Wherever We Go, Love Follows: the Angelito Collective Celebrates Christmas
As I watched everyone move around, catching up, sharing laughter, stories, and wisdom over glasses of wine and plates of food, it truly felt like a space for a family sowing the seeds of a lasting legacy.
Historically, Black Trans people have faced significant barriers to building legacies. While space has often served as a balm and refuge for Trans communities, it has also been the site of ongoing violence and erasure. In response, the Angelito Collective poses vital questions: “How can collective care enable our community to exist in a way that is wealthy beyond financial means? And what does it mean to have wealth in our bodies, minds, and hearts?” Positioned at this critical threshold, co-founder Demíyah and the collective’s members — Angel, Kam, Sinn, Divine, and Ramie — challenge traditional notions of space by actively imagining and creating new ones.
For Perez, “Nourishment can exist in so many different ways.” The dinners extend the meaning of wealth from monetary excess to forms of nourishment that sustain the body, mind, and soul. Safety is also paramount; attendees are provided with cars to and from the event and a $100 stipend to support any additional needs.
Attendees were encouraged to take part in healing modalities, such as ear acupuncture, craniosacral therapy, cupping, somatic therapy, and gua sha. Morning Glory a Bronx-based community garden that the collective frequently collaborates with, donated respiratory-support tea blends infused with raspberry leaf, shiso, mugwort, and echinacea. Milk Makeup provided thoughtfully curated product bags, while Star Route Farms supplied Kevin, the night’s chef, with fresh, seasonal produce for the menu. Attendees were also encouraged to bring their own dishes, fostering a sense of shared abundance.
The love in the air was palpable, thick enough to slice through. Whether I had met some of these people minutes before or had known them for years, I was embraced with open arms. Ramie darted around the foyer, snapping portraits of everyone, ensuring attendees had tangible keepsakes to remember the evening by. For Isa, whom I sat next to while trying ear acupuncture for the first time (more on that later), it was her second dinner with the Angelito Collective. She had first joined the community during their screening of CIÓN, MAMI at the Brooklyn Museum in June 2022 and attended her first dinner the following February. Bunny, seated next to Isa, was also trying ear acupuncture for the first time. For both, it wasn’t just the healing practices that resonated but the buzz of community — a sense of belonging that surged as five small needles pricked their ears, electrifying their senses.
When it came time to eat, I found myself sitting next to Divine and Kam, who reflected on the evolution of these gatherings. “It’s nice to have a space like this," Kam said. "Some of these people have been coming around for three years — it’s like family.” Watching Divine, Angel, and Sinn move around the room, ensuring everyone had experienced a healing practice, taken a portrait, and eaten their fill, it was clear just how deeply they cared about fostering this space.
As the evening wound down, I made my rounds to say goodbye to both familiar and new faces. Stepping into the kitchen, I was struck by Ramie’s Polaroids, neatly arranged on the mantle for everyone to admire.
Submissions for the next dinner, anticipated to happen in the spring, are now open. You can donate and support the next dinner here.