Wednesday 27 July 2022

Tremor Nation

 

The salutations changed after I turned fifty. Or maybe that was when I noticed.

‘How is your wife?’

‘How are the kids?’

‘Hearing from your mother? Hope she is fine’

That is the Nigerian way. The guys would shake your hand, smile but never ask about you.

I had two responses, the short one which was ‘fine’ and the long one which was ‘how long do you have?’

I had to answer ‘fine’ most of the time because I usually don’t like talking about my problems. Things were far from fine. There had been a domestic earthquake at home and I as boarded the plane for Lagos it felt I was escaping from tremors to go see more tremors. My mother’s hands had been shaking for some time now.

31/01/2022

AF 1165 Birmingham to Paris was a 1 hour 20 minutes affair. I was given some orange squash and a sandwich for my troubles. I chewed in anger as I had read a comment by someone on social media poking fun at a Presidential aspirant for having a hand tremor. Before I went into medical school I had been taught at home not to make jest of the symptoms and signs of disease. This was a cruel sport but alas; the world is full of cruelty. This is the same reason that no one in public office in Nigeria discloses their medical diagnosis to anyone; not even in death. The reasoning is that no one can berate you for dying from a ‘brief illness’. Confidentiality is not taken seriously either, and it is not unknown for medical reports to appear on social media. So the politicians fly abroad for treatments in places where their secrets are kept safe.

AF148 Paris to Lagos was a better journey. I had registered for the Lagos City Marathon for something to distract me from why I was really travelling to Nigeria. I had done a lot of running, stretches, balance drills that included standing on one leg, all in preparation for the big race. A few perceptive people had asked, ‘hope everything was fine’ when I told them I was travelling to Naija.

I told them, everything was fine and I was going to run the marathon.  Ironically I was also going to see my mother who was now struggling to walk as her muscles had become stiff and the grace, poise and agility of youth had deserted her leaving behind tremors. I had tremors on my mind. The whole country appeared to have tremors on their minds also.

As we landed I looked through the window to see Lagos lit up. I was soon pushing my trolley to the car park where my brother was waiting. Some offered to change my Dollars and others offered to push the trolley. I thanked them for their kind offers and moved on.


This was Naija. Everything hot, everything ginger. My mum stayed up to wait for me and she watched me eat.

1/02/2022

No one ever shouted from the rooftops with a heart overflowing with joy that they could button their shirts or do their zips. Hand movements are taken for granted. Everyone thinks they would pick up pens at will forever. People dress up in the mornings thinking about their neighbour’s designer outfits.  Isn’t it better to button up your Primak than have people help you button up Armani? Well my mum now needed help with getting up and dressing in the morning. Everyone had to get used to it. It was a struggle for me as my last visit to Lagos was in 2018 when I ‘really’ came to run the Lagos City Marathon and my mum was independently mobile. Since then I had studied her life for my next book: It takes a village and had thought a lot about her in the 70s and 80s. The energy and drive was all gone now.

I went to the Teslim Balogun Stadium early to get my running number and was given Race Number 444. It tickled me no end.

John 4:44 Jesus himself testified, that a prophet hath no honour in his own country.


The slogan The Race Never Stops was everywhere in the stadium. On the way back home I was on social media and the Presidential race indeed never stops in the country. The anti-tremor caucus were vile today. They showed videos of a man’s tremor and insinuated he was not fit to be a President. What if he had been in a wheel chair?


As it was for Nigeria so it was for neurological diseases: Things Fall Apart; the centre could not hold. The brain no more gave out instructions that a substantial part of Nigeria could respond to and the future looked shaky.

Back home I sat with my mum at the table. I have balance, suppleness and dexterity to spare having been a dancer most of my adult life. Ownership of the running number 444 indicated that I ran faster than 90% of the population. I also wrote with a pen without tremors albeit with an unattractive writing.  13,091 steps was my tally for the previous day; accumulated from my early morning run and walking through the airports in Paris and Lagos. My mother was down to 120 steps a day and though she had given me life, I couldn’t give her some of my fitness. Na so we dey look each other.


I went out for a run later in the day and found the roads difficult. The uncovered man holes meant I constantly looked down, and then the Okada motorbikes that left the roads and joined us on pavement meant I always looked behind me. Then there were people on either side all trying to avoid something. So my eyes were on my sides.  I had 14,862 steps by the time I went to bed.

02/02/2022 Wednesday

The Taxify car was an ancient of days. I knew the answer to my silly question as the words left my mouth. ‘Is there AC?’ Winding down the windows was a struggle as was opening the back doors at our destination. My mother has a colonoscopy after which she went home and I walked back to Teslim Balogun Stadium to the Reddington Zaine lab to do my Day 2 Covid test. The petite lady alarmed me by saying she would be taking the swab himself and she looked very efficient. Up my nose and almost to my brain that swab went and next thing I was gagging as she moved the swab like those music conductors in charge of orchestras. I dropped by at the bank to collect a new soft token and surprised myself by refusing to give my pen to this random lady who needed a pen. I had imagined her hands full of viruses.

I walked back to the diagnostic centre to collect the typed Colonoscopy report and then walked back in the direction of the Stadium again. Alhaji Masha Road was one i walked on a lot in the 80s. The low cost housing blocks on the left with strange electrical wiring looked strange to behold. The building looked like a human body that had bleached its skin for it had a thousand shades of colour. All the nerves were on the surface in a grotesque formation. I could almost see a weather beaten brain on the roof sending epileptic shock waves into the building.  I wondered what the condition of the toilets might me. At the end of the road was the National Stadium Surulere and to the right I saw Eric Moore Towers in the distance. Alone, walking, I wondered where all the people I went to secondary school with were now. The people who walked this roads with me. We watched Football matches at Teslim Balogun Stadium (formerly UAC Sports ground) when our beloved St Finbarr’s Football team ruled Lagos.

Alone walking; I stepped back in time and was grateful I was still here and that I had written about my time in school. It does really take a village.

At Adeniran Ogunsanya, I tried to buy a SIM card and the ‘network was down’. There was a ‘Nationwide problem’ with the NIN (National Identification Number) computers. Things have a way of breaking down in Naija. The brain; the great nerve centre sometimes cannot send the right messages to the peripheral parts. No network is ubiquitous the diagnosis heard from the mouths of every citizen. Security, electric power and financial accountability were in constant high frequency tremors that ensured that the country’s leadership and people were on different wavelength.

At home I went through the archives; pictures and documents. This took hours. I got an e mail to say my Covid test was Negative.

04/02/2022 Friday

I decided to register for the Ile Ife Heritage Marathon and 10km race taking place on Sunday the 6th of February. I couldn’t do it on line but the organiser of the race Dayo Reiman agreed to enter me in manually even though the registration for the virtual race had closed on the 31st of January.  She e- mailed my running Bib which my brother printed out for me.

05/02/2022 Saturday

I call this internal packing. It does get confusing sometimes when I have to pack stuff to go and sleep elsewhere. The last thing I want to do is forget an item. The taxi fare to Lekki was N5,900. It felt exorbitant. You could buy a whole car for that same amount in bygone years.

06/02/2022 Sunday

I put on my race number 114 and hit the streets of Lekki hoping to do my 10km in about an hour and 10 minutes. It did not transpire how I had envisaged but it was good all the same. I had a minor shock as I ran up the pedestrian bridge and found an Okada in hot pursuit. I got out of the way but there was one coming in the other direction. A few people were sleeping on the steps having spent the night there. More motor bikes sped in both directions with so much confidence that I doubted myself for thinking the motor bikes were breaking traffic rules. I filmed the motorbikes and put it up on a WhatsApp group for clarification.





To be Nigerian is to be tortured

It appears that traffic laws are subject to private interpretation. I attended House on The Rock for morning service. Pastor Appreciation Day. It was quite an inspirational morning as the Church honoured Pastor Paul Adefarasin for his service to humanity. Like always happens when the acts of an inspirational figure is on public display, I got to a point and wondered what I was doing with my life. The achievements were incredible.

I had a lecture in me I was keen to unleash on students which was entitled:

How to improve your writing.

It is always good to go back to the Alma Mata and inspire the students.

A few of my former classmates as St Finbarr’s College Akoka helped to facilitate the day.


Sam/Emmanuel/Baba/Godwin 1980 set. St Finbarr's College

 There were a lot of messages exchanged between us and the school administrators.

9-2-2022 Wednesday

I had not walked into the school since 1980. Well I walked through the gates in 2017 during my morning run while on holiday in Lagos and the gatemen refused me entry without an appointment. They didn’t even allow me snap a picture with the bust of the late Father Slattery. Even though annoyed I respected their sticking to the rules they had been handed.

It was strange walking around the school after my talk. Sitting in the class rooms brought memories back. 

The late seventies was a time when my parents were in peak physical fitness and had the wherewithal to kick me from Surulere to Akoka if I peradventure decided I didn’t want to attend school. I would have speed through the air and Father Slattery had enough football skills to control my descending body with his right foot and kick me into class. 


I inspected the boarding house and said hello to the students. It was a fulfillng day and I gave out copies of my books to both staff and students.

12/02/2022 Saturday

I woke up by 4:30am and was soon dressed for the Lagos City Marathon. I was prepared. I had bought my sweets and chocolates for the race the night before and they were all chilling in the freezer. I looked out the window into the black Naija early morning and this triggered an internal dialogue.

‘Those loud bangs last night, were they really fireworks? If they were gunshots, have the bullets finished? What if the Angel of Death is determined to fly out of Lagos with a full plane this morning and there are 15 empty seats waiting to be filled?

 I cancelled my plans to leave at 5am and waited till 6am as I cannot koman kee maisef.

The last time I rang this race was the 10th of February 2018 and my mum was up when I was leaving. Things had changed a lot in four short years. The will and strength for such things were now long gone. There would be no post-race gathering at Sapper’s water front on Bonny Camp this time around. Four years ago when we had gathered at the restaurant my mother had jokingly said she was the ‘mama of the marathon’ and thus justified eating to replenish her energies.

There was no one at the starting line up as they had left thirty minutes earlier. I was running alone and soon caught up with another late comer. Running alone is a different race. No banter, no camaraderie, you alone with your thoughts and your bladder. I made a detour to answer natures call on some grassy patch in front of a fence. It felt illegal but wetin man go do na? It was at this point I remembered my sweets in the fridge back home. I was running without carbs to munch in solitude.

I get good ideas in solitude. I did not share my mother’s womb with a twin and I am certain I would not be sharing my coffin with anyone when the time is up. They would cry about how much they would miss you then throw you in the dirt (after all there is a reception to attend after internment. Being alone with legs moving is a different kind of solitude. It reminds you that the hard things are usually done alone.

By the 10Th Kilometre I was on the Third Mainland Bridge; Nigeria’s most important bridge. It was deserted as expected and a bus crept up on us asking us to jump on the vehicle taking people to the finish line. I explained I started late and moved on. The run up to kilometre 17 was arduous. I had no snacks and even though there were water stations, I needed calories. There lagoon below looked ugly today and my toes began to hurt. This was the bridge afflicted with tremors in 2006 and caused rumours of its eminent collapse into the lagoon to spread. I was slipping into a pit of doubt and began to recite every prayer I could think of. Not completing the race was an impossibility in my mind yet I saw no way that I could complete it. I was starving and thinking of how hard it is to go from Surulere to Eko Atlantic City. This was a journey that was impossible to do for many people. A Surulere house might cost $50,000 while a flat in Eko Atlantic could go for $1 millon. The journey from the mainland to the Island was in some instances was as far as the heavens are from the earth. My dad and mum drove from Surulere to their offices on the Island for many years using the Carter Bridge and the Eko Bridge. My dad has since died having left Lagos on an invisible bridge to the great beyond while my mum even though alive could no longer drive or walk across any of the bridges that lead to the Lagos Island.

Last year people claimed they saw cracks in the bridge but there were none today. I was the one feeling cracks in my hamstrings.  I ran and it felt like the bridge stretched longer. It took an eternity to go from one Kilometre sign to the next. I wished the race was over but I simultaneously knew it was a few hours to go. The conflict was torture. Like when I was in the theatre assisting my Professor of Surgery at King’s College Hospital Camberwell in an operation. After three hours I was exhausted and that was when I had the biggest buttock itch I had ever felt while my gloved hands were in the patient’s belly.

The wicked itch had a mind of its own and travelled up my back before returning to my bum. That operation went on forever but a life was at stake. The parents were sat outside and Prof worked on the child’s liver with gentle deliberate movements. You stood there till the job was done.


By the 20th Kilometre the heavens opened. The rains were angry and seeking to exert revenge for something. The skies were dark and the lightening was frightening. I was soaked to the underpants and the messages from my toes were not great. I knew I was losing toes nails but there was no need to stop now. I bought snacks from road side vendors and staggered on along Osbourne Road. The pores of my running shoes oozed water and squeaky sounds with each step. Next came Gerrard and Alexander roads before crossing the Lekki-Ikoyi bridge; Nigeria’s prettiest bridge. This newest of bridges was a symbol of modernity and hope for the young Nigerians otherwise known as the EndSars generation. Runners, motorists and film makers all love this bridge. Ironically the young Nigerians are unable to afford real estate in the neighbourhood. Mark Zuckerberg went running on the bridge during his visit to Nigeria further enhancing the iconic image of the bridge

At the finish line at Eko Atlantic I was surprised to be there, in pains and snapping photographs with my medal. It is impossible to express the sense of fulfilment one gets.

 I had met four of my friends in the flesh for the first time Asmau Vivien, Dayo Akinbode Reiman who arranged the Ife Marathon race I had taken part in the week before, Sage Hasson the poet and Ngozi Ugoji.

I got home and I saw my toes were all damaged. Both big toe nails sat on a throne of blood. This race took a lot out of me and I walked like a duck with hip pains. The good thing was that I had raised quite a bit of money for the Orphanage in Ikorodu.

I was walking differently the next day. It was the gait of success. Every muscle below my belly button was in severe pain and going up those stairs at House on the Rock was as arduous as walking up Mount Zion bare footed in the middle of winter. This was beginning to be the longest I have been in Nigeria since 1989 and it was beautiful rediscovering my roots at close range.

Monday 14/02/2022

Enate and I wore our life jackets and took our seats in a boat at the Lekki  jetty  and the noisy outboard engine came to life on the Lagos Lagoon. We got to the jetty in Ikorodu and found the Okada guys who took us to town. We hopped in a Rickshaw and arrived at the Orphanage. It was quite emotional meeting the founder Mummy Grace who shares the same birthday with me. We had a tour of the property that included a bakery and primary school. I meet the kids. It was the best Valentine’s Day ever. When it was time to go, the prayers for me and my supporters in fund raising made me shed a few tears. The journey back was exciting in some respects. We got trapped in the water as the jetty was full of water hyacinth that came in with the tide. The outboard engine coughed and spluttered then died and we began to drift in the water. In the end the boat handlers manoeuvred us out of our trap after about forty minutes. The engine needed to be freed of plant debris twice.

Tuesday 15/02/2022

We got our N3k tickets and boarded the train at Mobolaji Johnson Ebuta Metta train station heading for Abeokuta. 

It was fortunate I had been warned about the air conditioning on these trains the day before. It felt like they were trying to freeze our body parts. 

I had my jacket and hat on. That must  be the coldest air conditioning in Nigerian transportation history. A lady with a loud voice spoke for so long on her phone that I knew all about her family on the journey. She mentioned names which I googled. 

Wole Soyinka Station in Abeokuta was quite grand but you got the feeling they ran out of money towards the end. There were no good roads to walk out to. It was Okada time on bumpy terrain. The Kuti Heritage Museum, Olumo Rock and the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library was how we spent the day. Every car has its petrol and we are all like cars. 

The Olumo Rock had a lot of mystique to it and it rose to its reputation. 

The Kuti residence was like going into the factory floor of an icon manufacturing establishment and the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library looked like a version of  the White House in Africa. 

 

The Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library Abeokuta


As we rode on our Okada’s back to Wole Soyinka train station we went past the Moshood Abiola Stadium. There was no time to visit it. I was being infused with my type of fuel. My life growing up in Lagos had a backdrop synthesized by these great men from the City who all had major influence in Lagos. Music, government, business and in the literary world.

The lady with the loud telephone voice was back at it all the way to Lagos. Apparently there had been a death and a dispute about an inheritance. As she dropped names we read about them on Google.

17/02/2022 Thursday

I made history by paying for my costliest Taxi journey. N7,000 Lekki to Ilepeju for an interview on Rave TV. 

My friend Pelu Awofeso turned up and did another interview about running the Lagos City Marathon. I stopped by at Emmanuel’s yard and sampled products from their bakery before going home to mama. I prepared my slides for PowerPoint my presentation at our primary school Sunnyfields Primary School Adelabu while sitting at the dining table with my mum.

18/02/2022 Friday

Before we went into the school hall, the school headmistress brought out the 1st term examination results for my class dated 14th December 1973. It was a table of results for 30 pupils and I was 4th placed. I was up to 3rd position by the end of the second term 29th March 1974 and by the end of the third term on the 28th June 1974 I was down to 10th. This was Primary 4 S. As I read through the names I could hear my teacher’s voice do the roll call in the morning. Each pupil usually responded with a loud ‘Present Sir’. Old documents make me happy. There is a historian in me somewhere trying to get out. The inner historian sees expression during medical consultations when I inquire able the ‘history of presenting complaint’.

There is that sensation of your life flashing before your eyes when you see old documents about yourself.

In the school Hall, (which appeared to have shrunk in size since I was a pupil in 1975) there was a large banner above the stage which read:

Motivational Talk

Keep Pushing Keep Moving


I shared the stage with Mrs Ireti Elegbe-Ogunlesi and we both shared our experiences in life using our participation in the Lagos City Marathon as an example of preserving to the end. 

The kids enjoyed looking at our medals and race shirts. The questions that followed showed we had captured but their attention and imagination.

 

19/02/2022 Saturday

About 2pm I asked my mum to change her clothes so we could take a few pictures. She was soon ready and so was I. We all had a photoshoot at home which went well. None of us knew it was the last time this would happen. Every action under the heavens is destined to happen for the last time one day but we know this in retrospect.

 I later left for Lekki where I had a meet up with my Finbarr’s classmates at the Sailor’s Lounge. There must be a ploy by Lagos venues to induce deafness in the Lagos population, I had to beg them to lower the music volume a few times. The food and ambience was great and so was the company.

20/02/2022 Sunday

Three straight Sundays in House on the Rock Lagos and Pastor Ify Adefarasin (wife of the head Pastor) preached. Sometimes I search for meaning in every pattern of events that stick out. The pulpit is a male dominated place and we need to challenge our expectations.

My usual Sunday greeting to my friend is: How was church, wetin Pastor Paul preach?

Things must change and nothing is set in stone.

 It was busy after church. We drove to do a Covid test and the swab was handled by the health assistant. She was enthusiastic about her job and up my nose she went as if she was prospecting for diamonds. By the time she got to my throat I was gagging for Nigeria. Next stop was the market to to shop for caps and then on to the National Museum.

 I had always wanted to see the car our Head of State was  assassinated in. The Mercedes was bullet riddled. I found the process painful as those bullets killed Murtala Mohammed in the streets of Lagos on the 13th of February 1976.

I thought of the many killed by bullets since then. We have unknown soldiers, unknown police and unknown civilians (according to Fela). So many homicides but few indictments for murder. Landmark beach was the last stop to release the tension. Water always takes my tension away.

Monday  21/2/2022

We attend a naming ceremony for twins. It was a representation of the new generation of parents and children. My friend Enate encouraged the parents to bring up the twins in the way of the Lord. He used personal examples that included me and a few stared at me. People end to take a second look when they hear ‘Doctor’. I rushed home to pack. I said goodbye to my mother and told her I would be back in May. Her voice was not as strong as before and the tremors remained in her hands.  I’m off to the airport with a heart full of memories tinged with some sadness.

Things were changing and I had to embrace change. Generations come and go but the earth remains.

 My sleep on the aircraft was interrupted with a vivid dream that saw Nigeria twerking vigorously on the edge of a precipice. Nigerians were thrown in the ecstasy staring at the quivering buttocks in scorching sunlight. Hunger and ill winds from the Atlantic blew across the land and the crowd began to lose weight, yet they cried in pleasure wildly like people possessed. China materialised and began to spray dollar by flinging it into the skies. The descent of the crisps Dollars that moved almost in slow motion made Nigeria dance harder because she mistook a crippling loan for a gift. The buttocks and legs began to drift west and east and the innards dropped to the floor. A hand materialised to sew the country together with a golden bright needle and a magic thread of unity but a tremor in the hand prevented the needle to be threaded. The earth began to shake. The tremor was severe. People and country began to fall off the edge.

‘Is there a Doctor on the plane?’

The announcement shook me out of my nightmare.

I knew a great shaking was coming

 

 

26 At that time his voice shook the earth, but now he has promised, “Once more I will shake not only the earth but also the heavens.”[e] 27 The words “once more” indicate the removing of what can be shaken—that is, created things—so that what cannot be shaken may remain.

28 Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us be thankful, and so worship God acceptably with reverence and awe, 29 for our “God is a consuming fire.”[f]

 

 

Mrs Charity Orhiunu

2/3/1944 to 6/5/2022

 

27/07/2022

Dr Wilson Orhiunu

Babawilly

Saturday 23 July 2022

Why do Black folks dance so well

 Eureka! I have solved the riddle of a thousand years. I now have in my possession the answers to the questions on millions of minds worldwide. The racial group with the reputation for rhythm, style, athleticism, grace, flexibility and plain old groove control have a secret. You are about to discover it today and you would be astounded by the sheer genius and simplicity of the discovery you are about to make. Here it goes- Black folks dance well because they practice their moves.

This leads us to Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 hours rule first proposed in his 2008 book Outliers. Here he puts forward the idea that mastery in any field can be achieved by putting in the hours. Any time someone tells you they cannot dance ask them how many hours they practice. They would probably tell you that there is no need to practice a skill that they can never acquire competence in. Now that leads us to my next point. Since practice is an act of faith, a presumption that repeated effort would lead to the actualisation of a hope, why do some people practice till they get it and others don’t? The answer again is simple. They are only living out what they have been told and have over time come to believe. As a child, I remember those birthday parties we used to call ‘four to six’. Two hours of merriment that culminated in the cutting of the birthday cake and the distribution of goody bags. When the music played you were instructed to dance. If you were a child given to shyness you got shoved to the dance floor. ‘Dance! Can’t you see the other children dancing?’ you got told by an aggressive aunty. No one asked you if you could dance. They just told you what was expected of you. They informed you of your reputation and you lived up to that image. Monetary gifts to really good dancers also helped to give kids an appreciation of the importance and rewards that go with dancing well.  That means you practiced.

Some say rocking babies while singing to them by their mothers teaches the babies rhythm. I have seen mothers from all races rock their babies and it is always in rhythm. Once music plays some of these same mums who moved like ballet dancers when carrying their babies suddenly become ataxic. Many white people exhibit style and grace in ballet, gymnastics, skating, football, well the list is endless. These same people might freeze at the first few bars of a hip hop track. Well, Justin Bieber and Justin Timberlake being exceptions. The other Non-Justin Caucasians have bought into a myth that White people cannot dance. This reminds me about what happened in the run up to the first time a mile was run under 4 minutes by Roger Bannister in 6-5-1954 at the Oxford University (3:59.4). Prior to that date John Landy, an Australian runner who had run the mile in 4 minute 2 seconds on seven occasions  had gone on record as saying he did not believe he could run a sub four minute mile. Shortly after Bannister’s historic record, on the 21-6-1954 Landy ran a sub four minute mile (3:58). This just goes to show it is who you listen to. Bannister had a coach who told him he could do it and Landy told himself he couldn’t do it. By breaking the record Bannister showed Landy it was possible and Landy subsequently went on to shave a full second off Bannister’s world record. Incidentally in 1954 most of the middle distance runners were white. In today’s world they all come from East Africa (at least the winners do).  He who is convinced about the possibility of success will practice hard for it. He who is told or he who tells himself he cannot do it will not bother to practice for the length of time required to achieve supreme mastery.

Carol Dweck in her book Mind-set: The new psychology of success introduces the concept of fixed and Growth mind-sets.

Those with a fixed mind-set believe intelligence is fixed and you are born with what you have. However those with a growth mind set believe intelligence can improve with learning.  This grouping of mind-sets can actually be applied to most activities of human endeavour. Let us take money for instance. A fixed mind-set person would view wealth as privilege and linked to birth. The phrase ‘Born with a silver spoon in the hand’ will be used to explain away great fortunes as would be being well connected in society, being born in the right country and perhaps ‘destiny’. A growth mind-set person however will study the rich and extract habits they can apply to his own life. The believe that handling money is a skill to be learnt and that one can actually get better with time and practice will spur one on to study more.

The same applies to dance. Those who say White people cannot dance have a fixed mind set. It however looks like the world is full of fixed mind-set folks. People not inclined to change because ‘all my relatives have two left feet’.  They feel that strenuous effort is fruitless and would give up. After two minutes of secretly trying out a dance move they saw someone do ‘effortlessly’ because it was ‘too complicated for me’. These people tend to only see what their eyes are conditioned to see, Black people dancing well.

The funny thing is all babies tend to move alike. They all dance to their inaudible music with the same leg and feet wiggling movements. When they learn to walk, it is always that same gait in no matter their ethnicity. I have never seen black babies crawl with swag or walk with a ‘cool limp’. Most of the changes you notice are environmental. If your dad keeps on playing that Joseph Haydn’s trumpet concerto in E flat while he reads his paper, you grow up playing with your toys and thinking. After years of missing out on impromptu ‘Azonto opportunities’  i.e dance practice sessions, that child might begin to think he cannot dance unless Ballet lessons are on the cards. A black child who is brought up on Azonto or hip hop beats has more opportunity for practice. Black churches with their soulful choirs create an impression that all Black people dance well. A young child looking at the choir just believes that what he sees will one day be his story. The same happens when children are taken to University graduation ceremonies. They just learn without a lecture that ‘in this family we get an education’.  In Nigerian weddings where close family members wear the same fabric, a call might be made for those wearing the ‘party uniform’, (aso ebi) to come out and dance.  Even if this is taken as an unavoidable chore, you get forced to the dance floor and you do your thing. Many people take pride in their moves the way some take pride in their gardens. Now, Alan Titchmarsh will bear me out when I say that there never was a beautiful garden that did not take a lot of time and years of accrued experience to keep in pristine condition. Any wonder why the electrifying James Brown was called the hardest working man in show business. He always sweated gallons on stage and talent is not sweat inducing; only hard work makes you sweat.

So like we say in Nigeria, no condition is permanent. If White people develop a desire to learn, get inspiration from good dance teachers, and accept that Black people dance badly indoors till they get it right and then come out looking all effortless, then all men will begin to appear created equal on the dance floor. The same applies to Black people and Ballet. (The slim Black people o!!!). Gone are the days when the fittest people in the world were Black. This was a fitness not acquired in the gym but from labouring as slaves on plantations. Today the black man is as unfit as any other race. There is indeed an equal opportunity vibe for all on the dance floor. Yes we can, if only we practice.

 

 

Babawilly

Dr Wilson Orhiunu

21-5-2014

References

Mind-set: The New Psychology of Success  © 2006 by Carol Dweck, Ph.D.  NY: Random House

ISBN 1­4000­6275­6

Outliers. 2008 by Malcolm Gladwell.  Little Brown and Company

ISBN 978-0-316-01792-3

Professor Tim Noakes at TEDxCapeTownED https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYWLfPmnJSI&hd=1.

 

 


Tuesday 19 July 2022

Naija Bucket Mentality

 If all the buckets in Nigeria should get raptured into Pail Heaven tonight, the country would be thrown into utter confusion. Life without buckets in Nigeria would mean no life at all. (The Rapture, to the uninitiated is when all Christians will suddenly varnish from the face of the earth when the last trumpet sounds). If such a fate befalls the ubiquitous buckets of Naija there will be cases  of confused church ushers scratching their heads when their Pastor shouts out ’pass the bucket around, for offering time is blessing time!’  Instances of naked men running out of the bathroom with soap in their eyes will be common place. Paranoid minds will be flung into panic when a sudden puddle of water caresses their feet as buckets exit Nigeria’s territorial space to the after -life.  It will be a sad night as mama bom-boi walks into her kitchen to find three small hills of garri, rice and beans in the place of her three virgin buckets. These were her vessels of honour complete with tight lids that have never once seen the soapy face of a human in the bathroom.  Buckets destined for great things on their day of purchase. Washed and dried and then comissioned to that high office of being the custodians of food stuffs. Alas the buckets are gone with the wind and the house wives cry.  Tales will be told of maidens walking back from the stream with buckets of water balanced on their heads all experiencing a sudden baptism they had not signed up for. Strong men pulling buckets out of wells will find themselves on the floor as the resistance against which they pull varnishes. Drivers will have to skip washing the cars as the weak tap pressures of Naija prevents washing cars with a hose pipe. Woe to those burdened with gastroenteritis on such a night. Having spent all night committing their vomitus and diarrhoea into the bucket, they will be saddled with guilt when their carers tell of how the bucket’s contents splashed onto the new carpets en-route to the toilet. There will is cries of horror as buckets of paint splash around in the boots of jeeps and ice-cream finds its freedom in freezers everywhere. Those with no washing machines who had ‘soaked’ clothes in a bucket with soap as part of their pre –wash ritual, would all awake to a soapy mess of water and wet clothes all over the house. Surviving the thunderstorm and leaky roof would be in vain in the wet parts of the country as the buckets of salvation get translated leaving behind their contents on the carpet.

The good news is that the great icon that is the Naija bucket is going nowhere. I just spoke about the rapture to pail heaven to flog the dead horse of a point that buckets are more important to Nigerian life than the Kola nut (No mind those jerry cans wey dey form levels). However even if the buckets sprout wings and fly away only to send a post card pledging never to return, overnight all the taps and showers in Nigeria will start to flow at a good pressure for no country in the world can match Naija when it comes to improvisation in a crisis. Our politicians and engineers can do things very quickly when push comes to push me-push you. So where did all this talk about buckets come from anyway?

Well, I needed a new bucket and asked my son where we should go for a new blue model. We brain stormed a bit and various shops were mentioned. He discounted a particular store as their clientele was predominantly White and as he put it, ‘white people do not keep buckets in their bathrooms’. It set me on a course of meditation that has brought me to this point. I have examined myself and concluded that I have a Naija Bucket Mentality. A unique mindset derived from a very simple necessity to avoid pain and embarrassment.  Getting stranded during a shower when the water stops, you learn to know a pain that will never be forgotten. Unable to open the eyes you call for help and when it arrives, opening the locked bathroom door is a struggle. It only needs to happen once for you to understand the importance of a bucket of water as insurance. When you grow up not trusting the utilities, your paranoia means you have buckets inside the house and an electric generator and bore hole outside. Must add that one man’s paranoia is another man’s common sense.

My personal journey into 'bucketism' started as a class monitor in primary school. Part of the job description was to go and fetch the break time snacks; puff- puff and squash in two buckets. The squash was then served into plastic cups by dipping the master cup into the bucket and filling the cups held out by fellow pupils. It was indeed a position of power. On the school playground you heard stories of the famed Ojukwu bucket alias Ogbunigwe, a kind of anti-armoured vehicle weapon made in Biafra. No this bucket did not contain water to wash you clean. It exploded on impact.  At home, the low pressure of the water supplies meant you had no running water upstairs and had to fetch water from the down stairs tap. When it was time to go into boarding school, you got a list of essentials to bring in and the bucket was usually high up the list. The same applied to going to university. Everyone packed his bucket, sometimes before the books.

So having been fully bucketanized mentally, it is no wonder that having moved to the UK, where the taps run at a reasonable pressure, I still haven’t changed gears mentally as regards to my bathroom rituals. It is just an irrational habit for I know that I only need a mop bucket at present. On holidays or when ever I check into hotels, I do not expect to see a bucket in bathrooms and never notice the absence of one. However once I am back into a home I call my own, I look forward to having a bath out of a bucket and having a small bowl with which to throw water on my body.

So why is this important?  I look at myself and I wonder. The ‘normal’ of yesterday has not given way to the ‘new normal’ of today in some departments of my brain. The brain and head are out of Suru-lere but parts of Suru-lere still exists in my frontal lobe. As seasons change, being stuck in the past becomes a weight. Since different countries exist in different ‘seasons of advancement’ one needs to ‘change gears’ when one travels to another country. Being used to something is not a good enough excuse. Naija says, ‘shine your eyes’. A skill or daily chore that has become obsolete must be forgotten. The great hand washer of clothes with skills honed through washing senior students’ clothes in boarding school must find new things to do with the hands once they move into a country with washing machines, light and free flowing water; rather than insist that ‘dis washing machine no dey wash cloth well’.

Of course the skills should return if he travels back to his native country. There was this lady I stood next too while we awaited the arrival of our luggage on the conveyor belt at Murtala Mohammed airport, Lagos. This lady had no Naija Bucket mentality at all. She complained more that the Europeans with an accent like beans wey never done well.  She said over twenty times that, ‘dis Nigeria is too hot’. I looked at her and wondered how being in Europe for 3 weeks had taken away her acclimatisation to heat talents. She was fanning her face with some brightly painted nail extensions studded with fake tiny diamonds. She paused from fanning once in a while to scratch her weave. She was just acting like an Ajebuta  that she was not. I advocate losing eighty to ninety per cent of our bucket mentality but not a hundred per cent abeg. You must still know how to endure tropical climates and retain our  slap-to-kill mosquitoes policy without complaining.

In summary (African style), I hope I have convinced you that the Bucket is mightier than the Basket and it holds a significant place in Nigeria. It also sits on the mantel piece of my heart as my early life was spent lifting water; holding onto the arched handles that so calloused my palms. (Now everyone who shakes me says my hands are soft, how embarrassing). The lessons to learn must be spelt out clearly. The old normal is gone. Just because you had adapted to low water pressures in the past and were happy and content with life does not mean that you must keep using these adaptation skills till you kick the bucket. Seasons will change and so must we.

I foresee a poor ‘bucket mentality’ chap importing one million electric generators into Nigeria in the near future because that was a good business plan for his father, only to discover that there was no demand for his products as a new era of Light 24/7 had been ushered in.  Or perhaps in the near future  someone without a visionary bone in his body decides to open the biggest bucket factory in the Nigeria because research done last year  showed that there are more buckets than children in each Nigerian household so he figured that the high demand would gulp up his industrial output. Then the government suddenly does a 360 like an Asha song and pipes portable water to every Nigerian home, Church, Mosque, Prison, Babalawo joint and School. The magnate with the bucket plant don enta gbese bi dat.

 With light and water, everyone will own a washing machine and the Omo anointed hand washing ministries and all night soaking of clothes ministries will all be raptured into antiquity. So in summary, friends, business men and country men, shine eye and in all thy shining, shine retina.

 

 

 Babawilly

 

Dr Wilson Orhiunu

26-3-2014