Painting of two swifts flying over wildflowers.
‘Common Swifts’ (1886) by Bruno Liljefors via Wikimedia Commons

Waiting to Land

Watching pigeons, blackbirds, and swifts with my infant son while suspended in quarantine

Tenderly
Published in
6 min readAug 5, 2020

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Before he learns the sign for milk, my son points to the top of the seven-foot high, Kahlo-blue wooden fence which protects our rooftop patio and chews invisible seed, mimicking the birds eating from a terracotta dish. Will we go see the pigeons? Can you see the pigeons? What are the pigeons doing? My husband asks the baby many questions, and this is one of the first words he clearly recognizes. When he begins to be unsettled, pigeons snaps his eyes to the glass and swivels his head to search out their small forms. He smiles. He points, and we take him there.

For the first 56 days of his life, my son had no nationality. He was not automatically British, like my husband, because he was not born on British soil. He was not a U.S. citizen, like I am, because he was not born on U.S. soil. Despite being born in Alicante, he could not be Spanish, because he has two parents foreign to Spain.

He was ours. He was mine.

In the hospital, the two of us slept in shifts so we could watch him at all times. We kept on the 24-hour Spanish news cycle to help keep ourselves awake and I saw the same clips of people walking and running from a Walmart in El Paso dozens of times.

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Tenderly

Published in Tenderly

A vegan magazine that’s hopefully devoted to delicious plants, liberated animals, and leading a radical, sustainable, joyful life

Layla Benitez-James

Written by Layla Benitez-James

lives in Alicante. Her poems and translations have appeared in The London Magazine, The Acentos Review, Guernica, Waxwing, and EuropeNow Journal.

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