He finds on cheap match covers. 
PLEASE MAKE ME  
TASTE LIKE A MAN 
is the first one he reads after lighting up 
an American Spirit cigarette on the corner 
of Broadway and Houston. The painted Statue 
of Liberty on the giant DKNY ad on the side 
of the building winks her big blue eye 
as if she understands what those words mean, 
as if she could make him taste like a man. 
The street sign changes to WALK 
and the natural smoke of the natural cigarette 
feels good in his lungs. He thinks 
of the taste of fried garlic, of anise seeds, 
of rambutan fruit, of broiled tuna-- 
none comes close to what a man 
would taste like in his mind. He reaches 
underneath his shirt and sweater to scratch 
his left arm-pit. He smells his fingers 
and thinks: this is what a Filipino man  
must taste like to American women. 
To test his hypothesis, he sticks  
his index finger in his mouth, pulls 
it out with a slurpy sound and points upwards 
as if he were testing the wind, 
as if he were carrying a flaming torch.
Nick Carbo
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/ang-tunay-na-lalaki-the-real-man-is-baffled-by-c/