Lessons at the Legendary Institute for Yarn Spinning

“Embuste,” Abuela said. 
            A more polite way to say 
                        “Lie!” or “Liar!” Not true

that story told—a tale 
            spun from cobwebs 
                        and a trail of smoke, 

so flimsy it crumbled 
            with the weight of 
                        its fiction. Embuste,

gentle reprimand, anger 
            demoted to delight, 
                        perhaps even pride.

Not for the brazenness  
            but for the embroidery.  
                        And then her lively eyes 

narrowed, warning us: 
            less hasty stitching  
                        next time. Sturdier thread.  

Credit

Copyright © 2026 by Rigoberto González. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on February 17, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets. 

About this Poem

“The longer I walk the earth without my beloved Abuela, the more I think about her. Poetry is one way to stay connected to the memories I hold dear about this incredible Indigenous woman, Purépecha from Michoacán, who surprised her grandchildren with moments like the one that inspired this poem. I can still hear her whispering: ‘If you’re going to make things up, do it well.’”
—Rigoberto González