrays someone just because of their identity.

Sometimes found family

is better than the one you were born into.

As latinos,

we’ve been taught to respect our elders,

but your identity should not suffer

just because you live under your parents roof.

A relationship is complex;

You don’t want to understand

the other’s side, but,

let me put it this way,

being forced to do something you don’t want to do

isn’t a choice.

Just like your

sexual orientation

Gender identity or

Immigration status

Isn’t one either.

Sometimes,

getting lost in that seashell shouldn’t be the only way to cope.

To save ourselves,

We get lost in activities we claim as our own,

We sew our lives into beautiful patterns

that are made into colorful textiles.

But the minute we pioneer an idea, 

there is always someone just waiting to steal it.

Taking tradition and culture that

doesn’t belong to you doesn’t make you

a trendsetter, it makes you a colonizer.

 

But your appropriation doesn’t make us victims.

We’re seeds that grow and heal from our pain,

nurtured by the ocean’s water.

 

At times,

Getting lost in the chaos of life

can make you feel like your drowning,

but the most amazing thing about

the human body is that it floats.

Like seafoam, latinos always rise to the top.

You can hear our cries of victory in the

depths of a seashell pressed

against a child’s ear.

Cielo Valenzuela-Lara

Cielo Valenzuela-Lara (she/her/hers) 17, is a Latinx artist & activist from Los Angeles, California. Cielo takes pride in calling herself an artivist. She uses this term to describe her passion for using her acting, singing, dancing, and spoken word poetry as activism. With artivism in mind, she sees the material she performs and the content she writes as tools to bring about social and political change. As a result, Cielo has performed during immigration rallies, fundraising events for local non-profits, and other special campaigns and projects that raise awareness about social issues, like adverse childhood experiences. These professional experiences have also earned Cielo notable recognition. In 2020, Cielo began her engagement with a professional youth poetry troop known as the Get Lit Players. She is also a published poet, featured in The Los Angeles Press and the National Youngarts 2021 Anthology and Catalogue. Cielo currently attends California School of the Arts and plans to pursue a degree in Musical Theater in the fall. Her dream is to study musical theater in college while applying her interests in history and creative writing to support causes that matter to her.