Thursday, November 6, 2008

Lupita.

I really suck at keeping up with posts.

My sister and I were reminiscing about the past and we were remembering our house-keeper from back in the day. Her name was Lupita and she was like our second mother/older sister. My parents were always busy (don't get me wrong, I'm not saying they were never there or anything) so Lupita was always there to help us with whatever we needed.

She came to work with us when I was 3. She was only 14, but she was the only working person in her family. Every week she would send money to her family and barely kept any for herself. She was always a hard worker and she had a lot of ambition.

Lupita didn't speak a word of English, and at the tender age of 3, I didn't either. If my mom was too busy to help me with my homework, my house keeper would do her best to help me. She would also cook my meals and try and help my mom with the never-ending battle with my weight.

Needles to say, she would sneak in a couple of treats for me. She would leave me little mini-snickers on my pillow at night. Also, I absolutely refused to sleep on my own. I slept with her until I was 11. And even then, she had to be in the room for me to fall asleep.

Lupita was such an awesome big sister. She would put it on this crazy radio station that was based in Mexico City and for some reason, our retarded radio would get signal. (That radio was retarded, we would get signal from the airport and we could hear the pilots talking). The radio station would have a segment at night dedicated to the paranormal. We would stay up really late listening to people call in and talk about the weird things happening in their home. For some reason, they got a lot of calls complaining about dwarfs or elves.

I guess that's why I'm so into that kind of stuff. I grew up with it.

Anyway, Lupita left us for a good year or two. It was hard for us to cope without her because she was always there. When she came back, she had a surprise: she was pregnant. I think I was about 13 when she gave birth her son. She named him Brian, which is hilarious because he's a really really really Mexican looking kid with a white name.

We raised Brian for a couple of years.

Then she left to Atlanta and she would call us all on our birthdays and send us letters. I always thought it was so sweet that she remembered all that stuff.

She came by and stayed with us for a couple of days this past summer, and it was just like old times. We stayed up until the wee hours of the morning talking about what's new, talking about love and most importantly, talking about ghosts.

My sister and I were laughing because she and I were horrible kids to her sometimes. We locked her out of the house while my sister and I wreaked havoc on our house. One time, we were out riding out bikes and I decided it would be hilarious to ram my bike into hers, and when I did, she flew off of hers and skinned her leg BAD. She still has the scars!

Oh man, Lupita was such a badass.

She's working at the Salvation Army now and she can speak English! That girl has so much ambition... I envy her. What she wants, she gets with blood, sweat, and tears. I wish I had that sort of dedication.

Sorry for the rant, but she was on my mind all day.

Oh, Lupita. You were the best.