First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"A whole bunch of people towards the back of the room were now getting up to leave. But these teachers were not going to intimidate me. I wasnāt my fatherās and motherās son for nada-nothing. I wasnāt my two indigenous grandmothersā grandson for nada-nothing either. I came from a long line of peopleā¦whoād lived through starvation, revolutions, and massacre. āAND YOU!ā I yelled into the microphone. āOver there in the backā¦who are getting up to leaveā¦IāM GLAD THAT YOUāRE LEAVING!"
"It was truly a good thing that Iād found writing as my outlet or I was sure I would have become a mass murderer, killing all those heartless, racist teachers whoād beat us Mexican kids down since kindergarten"
"I still wanted to tell our teacher about how the Indian people whoād worked on the ranch for us had explained to me that Shep, whoād always loved my brother more than life itself, had disappeared, because heād run off to the highest hilltop to intercept my brotherās soul so he could lead my brotherās soul back to heaven."
"Dog, cats, horses, all animals could do this at will much easier than us humans, Rosa and her husband Emilio, had explained to me, because animals were much closer to God than we humans were."
"Because the most important thing any man can do in all his life is pick the right woman to breed withāI mean, marry first, then breed, because from the woman comes theāā āācomes the instinct to survive,ā I said, having heard this for as long as I could remember. āGood,ā said mi papa,"
"Lo cortĆ©s no quita lo valiante, y lo valiante no quita lo cortĆ©s.ā This Iād also heard for as long as I could remember, and it was one of our oldest Mexican dichos, sayings, and what it said was that manners didnāt take away bravery, and that bravery didnāt diminish manners."
"No, my dad had well explained to me that a real man didnāt get offended if other men ridiculed him for staying close to the women of his familia. That a real hombre was proud of being close and loving with the women of his life."
"Seeing my motherās red shoes disappear, I almost leaped up screaming again, but then, the boy next to me said, āCalmate,ā in Spanish, āweāre going to be okay, mano.ā I turned and looked at this boy. My God, his Spanish sounded so soft and comforting, and he was the most darkly handsome boy that Iād ever seen. His eyes were as large and beautiful as a goatās eyes. Looking at him, I stopped crying."
"I liked him. He seemed a lot more animal to me than human, which was good, of course, because my grandmother, DoƱa Guadalupe, had always explained to me that all humans were born with an animal-spirit to help guide them through life, and so the humans who realized this would always seem more animal than human, and this was wonderful. It kept us closer to God."
"āLook,ā said Jake, ālast night, after you went to bed, we told your dad how weād come across you running away from home.ā āYou did?ā I said. āYes, we did. It was the honest thing to do, son. And you shouldāve seen the hurt look on your dadās face, because, you see, Mexican kids donāt run away from home. White kids, gringo kids, like me and Luke, weāre the ones who run from home, but Mexicans, they aināt never do that."
"Later, I heard my brother ask our father why heād been so generous. āA man can never be too generous,ā said our dad, āwhen heās generous to a good, hardworking honest hombre, because that man will then break his back to do all he can for you. Butā¦you be generous to a relative or a lazy, no-good worker, and they then think youāre a fool, lose respect for you, and start thinking you owe them something."
"It was from this day on that I began to notice a real difference between our vaqueros on the ranch from Mexico and the gringo cowboys. The American cowboys always seemed so ready to act rough and tough, wanting to ābreakā the horse, cow, or goat or anything else. Where, on the other hand, our vaquerosāwho used the word āamanzar,ā meaning to make ātame,ā for dealing with horsesāhad a whole different attitude towards everything. To ābreakā a horse, for the cowboys, actually, really meant to take a green, untrained horse and rope him, knock him down, saddle him while he fought to get loose, then mount him as he got up on all four legs, and ride the living hell out of the horse until you tired him out, taught him who was boss, and ābrokeā his spirit. To āamanzarā a horse, on the other hand, was a whole other approach that took weeks of grooming, petting, and leading the green horse around in the afternoon with a couple of well-trained horses. Then, after about a month, you began to put a saddle on the horse and tie him up in shade in the afternoon for a couple of hours until, finally, the saddle felt like just a natural part of him. Then, and only then, did a person finally mount the horse, petting and sweet-talking him the whole time, and once more the green horse was taken on a walk between two well-trained horses."
"I now began to collect pubic hair, which I figured was a much safer way to go. Iād look for pubic hair in every bathroom after the girls showered, and in my mindās eye, Iād try to match up each hair with each girl, all the while imaging her beautiful, luscious, wet, hairy, good-feeling bush. I mean, this was the summer that our pool area just seemed to be full of girls all the time. I was quickly becoming a pubic hair expert"
"And here at my school, we were in a protected environment, and so, to be as tough as we were being taught to be wasnāt a virtue. It could also be just plain stupid. Like one cadet named Wellabussy. He was from La Jolla, and his family had a feeding pen for cattle in the Imperial Valley east of San Diego County. They were very wealthy, and he liked to tell the story about how he shot illegal Mexicans below their knees with his .22 rifle when they were returning home across the border after theyād worked all day on his dadās ranch. When he told this story in English class, I was shocked. And after class when I asked him why he would do such a horrible thing, he smiled a sick-looking little grin. āBecause itās fun watching them scream,ā he said, āand theyāre illegal, so they canāt do shit about it.ā He laughed, then said to me, āGrow up. We need to be tough and not give an inch or our whole country will go to hell, returning to the Indians who we already whipped.ā Iāll never forget how heād grinned at me as he said this, knowing well that I was Mexican and therefore part Indian."
"Suddenly, I donāt know how to explain it, the chess pieces seemed to come alive for me. It was like I could now see the chess pieces moving on the board on their own. I started beating everybody. I, the slowest of the slow, had now gone something like a hundred games without losing. I could do no wrong. It was magical how the pieces spoke to me, showing me where to move."
"My mother, a woman, told me this, and Iāll tell you, mijo, that you will learn who you are and who you arenāt in the next four or five years, because not to learn who you are and who you arenāt in the next few years, my mother said, is to be missing the most important part of your whole life."
"Every year right after the Christmas holidays, our IQ scores were posted on the bulletin board at the Academy. We, the juniors and seniors, had taken our tests several weeks ago, and for the last few days we were all nervous wrecks waiting to see our results. Of course, we were all told that what was really crucial for us to get into the college of our choice was the grade point average of our last two years of high school, plus our SAT scores. But we knew that our IQ score could also make a big difference because our IQ, weād been told, was what gave us a true measure of our intelligence. So if we hadnāt worked real hard in school or hadnāt tested well in our college entrance exams, then our IQ could make all the difference."
"Sex and love were driving the whole world and me crazyloco! I just couldnāt stand it anymore! I was going to have to kill myself."
"And no one would interfere with me because of the loaded gun in my hand. Also, a part of me didnāt give a shit anymore if I was caught or not. I could now see that my objective wasnāt just to kill Moses and all these other teachers who had abused us, but for everyone in all the whole world to know why. This wasnāt going to be a surprise attack. This had to be a cold, premeditated act, completely well planned, just as it had been premeditated and well thought out to torture and beat us Mexican kids, starting in kindergarten, so weād be a people, a gente, with our heads bowed down to authority forever, thinking we were inferior and worthless. I now realized that this was how you enslaved a people. You didnāt just bring them over in chains from Africa. No, you convinced them that they were inferior, not evolved, subhuman, and then when you took off their shackles, so they could go to work, youād still have them enslaved and shackled inside of their minds for hundreds of years. And this system of teaching was fine with most Anglo teachers, because in the act of convincing us, los Mexicanos and the Blacks, we were subhuman, theyād also convinced themselves that they were superior!"
"Someone finally understood all the āhellā that Iād been through since a child when Iād first tried to understand language. And yet in other forms of communications, like painting, sculpture, music, math, problem-solving, and chess, Iād been very good. In fact, in high school, once I learned how to play chess, Iād play lightning-fast, intuitively seeing all these different possibilities at the same time, and Iād won well over a hundred chess games without losing a single game. And that included beating some of our faculty members who thought that they were very good at chess."
"e as you, but he couldnāt see me, because I was dark and Indian-looking and didnāt have blue eyes like him. Your mother and me, we are not going to forget you and your sisters like my father forgot me. I swear it!ā"
"āYes,ā he said. āYou see, I, too, have been seeing a lot of things, now that Iāve been spending so much time at the hospital.ā He took a deep breath. āOne night I got up and went down the hallway to see this woman who was crying. She was an elderly woman and the doctors didnāt know what to do for her. She was dying. I held her hand and stroked her forehead like she was a child. She immediately calmed down and was able to pass over in her sleep so peacefully. āThe night nurse was furious, and the next morning she told the doctors what Iād done. They, too, became upset, telling me I didnāt have the authority to visit other patients. That poor nurse and the doctors, they just werenāt prepared to accept the simple truth that they arenāt in control. No one is in control, Mundo. Weāre all just Godās guests for a short time.ā I donāt know why, but I now asked, āJoseph, are you dying?ā He looked at me straight in the eyes. āYes, Mundo,ā he said, āIām dying.ā"
"I laughed. I could see her point completely, because in Spanish youād never say, āI think I love you,ā especially after four years. That would be an insult. Youād say, āI feel love for you so deeply that when I just think of you, I start to tremble and feel my heart flutter.ā Why? Because Spanish is a feeling-based language that comes first from the heart, just as English is a thinking-based language that comes first from the head."
"āMy dad, he didnāt even have the eyes to see me after all of his tall, blue-eyed sons were dead. He started bellowing from the hilltop to hilltop like a madman, saying that God had forsaken him, and he had nothing more to live for, because all his sons were gone!ā Tears streamed down my dadās face. āI was about nine or ten, the same ag"
"āLook at me closely, amigo,ā said my dad. āHere is a hundred-dollar bill just to start with. Thirty dollars of this is for you to put in your own pocket right now. Capiche?ā The bartenderās whole attitude changed. Suddenly he wasnāt tired anymore. āYes, mi general, entiendo!ā he said. āGood, and give another twenty to the chef in back and ten to the dishwasher. That leaves forty for my son and me to drink and eat a little something.ā āBut of course!ā said the barkeeper. āThe whole place is open for you! Which tequila would you like?ā he added anxiously. āHerradura, and a couple of Modelo cervezas.ā āI like Dos Equis,ā I said. āThe dark one.ā āOkay,ā said my dad, āone Modelo and one dark Dos Equis.ā The bartender was flying, moving, truly enjoying the whole show. My dad winked at me. āLike I always say, to tip after the meal is stupid. Tip first and big, and the whole world changes.ā"
"Suddenly, I wondered what the hell was going on. Ramón had been the smartest and most capable guy in our whole grade in āthinkingā and āfiguringā out things, and heād been considered dumb, too. And now Gus, he was also the smartest guy of all of us during recess and he just said that heād been flunked before. This didnāt make any damnāI mean, blessedāsense to me at all! The smartest kids I knew were all considered stupid."
"āListen to me good,ā said my father the moment we were out the door. He was hot, I could tell. āEverybody has their own game, understand? Lawyers got theirs. Doctors got theirs. Business people got theirs. Every bum on the street has his, too. Got it? And every game has two sets of rules, the one set that they tell people that they play by, butālisten closelyābehind their closed doors, these same people always got another set of rules that they really play their game with. The Church, she does this beautifully, having people pray to Cristo, oh, so sweetly. Then they get all those young nuns and priests to work for free for them all their lives, and yet from behind those closed doors, that goodhearted, all-loving Church steals the best lands of Mexico, and the whole world, if she could! āEducation, mijo, is another racket. Another con game! Donāt let nobody fool you! School wants to get people thinking all the same way like trained mice. Donāt you ever fall for nobodyās racket, mijito. Think, here in your head, feel, here in your heart, and trust your tanates, here between your legs a lo chingón! This is life in all her power and glory! Got it?ā he said, gently putting his huge thick hand on my shoulder. āI got it, papa,ā I said, wiping the tears out of my eyes. And I really did get it. I loved my father con todo mi corazón. He made so much sense, just like Ramón, and even Gus. All these guys made sense and they took no shit from nobody!"
"My heart was beat, beat, beating. No one, except my mother, had ever looked at me or spoken to me like this. āYou are the most sensitive and beautiful man Iāve ever met,ā she said with tears coming to her eyes. I took a big, deep breath. This was just too much. I couldnāt believe it. Iād been called stupid and ugly for so long that this was really tough to hear. Once, Iāll never forget, two seniors at the Academy had stopped me and ordered me to attention, and Iād snapped to, as we underclassmen were supposed to do. Theyād walked around me, carefully inspecting my uniform, and one of them then said, āIs this the cadet?ā āYes,ā said the other one. āI agree with you; youāre right,ā said the first one. āThis is the ugliest cadet in the school!ā"
"āPromise me,ā he said, āthat youāll say nothing, and if something happens to me, youāll always honor our parents.ā I swallowed. He was scaring me. āLook,ā he continued, āIāve met a lot of rich kids and their parents at the Academy, and Iāll tell you, there are no parents that Iām prouder to have as my father and mother than ours. They rose up with nothing, Mundo, except guts and faith and love. Do you understand?ā I shook my head. āNo, I donāt,ā I said. He licked his lips. He seemed to be licking his lips all the time now. āYou will,ā he said. āYou just pay close attention, and you will.ā"
"āMamaās beautiful?ā I asked. āAre you blind?ā said my brother. āDonāt you see how men and women are always looking at our mother everywhere she goes. Our mother is more beautiful than any movie star youāll ever see, and yet this isnāt why papa chose her. He chose her, heās told us a thousand times, because when he first saw her, she was in line to go into the dance hall over in Carlos Malo with her brother and sister. And when a fight broke out, she didnāt get excited and enjoy it like her sister and the other women. No, she and her brother moved away, wanting no part of it, and so, by seeing this, papa knew that she was a woman of high intelligence, respect, and responsibility; a person that he could trust with his life. And trust, remember, is the foundation of all love, papa says.ā"
"Here, a man and woman unite for life, but they include in their union all the loves they will live through in their lifetime. But over there, itās all about changing wives and changing husbands, searching for that one perfect amor."
"The written word is holyā¦When we write our stories, it helps us bring understanding."
"āYOUāVE GOT RAGE. THEN YOU RETURN TO THE STATES WITH THAT RAGE! YOU DONāT RUN AWAY! You saw bad, terrible things happen to you and other Mexican kids in school, then YOU DONāT CHICKENSHIT OUT! No, you go back, and you do something with that rage that will MAKE A DIFFERENCE for all those kids! Thatās the beauty of the United States! Even the little guy can fight back!"
"āMarina,ā I said, āI donāt know how to explain this, but ⦠well, everything I say or do or even think just doesnāt seem to work out for me. Except when Iām totally alone.ā I almost added, āTotally alone with God,ā but I didnāt because I knew how crazyloco this might sound, especially since I wasnāt a priest or a monk."
"I'm showing people that indigenous people weren't stupidā¦At one time, we were all indigenous: the Irish, the English. We built a false premise that we're superior to the indigenous people. We've got to ⦠show that we're in harmony with this planet."
"No, I wasnāt very smart, this I knew, but I was beginning to think that maybe, just maybe, I was some kind of crazy-loco genius, burro genius. I mean, to have been able to hold on to my Spirit for this long had to mean something."
"āEve,ā I said, āplease stop for a minute. I think I finally get it. As you read to me aloud, the words become alive for me, and I can see pictures in my head. But when I try to read, all those little letters just confuse me. Because itās the white of the page between the words that truly grab me. Do I make any sense? Reading, I do believe, is a very unnatural thing. But to listen to a story, like sitting around a campfire, is very natural.ā"
"āMundo, you start paying closer attention to our mama and papa. They didnāt get this far in life because their eyes are closed.ā I nodded. Iād never had a conversation like this before with my brother Joseph"
"Yes, amor and peace and prosperity are what we need here in this great nation of ours after that terrible Depression, and then this huge, long, awful World War Two. āBut, Iād also like to add that I, personally, didnāt build this house just in honor of Joseph and Mary and Jesus. No, when we made plans to build this house, I immediately sent our architect to Hollywood to find how big Tom Mixās house was. Because when I first come to this country from Mexico, we see these Tom Mix movies in Arizona, with the gringos on the right side of the theater and the Mexicans and Blacks on the left side. And we see that no-good, fake son-of-a-bitch Tom Mix knock down five Mexicanos with one punch! And one Sunday in Douglas, ArizonaāIāll never forget, I was just a kidāthis big, handsome Mexicano from Los Altos de Jalisco got mad and jumped up on the stage in front of the movie and yelled, āCome on, you gringo bastards! See if one of you can knock me down with one punch! And Iāll give you the first punch free, a lo chingón!ā And he ripped his shirt open and pounded his chest! āAnd soāwell, yes, of course, a fight got started. Two men were killed and ten more hospitalized. So I tell you, when we started to build this house, I told our architect, GO up to Hollywood and find out how big Tom Mixās house is, so we could build OUR CASA BIGGER AND BETTER! So I now say to all of you that I didnāt have this house built just for peace and love, but to also tell every DAMN HUMAN BEING ON ALL THE EARTH that here in Oceanside, California, stands UN MEXICANO DE LOS BUENOS CON SUS TANATES IN HAND, free to work or fight with both hands, whichever way the DEVIL WANTS TO PAINT IT! And this is MY TOAST A LO CHINGĆN! SALUD!ā SHOUTS ERUPTED!"
"You are a man now, and to be un hombre, a man must not only know right from wrong, he must also know who he is and who he isnāt. Because if a man doesnāt know who he is and who he isnāt, then no matter how much he knows about right and wrong, he will always be like a fish out of water."
"I talked for hours, and for the first time in my life, I could see that Iād lived two very different lives ever since Iād started school. On the ranch Iād lived a life full of love and work and warm, good feelings. At school Iād been treated with so much ⦠physical and mental abuse that I was still filled with so much rage; it was hard for me to even think about it."
"āPapĆ”,ā I said, āon our first day of school, they screamed at us, āNo Spanish! English only!ā Then they slapped Ramón in the face until he was all bloody because he wouldnāt stop talking Spanish. And all he was saying was āDonāt yell at me, youāre not my mother,ā and āDonāt be grabbing me! You have no right to do this.ā He was so smart, papĆ”, and so brave and noble, and they kept slapping him, again and again, until his whole face was a bloody mess.ā"
"I took a deep breath, and the humming began behind my left ear. I now knew how Iād solved that math problem in Ashmoreās class. Everything, every thought that came to us came from heaven through our guardian angel, our genius, when we were at peace in our hearts and in balance in our brains. So yes, I was barking up the right tree with all these thoughts and words that were coming out of my mouth. And with such ease."
"He knocked the chess set off his desk, screaming at me, āYouāre not a stupid Mexican! Youāre just lazy! Iām one of the best chess players in all Carlsbad and you treat me with no respect!ā I was shocked. All my life Iād been called stupid because I was Mexican, not because I was lazy. This was really good."
"Suddenly I remembered Jeannie Windflow, whoād taught me how to kiss when we were kids. At the age of seventeen, sheād run off with a Mexican guy from Pozole Town who was nineteen years old, had a job, and was one of the handsomest guys Iād ever seen. He was a semi-professional boxer and real dark. She was a track star, a straight-A student, and real blonde."
"āYou know, weāve got to be careful about what we believe that this Church tells us,ā said my dad. āRemember, sheās the one who stole all the best lands de MĆ©xico for herself and enslaved all the Indians that she didnāt kill off."
"And I realized: I've got to write the story about our people to anchor us to creation. And then no matter how much we get abused, we'll still feel special and we'll still feel good."
"So, keep your powder dry and dig in for a long, fruitful life of being a writer, that storyteller around the campfire of your people and your generation. Your trade is as old as time, and your main job is to uplift the human heart so that then we can go on with dignity and fair play. Thatās it"
"Then I was almost thirty years old when I wrote Macho!, and finally got published after 265 rejections. Immediately, I returned to this book youāre reading, thinking I could now pull it off, but I was wrong."
"My God, it was really coming true. The higher and higher I climbed in education, the more I was finding people I could talk to."