The streets bear the names of colonizers
Pretty houses painted pastel pink
Sit atop manicured lawns
The hard-fought neighborhood park proclaims:
First white man killed here
It’s history worth preserving
In a habitat demolished
To build a habitat reserve
Where fish swim slowly in rippling murky water
Didn’t they hear what happened
To the fish from yesterday?
Trump flags fly proudly on large shiny boats
Weeks after his recounted loss
Because white men never lose
They’ll destroy the world before they do
I wrote this poem in late November 2020 traveling to Ponce de Leon Park in Punta Gorda, FL. The park is located in a ritzy neighborhood with two and three story houses, boats in the yards, and Trump flags all over the place.
At the time, I was writing a series of poems about nature — thinking about the themes of destruction, reclamation, and preservation. Here, I was toying with the ideas of destruction and preservation.
Who gets to decide what history, land, and people deserve to be preserved?
I was also thinking about how ironic it was that this community built a habitat preserve without thinking about who they’re preserving the…