Unheard Grief, Unmovable Men: How an Old Mexican Folktale Speaks to Our Pain Today
All the wrong people are crying, and all the people who ought to feel something do not.
The Curse of La Llorona
It’s not mentioned, in the story I chose, how the father feels. We don’t know if Maria’s, now Llorona’s, infanticide inspired anything in him, if it made him feel sadness, rage, regret, or anguish. Nothing. There is nothing. There is no crying man in this story, which I take to mean he didn’t cry at all.
Here is what I’m afraid of: What if, horror of all horrors, when the man discovered his children had died, and then when he discovered that Maria had died too, what he felt was relief?
Canon doesn’t matter so much in folklore, which is personal. These stories are made for practical uses anyway—to keep your children in line, to frighten them into bed and make them behave. It’s my canon that the man felt relief. It’s what makes the story frightening for me, and therefore useful because it cautions me. It cautions me that men don’t care. This was the same lesson I took away recently, during the Brett Kavanaugh hearings, when people were prompted to publicly share their experiences with sexual assault.
Here’s mine: I was drunk. This was years ago. He put me in his bed. I woke up to feel him inside me. I didn’t tell him to get off of me. I questioned if maybe I wanted this to happen, a question that will make me doubt myself forever—didn’t some part of me want this? I scrutinize, interrogate, worry, while he, that morning, slaps me on the back and jokes, “Don’t call the cops on me for that.” It’s my doubt against his violent certainty that distresses me. I bother to question myself, to worry. He has no such burdens. I consider sharing this online, but then I consider what sharing will accomplish. I wonder how torturing myself is supposed to move torturers. I say nothing instead.
The urge to say nothing grows stronger with time and grueling repetition. Each new event rhymes with the last, but is bigger, worse. A news anchor brags about “catching” a member of the migrant caravan, stopping them from their journey. I think of the migrant’s feet, if they hurt. A shooting spree in a synagogue. The worst of its kind, for now. I say nothing because there is nothing to say, and I have to wonder if I’m playing the silence game again, the game I have come to think of as hereditary, an instinct to grief passed down to me from the stubborn, weeping women who raised me. I wonder if I am curling up, disappearing. I wake up, I put myself together, I break, I sleep, I repeat, I haven’t given up, but I am afraid.
*
I am afraid of the apathy of men. I am afraid of many women, but mostly I’m afraid of men, of the man who feels only relief when his burdens drown in their grief, remove themselves. I worry he is all men. I worry he is these men: the president, the new Supreme Court justice, the pundits on TV, the man who raped me, the man who, after endless phone calls and promises, vanished, the man who will do that next, the man who is my friend, waiting to reveal he too has nothing inside, the man who will let the planet become inhospitable because he is greedy, the man who will watch us die and not feel much at all. I am afraid all men have nothing inside. I am afraid of spending a lifetime just to reach that useless conclusion.
I am afraid of the silence game, of perfect grief; perfect, because it’s endless. Grief is meant to land somewhere, on something. I understand it as an agent of transformation. It’s meant to ferry one to a place where grief isn’t needed; a bruise feels strangely comforting when you press on it, then it turns yellow, the healing color, and goes away. But I am afraid of an endless blue-black bruise, of my brain rotting from grief. I am afraid of my disappointment becoming so great that I resolve to shrink into nothing, respond only with gasps and whispers of ‘no,’ a ghost who cries, and cries, and cries, and for what? For whom? All the wrong people are crying, and all the people who ought to feel something do not.
Should La Llorona have drowned her children in the river? I can’t think of anything that matters less, anything more beside the point. A more worthwhile exercise would be to contemplate why her story is used to frighten children into bed rather than to frighten men into fidelity. She frightens me, not because she’s scary, or because she looks frightening, has scary eyes and a ghostly appearance, but because she goes unanswered.
La Llorona speaks, after all. She wants something. “Mis hijos,” she cries in the dark. “My children.”
Who hears her when she cries? Only victims, it seems.
I am a writer, journalist, and advice columnist from Oklahoma currently residing in New York City. I have contributed to NBC News, BuzzFeed, The Guardian, and more. My weekly column is called "Hola Papi!" and can be found on Condé Nast's LGBTQ+ outlet, them.us