Leaking Coconuts

Rosa H.


Some women raise children because they’re expected to. Others do it because they choose to. Rosa chose me. She wasn’t my mother by blood, but she was the one who fed me, bathed me, held me and filled our home with the scent of comfort. I never told her what she meant to me. This is my way of doing that now.


It was the early 1900s in a remote southern town. Rosa was barely a teenager when she was sent to the city to work as a maid. Presumably, her family had sent her away to support herself or perhaps she ran off; either way, no one came looking, no one ever said a word.

How Rosa survived in that new environment was never discussed. But what did happen, what changed everything, really, was that while working as a domestic servant, she became pregnant by the employers’ son, Alejandro, most likely the result of abuse. She would go on to have three more children by him. Somehow, Rosa managed to settle into a second floor walk-up and sustain a modest, stable home for herself and, eventually, six children.

I’m not sure I would’ve done any better under the same circumstances.

By the time Rosa took me in, only her youngest daughter, Virginia, remained in the apartment. Virginia doted on me too and, as a 25-year-old unmarried woman, she began to see me as her daughter.

It was both of these women who cared for me, practically from birth through the first five years of my current lifetime. Rosa was the one who did the hard parts: the diapering, the feeding, the night wakings. She didn’t hesitate. She simply took me into her home and into her heart.

She was also a good cook, nothing fancy, just nourishing, comforting food made with care. By eleven in the morning, the whole apartment would be filled with the scent of something delicious: potatoes, rice, maybe quinoa. To this day, when I think of comfort food, I think of Rosa. That smell meant love, it meant home.

The first life altering moment I can remember was the day I was taken from Rosa. No warning. No explanation, just removed and placed in the “family” home.

No one ever thanked Rosa. I didn’t either. I was too small to understand what she had given me.

This is me saying it now, mamama. You were my mother. You chose me. And I miss you.

Leaking Coconuts

795 Inambari

Her right hand gently poured warm water over my chest, while her left cradled my head just above the surface. It was daytime. A soft breeze floated in from the open balcony door behind me.

The woman I looked at as she bathed me was my grandmother. Her name was Rosa. Had it not been for her, I likely wouldn’t have survived the first few days of my life.

The warmth of the water in her hand, the way it touched my skin, felt like floating in pure trust, in love. A knowing I still cannot verbalize.

This is the first recollection of my life, one of only a handful of memories that still fill me with a profound sense of belonging, of being safe. I see the metal tub, placed carefully between two of her wooden chairs. I feel the warm water on my chest. I remember perceivig a kindness as she looked at me, a baby she had chosen to look after despite economic hardship and other struggles.

That memory stands in stark contrast to what came after. But for a brief, golden time, I was the apple of someone’s eye.

And I never thanked her.

Not with words.
Not with time.
Not before she was gone.

I carry that now.