PLZ HELP 
The next reading strategy you will use helps to organize the text into smaller sections. This strategy is called chunking the text. Look at the stanzas of the free-verse narrative passage from Under the Mesquite. Do any of them fit together? Are there clear transitions in the story? How would you chunk the text? Focus on one section at a time. Write an outline of how you organized the text into smaller sections.
señorita
Mami said life would change
after I turned fifteen, 
when I became a señorita. 
But señorita means different things 
to different people.
For my friends Mireya and Sarita, 
who turned fifteen last summer, 
señorita means wearing lipstick, 
which when I put it on 
is sticky and messy, 
like strawberry jam on my lips.
For Mami, señorita means 
making me try on high-heeled shoes 
two inches high 
and meant to break my neck.
For Mami’s sisters, my tías 
Maritza and Belén, who live in Mexico, 
señorita means measuring me, 
turning me this way and that 
as they fit me for the floral dresses 
they cheerfully stitch together 
on their sewing machines.
For the aunts, señorita also means 
insisting I wear pantyhose, 
the cruel invention that makes 
my thick, trunk-like thighs 
into bulging sausages.
When my tías are done dressing me up 
like a big Mexican Barbie doll, 
I look at myself in the mirror. 
Mami stands behind me 
as I pull at the starched 
flowered fabric and argue 
with Mami’s reflection.
“Why do I have to wear this stuff? 
This is your style, not mine! 
I like jeans and tennis shoes. 
Why can’t I just dress 
like a normal teenager? 
En los Estados Unidos, girls 
don’t dress up like muñecas.”
“Señoritas don’t talk back 
to their mothers,” Mami warns. 
When my aunts aren’t looking, 
she gives me a tiny pinch, 
like a bee sting on the inside 
of my upper arm. “Señoritas know 
when to be quiet and let their 
elders make the decisions.”
For my father, señorita means 
he has to be a guard dog 
when boys are around. 
According to my parents, 
I won’t be allowed to date 
until I graduate from high school.
That’s fine with me. 
I have better things to do than think about boys— 
like prepare for my future. 
I want to be the first one in our family 
to earn a college degree.
For my sisters, señorita means 
having someone to worship: 
it is the wonder of 
seeing their oldest sister 
looking like Cinderella 
on her way to the ball.
But for me, señorita means 
melancolía: settling into sadness. 
It is the end of wild laughter. 
The end of chewing bubble gum 
and giggling over nothing 
with my friends at the movies, our feet up 
on the backs of the theater seats.
Señorita is very boring 
when we go to a fancy restaurant 
decorated with Christmas lights 
for the upcoming Posadas. 
We sit properly, Papi, Mami, 
and I, quietly celebrating 
my fifteenth birthday 
with due etiquette because 
I’m trying my best 
to be a good daughter and accept 
the clipping of my wings, 
the taming of my heart.
Being a señorita 
is not as much fun 
as I’d expected it to be. 
It means composure and dignity.
Señorita is a niña, 
the girl I used to be, 
who has lost her voice.