If you've never seen the distance in an immigrants eyes Then you've never seen resistance in the form of a cry He decided it was time to bring the drought to an end The soujourner, soul searcher from whom i descend Put his life inside his pockets leavin' on a plane Living long lonely nights children wife left in labor pain Tirelessly trying to provide he prized dialectics to fight for the slice of a pie But this life was premised on a lie instead of being promised by society The nature of economy is sodomy ten generations of poverty turned to poverty Later, and a third world diploma not even worth the paper its written on With no elevators goin' up to the top ya'll Instead its long days spent slavin over hourly wages And when the clock strikes labor he savors the pages Of letters sent by his kinfolk who invoke the image of what its like to have been broke through cigarette smoke
He tries to spin hope to dreams in close to proximity to family in his memory And it is stated in between the night shifts and sleep a moment of clarity He may never come home despite the familiarity of faces from his homeland who speak the same dialect Fellow country women and men standin' in line to get greencards, visas, and pa**ports Barely makin' enough over half a paycheck remitted with love Strangers keep staring in disgust and distrust talkin 'bout this country's just us: no justice His hope's enough to oneday return to his town to join his ancestors in their burial ground Almost forgot how the countryside sounds but this time around the lost are never found In the distance between home and where we live Its the distance between a mother and her kids and Its the distance that keeps us apart and Its the distance between my soul and my heart