Searching for Connection, Identity, and Community as a Honduran-Born Adoptee
I wanted her language, her understanding of Honduras, a family like hers. I wanted things she could never give me.
me
replace
born I felt my heart wilt at the thought of her thinking less of me. If I explained that I’d been adopted, in her eyes I would no longer be someone like her. Maybe I would no longer be Honduran at all.
really
In the end, I wouldn’t give her a chance to see or to know me. We never became close friends. We never had a full conversation in Spanish. We never danced together to Maná, as I once imagined we would, or talked about politics. But it wasn’t because of her, it was because of me. I was too afraid to show her who I was. I was scared she would reject me, so I rejected her first.
*
After that experience, I decided I couldn’t base a friendship on whether or not someone was Honduran. If you took that away, after all, would Analu and I have had anything in common? Would we have connected at all?
Still, when you grow up with no relationships with anyone of your own ethnic background, no mirrors, it’s hard not to crave it. What I finally learned that I craved, as much as seeing myself in other people, was a sense of community—what the family I’d known in childhood had moved away to find. But I would never be part of any community if I kept hiding myself from others.
As I grew older, I did wonder more about my biological origins. Eventually, though, I became more interested in knowing where I came from, rather than who I came from. I wanted to connect with my culture, my heritage, more than I wanted to find my birth family. Maybe I was scared I would never find my biological family, so the next best thing would be to reconnect with my own culture; find some kind of acceptance there.
After college, I traveled to Southeast Asia, where new Thai friends opened up to me. I became close to a Korean woman and her son. I visited a high school friend in Cambodia and became part of her tight-knit community there. Later, I traveled across Latin America and lived with a host family in Peru. My papito there called me funny nicknames, and I know I was his favorite host student. My mamita and I would sneak off to the movies, or have pollo a la brasa before dinner, and not tell anyone. My two host sisters and I had similar dark, charcoal eyes and brown skin, the same sarcastic sense of humor, but the most important thing we shared was our love for each other. I made these connections because I was no longer so afraid to let people in—I allowed them to know me, and they loved me for who I was.
I became more interested in knowing where I came from, rather than who I came from. I wanted to connect with my culture more than I wanted to find my birth family.
I made my way to Honduras three separate times. Each visit was different. Each time, the longing I’d once felt to find my biological family lessened. By the third visit, I started to be more present in each moment, and in these moments I became better acquainted with and embedded in the place I was living.
The family I was closest to owned a restaurant across from my apartment, and I would see them every day. Some days I would help in the kitchen, and the mother and I would laugh and laugh. On other days, I’d help the youngest daughter, Ruth, with her homework. I was there for the older daughter, Ana, when she wanted to talk about her newest crush. These relationships were based on something deeper than a shared ethnicity. These people knew me. They loved me. They saw me, and I saw them.
I didn’t find my biological family in Honduras, but I found myself. And, just as important, I found community—that word the Bolivian family had used back when I couldn’t quite understand what it meant, or voice my longing for the same.
i am a queer honduran nonbinary trans adoptee currently completing my mfa in creative writing (wfcya) at the new school. i am represented by marietta zacker. you can find some of my words in them, bustle, into, and the establishment. www.medinawrites.com