Papi, Papi, Papi

photo of belmont harbor in chicago with waves crashing
Public cruising spot #21, Belmont Harbor, Chicago, IL.
 
papi:  father
papi: a term of  endearment   for a child, primo, masculine tía
papi: sexualized latinx gay / queer call, “hey papiiiiiii!”

Death opens up so much space.

____

 
family sitting around picnic table
Archival image #3

1980s traversing lincoln park to boystown / lakeview 
to humboldt park, chicago, il.

Queers, drug users, families of color, and lots of  puertorriqueñx.

And then it wasn’t.

My Papi, Peter, lived in Chicago neighborhoods, Humboldt Park, 
   Lincoln Park, and Boystown/Lakeview.
(Or Pedro or Troy, depending on what neighborhood he was in.)
A cruising sex worker who worked many neighborhoods under
   many names.

I lived primarily southwest of  Lincoln Park in a neighborhood that had
   no name.
Until gentrification started in the early 1990s and then it did.
West Town.

1980s gentrification had emptied Lincoln Park of  Puerto Rican families,
pushed west and flooded into the Humboldt Park neighborhood.
The continuous push West then South,
then out.

Lincoln Park in the ’80s was comprised of queers,
working class, and people of color (POC folks).
Other.

____

 
people on black and white/checkered float in lakeview, Chicago
Archival image #218

1980s, lincoln park, chicago, il.

Frequented as a child with my Papi,
my ass pressed hard against the middle bar of  his bike.
His arms holding me close
amidst the sex,
verde public cruising spaces
where the butterfly museum is now.
Called Knob Hill then.
Gentrification / colonialism changes the language we speak.
There is so much cum under the butterfly museum, my Ma says.
As one approached the hill the rise and fall of  bodies was distinct.
Lake Michigan, water beating background.

Everyone was fucking everyone, my Ma says.

____

 
Public cruising spot #24, Belmont Harbor, Chicago, IL
Public cruising spot #24, Belmont Harbor, Chicago, IL

belmont harbor, boystown / lakeview, chicago, il.

Working class POC families enjoying the beach,
with blow jobs beneath them on the rocks of the harbor.

My  Ma and Papi met a mile away in the basement of  a private school,
Francis Parker, working as janitors.
I was conceived in an elevator, going up.

____

 
people dancing in a club together, 1990's Chicago
Archival image #219

i grew up in a gay disco. it was a triad of  queers, kids, and cats.

Dress-up was a mandatory event.
He had so many hats!
Construction worker, feather boa, baseball, ’80s mesh, fedora, 
   all the white black leather pleather.
The black leather cap—that was my favorite.
I learned the walk with that cap.
I strutted through his apartment,
while my other papis / father figures / queer padres and the 
   dragboygirlqueens
yelled their approval—
Heyyyyy papiiiiiii,
get it girlllll!
Work it.

It was a fashion show;
a practiced, polished, queer strut.
An owning swagger that my small self  had mastered
while watching the drag queens and trans* folk perform in gay bars.

I had been kicked out of  more gay bars than any other eight-year-old.

I was proudly his sondaughter—genderfluid and a super gay, 
   as my brother called me.
Beyond gay.
Queered.

I was a verb.
An action.
A past tense active verb porque I was always queer, other.

I am an epidemic child, not birthed but raised by AIDS.

____


have you had sex with my papi?

I solicited men who had sex with my Papi in 2010 on Craigslist.
Seeking to meet and hook up.
The search was destined for failure / I was expecting silence.
My Ma says, Good luck, they’re all dead.
They meaning my papis / multiple queer padre figures.
In my post, I was seeking that absence.
This absence signifies the potential teacher, father, lover, 
    friend that we could have loved, fought, and felt.
AIDS devastated these potential connections.
And these non-relationships are part of our daily mourning.

____

 
men sleeping in a bed | Archival image #37 from OLI RODRIGUEZ
 Archival image #37

 
A note between friends | Archival image #38 from Oli Rodriguez
Archival image #38

the hospice—1993 chicago house—now a trans life center.1

The straight men with wives had the only room downstairs.
Leaving, moving quicker
   out—

   upstairs,
there was a drag queen next door.
His mother and mine fast became friends.
Both were drag queens.

AIDS is silent in its wasting kill.
Everything runs through you.

He was better now.
No, not better—
quiet.

The last time I recall him making sounds was in the hospital.
It was winter—loud-cold, bitterly dark.
There was a television in the waiting room.
I would watch  Jesse struggle with HIV on Life Goes On.
Thinking about the relationship of  opera and AIDS: Patti Lupone,
Maria Callas in  Philadelphia.
It was so much easier to watch  Jesse die a TV death
than to be witness to a real one.

The last sound he made was every liquid leaving him.

____

 
son with his mother Archival image #7 from Oli Rodriguez
Archival image #7

Another ending.
I am an AIDS baby, reared in an epidemic child.

¡Feliz cumpleaños! Mi Papi throwing his birthday party
November 1987, I’m a fresh 7  years old.

He has many cruising amigos companions partners, estan aqui.
One of  his drunk amigos, large mustache lips ojos
Tu Papi is a maricón / tu papi is a faggot / gay.
I laugh.
I don’t know what I’m laughing at.
I don’t know what a faggot is, a maricón yes.
I couldn’t tell what it meant either.
Somehow if  it was attached to this it wasn’t that bad.
I smile at the dyke in the corner who looks like me.
Our matching fades cut to our chin.

I look around at the men queers trans* folks.

Laughing.

Drinking.

Dancing.

Hugging.Holding.Loving.Kissing.Simpatico.

Supporting one another.
The big A—as they called it—had come.
Visibly flaco sores y dehydration bags as dance partners.

If  this was gay, I loved it.
Or if  he was a faggot, so was I.
And so was my Ma.

My Ma is a faggot.
I’m a faggot.

We are the only two faggots left.



1“Founded in 1985 during the height of the AIDS crisis, Chicago House initially served as a housing resource, and in most cases a hospice, for those living with HIV/AIDS. Today, the organization empowers people living with or vulnerable to HIV/AIDS...with the central purpose to lead healthy, dignified lives.”
Notes:

All images are from the author’s archive. To see more of this project, visit http://olirodriguez.com/ThePapiProject.html.

Source: Poetry (October 2020)