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Heritage
My Chinese
is more than just red-and-gold envelopes,
pale dumplings in porcelain dishes,
Or the lanterns above our doorstep ushering in good fortune,
Billowing gently in the wind like calla lilies carrying sweet incense.
It is a delicate dream embroidered into soft silk,
a moral code carved on cold, glistening jade,
an upbringing strict yet forged in ambition:
Build yourself up from the strength of knowledge
And no one can take you down.
It’s what has convinced a diffident little girl,
Always keeping her head down and voice a hushed whisper
That her true form is an astrological dragon
Full of fire and brimstone
With wings strong enough to soar above the sky.
It’s the ghost of a past
That gets lodged in my throat
everytime I grasp for words in that lost language,
shadows of willowy characters
tugging at my mind.
My Chinese may bide its days
Hidden just beneath the soil,
But it’s also the roots
that hold me up with its firm, unwavering grasp,
the foundation of my identity.
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As a Chinese-American, sometimes, it can sometimes feel like being caught between two worlds. But in the end, heritage is something so valuable that you can never let go of.