Identified and exhibitionists
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,3,2008
Contrary to secrecy and false identity, some of us alternative bloggers have put our identify cards next to the texts we write. In the midst of so much self imposed disguise, showing my ID reminds me of the exhibitionist who opens his coat even though everyone knows what’s inside.
My fingerprint, my two last names and even the names of my parents appear on the little blue card that proves my existence. To save the police wearing themselves out saying to me, “Identify yourself, citizen,” I show in advance the particulars of my life. Claudia has also done this on her eclectic blog Octavo Cerco, and so has Lia, in her harangues on Habanemia, as well as some others who reveal their identities to scare away the fear.
Who knows if we manage to infect the trolls who, shielded by anonymity, try to crash our sites with their insults. It’s unlikely, however, that the fever of self identification reaches those whose trade does not show its face. By opening my coat I want to show these “anonymous guys” that I am more than 75090424120, a document laminated in plastic and an ink-stained thumb copied on paper.
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Terminations
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Noviembre,1,2008
“Twenty-three years and four abortions,” she’s telling everyone who wants to hear. On her slim figure, maternity would wreck havoc, she tells me, while adjusting her short skirt around her hips. For many years the termination of a pregnancy was the most common method of birth control for thousands of Cuban women. In the eighties, condoms were an illusion and by the time they were available at all the pharmacies, men refused to use them.
I met this slender young woman from Villa Clara on a Yutong* bus bound for that province. In the first hour of conversation she told me all the details of her truncated pregnancies. “It doesn’t hurt much,” she told me, while winking at the driver who was looking at her legs in the rearview mirror. In an almost forty minute tirade she wanted to explain her reasons, although I already knew them from others. That she lives with her parents and shares a room with her sister; that of the men she’s been intimate with, some are married or don’t want to have children; that she wants to leave the country and it’s harder with a baby… She ended by making it clear, “I have a friend in the gynecological hospital and she always fixes it for me.”
I was rattled by her illusion of leaving all her problems—housing, love or immigration—in the operating room, and pointed out that they are no longer doing abortions in hospitals. The press hasn’t published it, just as no one has talked about the high number of dilation and curettages practiced until very recently, but for the last few months an internal directive has limited the number of terminations of pregnancy. The reason is that the birth rate is falling and they want to try to increase it, even if it means forcing women to give birth. She bit her lip in disbelief and declared with some cheek, “Don’t worry yourself, I took a nice gift to the doctor and left with a brand-new womb.”
The bus hit a rut and I noticed that the driver was still entranced with her thighs. I was afraid we were going to crash and we‘d end up like another short trip, truncated between her legs.
Translator’s note: