We cannot tattoo roses 
On the wall 
Can’t tattoo Gloria Anzaldúa’s roses 
On the wall 
Roses grow in the earth of white-winged doves 
The doves coo all day with roosters at Valle de la Paz 
Cemetery, the panteón in Hargill near La Sal del Rey 
Where deer snort warnings 
From the monte, warn visitors 
Because the freshwater puddles near the saline lake are shared 
And deer prints outnumber all others, wedge prints fill with salt 
And when the sun beats down on the washed-up body of a crystallized frog 
I remember Prietita having to kill and bury her fawn 
Before the game warden arrives and incarcerates her papi 
And I remember a gardener tending flowers 
Was thrown by a car carelessly backing up fast 
In a McAllen strip mall parking lot. The gardener 
Forced a dizzy smile, spoke only Spanish when he finally stood up. 
He didn’t want to call attention to his presence 
On this earth, 
This strip mall earth. And so the driver zoomed off. 
And I remember the parakeets eating bottlebrush seeds in spring 
Their anxious huddling in fall on urban electric wires 
I remember buying cascarones on a spring corner 
After my own accidents 
I remember Brownsville’s red-faced parrots 
The ancient tortoise at Laguna Atascosa 
Hundred-year-old sabal palms uprooted for the wall’s concrete footing 
I remember the confluence of river and Gulf at Boca Chica 
And the fisherwomen, men, and children across 
At Playa Bagdad, Matamoros 
I remember wanting to plant and water roses 
como las palabras de Gloria, como la gente 
Del valle, como mexicanos in the borderlands 
*
*
And when I wake up in the morning feeling love 
And when I wake up in the morning with love 
And when I wake up in the morning and feel love 
And when I wake up in the morning already loving 
How the body works to help us feel it 
From With the River on our Face (University of Arizona Press, 2016). Copyright © 2016 by Emmy Pérez. Used with the permission of University of Arizona Press.