Latest News:

【Bebo Love (2021) BindasTimes Hindi Short Film】

Love Songs: “Estoy Aquí”

By Ana Karina Zatarain

On Music

Shakira. Wikimedia Commons, Licensed Under CCO 2.0

This week, the Review is publishing a series of short reflections on love songs, broadly defined. 

Romance and heartbreak are promised before they are experienced. As a child I was filled with a sort of yearning that preceded any actual object of desire. It was a desire for desire itself, one that, like many girls who grew up speaking Spanish in the late nineties and early aughts, I conjured by listening to  Shakira’s 1995 album, Pies Descalzos. The first song was my favorite. “Estoy Aquí” begins with a teenage Shakira’s lilting voice over an acoustic guitar: “I know you won’t return,” she sings with quavering melancholy, and then the song explodes into a saccharine tempo unbefitting of a lovelorn person. But how would I have known that? I sang along in my room, imagining that one day I would love someone but also one day I would lose them, and that was even more thrilling. To be alive! And drowning amid “photos and notebooks and things and memories.” I could hardly wait. 

In adulthood I have found that intense pleasure and intense grief are startlingly similar experiences—both ecstatic states of being, from the Greek word ekstasis: “entrancement, astonishment, insanity; any displacement or removal from the proper place.” “Estoy Aquí” articulates the specific contours of feeling left behind in a great love’s wake. But, also in adulthood and much to my disappointment, I have found that most affairs end in anticlimax. Twice I have been overcome by the obsessive conjuring of a lost lover; countless times, a budding romance has fizzled out unspectacularly. Infatuation often fails to coalesce into substance. As a child I knew no anthems for the guilt that comes with ghosting or, worse, for the blunt anxiety born of receiving text messages with decreasing frequency. I must admit I feel a little ripped off. “The letters I wrote, I never sent,” sings young Shakira, but what about the pages you leave blank because passion would be unwarranted? 

I suppose it is apt that, to borrow from T.S. Eliot, “Estoy Aquí” ends not with a bang but a whimper. The song fades with no resounding note, just a watered down repetition of what has already been stated, a languid dissolution of something that started off so strong.

 

Ana Karina Zatarain is a writer living in Mexico City. Her debut essay collection, To and From, will be published by Knopf in 2024. 

Related Articles

  • Put Me In, Coach!
    2025-06-26 16:13
  • Trump's meeting about violence and video games is off to a bad start
    2025-06-26 16:12
  • WeWork buys digital marketing company Conductor to offer members tools
    2025-06-26 15:16
  • In praise of the addictive madness of 'Bachelor' Twitter
    2025-06-26 14:52
  • Here are the glorious proposed logos for Donald Trump's Space Force
    2025-06-26 14:40
  • BlackBerry sues Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp for patent infringement
    2025-06-26 14:34
  • Hey Travis Kalanick, your fund's name is trucker code for pissing
    2025-06-26 14:17
  • MoviePass collects alarming amount of data about you: Company responds
    2025-06-26 13:45
  • Best Garmin deal: Save over $100 on Garmin Forerunner 955
    2025-06-26 13:40
  • Marvel is going to make a sequel to 'Black Panther.' Obviously.
    2025-06-26 13:40

Popular

Top Reads

Recommendations