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Sunday 28 February 2016

MOTHER AND CHILD --by Slick

(Photography: Slick)

On a particular Tuesday, nothing seemed to be fun at all. I had suddenly lost interest in things I considered fun to do. I tried to write but there was nothing forthcoming. I decided to sit on the balcony to see if I could be inspired by anything that may pass by so headphones plugged in, seated without a shirt on, a little rum in a glass, I waited for inspiration to pass by.

Thirty minutes after, a woman dressed in native attire holding the hand of her son passed by. She did not wear much make-up probably because of the intensity of the sun rays. A set of beautifully knitted beads adorned her neck. White pearls served as ear rings for her ear lobes. I could see the outline of her veins through her fair skin. Then her hair! Oh my! She was rocking a low-cut. She had an image an artiste would have coveted jealously. She was incessantly bothered by her son who was about two years old. "Mummy buy biscuit for me" were the only words I heard as they walked by.
She was a woman I knew when she was a spinster but she suddenly had transformed into this beautiful mother.

I simply loved the sight. It got me imagining things. I tried to picture myself as a boy doing the same thing this toddler was doing while gullibly believing the white lies my Mother would tell me about biscuits causing discoloration of the teeth. After all, she was African! There was my inspiration; Mother and Child. So I got busy writing this poem, hoping that you can relate to and enjoy it.

Mother and Child on a lonely road
Two beautiful intertwined souls
Like a prophecy our story was foretold
Months passed and it came true

I walk you through these streets
To strengthen your feet
To dominate them
And never accept defeat

You must know your turf
Guard it jealously
Intruders will always come
Heed my warnings and never conform

Mother, what will it be?
Biscuits or sweets?
Grant my wishes
Your white lies are killing me

Aha! A white lie is a necessity
When the wallet is empty
And your whining is not an elixir
For this scorching sun

Remember these routes Segun
For you will walk them alone
Maybe when you are eleven
When I am too old and feeble

Mother and Child on a lonely road
These were the words of my mother
Two beautiful intertwined souls
Mother the guide, Child the toddler




Saturday 27 February 2016

THE SUNDOWN RED LIGHT --by Nickz


Nature has placed several things in place for us to admire and appreciate; you could look at the blue sky and see the dragons and massive gorillas formed by the white clouds. While admiring their intricacies and outlines, they begin to disintegrate, pulling apart from each other in a smoky transformation until all that’s left is the curvature of the unending blue sky. Gradually, the fierce sun loses its scorching power, changing into an orange and harmless ball, sinking into the edge of the curvature where no soul sojourns.

This is the point where the traffic grows tense, cars lining up on the order of the red light from the traffic light. Then the moment that captured my attention crept in; the waiting people. I didn’t just see the lined up sedans, SUVs, wagons and trucks but I saw the souls on the wheels. I took the time to read the different faces, looking through the shields into their eyes, deciphering the unspoken words from their faces, reading the contemplation of their hearts. From my viewpoint I sat, taking it all in.

The man driving the Hilux was chewing carrot, his other hand on the wheel, hoping the light turned green. He looked cheerful and fairly rich, probably a worker who had a busy day at work and couldn’t get adequate lunch so settled for the crunchy fruit from street light hawkers. There was another car with a lady behind the wheels, probably in her late thirties. Even with her glasses on, I could see fragments of worry in her eyes. She focused her stare ahead at the light pole. I could only guess she was worried about getting home to see her kids and if good enough, meet her husband’s needs. There was another sedan; the bony driver not looking quite happy. He didn’t look like he could afford a car so I guessed he was a paid driver, probably going to pick up the mistress or master from a place or on another errand. Close to him was an SUV with two men in the front seats. The man on the wheels was engaged in a conversation by the other man, the other fellow doing more of the talking. The driver was more calm and lukewarm in the conversation, looking ahead for the colour he wanted to see. Maybe he was giving a less privileged colleague a lift from work and was more concerned about getting home than engaging in a conversation. Behind him was another sedan, the man on the wheels spiting words at whosoever was on the other end of his phone. Then there was the patrol Hilux with the men in black inside, trying to meander to the front like they were above every law. The tricycles could not be left out as they splattered everywhere like a disrupted file of ants. They were the back bone of the common men, the public transport means.

Horns blared, carbon monoxide fumes displaced the lower air, traders hustled to sell, human and mechanical noise was everywhere.

Ping! The light went green and engines dropped into gears; some sounding like grinders, others like super cars. Then the horn blaring intensified and the aggression set in. Everyone wanted to get ahead of the other, pushing in bumper to bumper. In a fraction of time, I could see the race in human nature, the volumes in their unmoving lips and the desperation to meet their needs. Then my tricycle moved.

Friday 26 February 2016

PAGES FROM MY NYSC DIARY --by Nickz


Back in 2015 when I was serving my country in Anambra State through National Youth Service, I had some of the most memorable experiences in my life. I won't bore you with all, just a quick flash here and there. In the end, I hope you take something from it. I heard a lot of things about the land but you know, everyone has their own version; just like the blind men that touched an elephant gave different descriptions. They said Igbo girls are beautiful and love money a lot. Well, the few I met, though pretty, weren’t money-crazy types. They were just ordinary people, like those in Akwa Ibom. Anyway, don’t worry, it’s not about the ladies today.

Adaptation was necessary due to cultural differences so I had to re-tune my preferences in some ways. Most of the meals they could offer were gbanga soup and egusi soup—very few varieties. I love food so I didn’t joke with my feeding (as much as allowee could allow) and so, I often times cooked Akwa Ibom native meals when I could hustle in the leaves (I’m not a super cook. There was another corps dude from AKS who cooked better than me though). As expected, fellow corps members fell in love with our leaves and native delicacies, some even learnt how to cook the meals themselves. Our lodge was a fun place to be; after work, we chatted for hours, complained about our little allowance, criticized government, compared tribes and argued football. Yes, I almost forgot, we flirted with the ladies and when evening meal was ready, we stayed in the common room to devour. 

One of the challenges there was power supply (well, it’s a national case but was horrible in that community). Two days of light in a month was like Christmas for us. In the evenings, some of us would take a walk along the community red soil, feel the evening breeze and relax in a viewing center bar where we could charge our gadgets, watch football and drink beer. It became a ritual almost every evening as we drained our batteries to internet and calls on daily basis. The community was peaceful and accommodating so we barely had problems with them, we could even return to the lodge late in the night. There was this thing peculiar to their place; they were crazy about their language, barely minding if you were a stranger, plus, they had burials on daily basis, firing gunshots into the air as respect or whatever.

Still on the gist, I was assigned to a government secondary school to teach some technical subjects (grrrh! I hate teaching!). Since I had no choice, I had to put my mind to it. The school authority expected us to cooperate with them, sometimes, expecting us to do better than their paid staff. “Sign the time-book everyday”, “be in school before 7:40am,” “cover your scheme of work and give assignments,” “don’t wear jeans trousers to classrooms, dress cooperate,” (like hell I didn’t wear!). “Don’t invite female students to your quarters,” (Seriously? Did we look so female starved?)

Well, well, most of us tried our bests to meet expectations, including myself while some colleagues didn’t give a shit if the principal wailed on a cliff. They did their thing their own way, travelling indiscriminately and went AWOL. Sometimes, such things brought conflicts between the school management and corps members, and even among corps members. Here comes the ridiculous part; the lukewarm corps members expected the hardworking ones to be on the same page with them, wiping their arses and covering up their shit. If you help someone out once and do so another time, and then another time, it might not hold water anymore and so it could be pointless and tiring. “Bro, why did you tell the principal I travelled? You no de try for person o,” a colleague would accuse another of reporting, not knowing if he was actually reported or the principal made the findings through another means. Some things like this made the bad guys appear good and the good guys bad. In the line of doing your work diligently, you could be seen as annoying or too showy.
At some point, the team was divided, some claiming others were snitches, some feeling offended as being suspects while some just focused on their job. Other times, stitches would be made and there would be patched unity again. I always advocated for togetherness and peaceful coexistence though it had earned me some unpleasant names. It was still an educating experience. 


In the end, while I dumped some unhealthy colleagues, I still made good friends from different parts of the country, friends I wouldn’t forget, friends that we still communicate and share times. I learnt that in life, some people have expiry dates as you progress while some would last forever. I also learnt that meeting people from different tribes is not really about the tribes, but about good interpersonal relationship. I really miss my good friends.

Thursday 25 February 2016

WHAT WILL HAPPEN TOMORROW? --by Slick

Photography: Slick

Thanks for continually following our posts. Please remember that your comments and suggestions are welcome. Enjoy!

It was a sunny Thursday afternoon and I was seated with my boss outside the office waiting for electricity to come on. We seized the opportunity to discuss about the poor state of the economy and the ever rising exchange rate. I could sense the annoyance in his tone, as he had been struggling for the past month to keep head above water in his business. The ordeals of a father eh!
“Can you imagine that a dollar now goes for N405?” He asked repeatedly. It was a question I didn’t have to answer, since he had the answers in a copy of The Punch Newspaper he had brought along to the office. I was just about to make my little contribution to the matters arising, when a sanitation truck arrived the neighbourhood to pick up the refuse that residents had heaped for a while.
Everyone hurried out with their bags of waste towards the truck, awaiting their turn for disposal. The opportunity to learn a new lesson had just presented itself. Therefore, I studied with keen interest, the activities at the disposal truck and observed that people had majorly disposed waste food items, old clothes, rags etc.
Despite the challenges that man had to face in his daily existence, he always found a way to feed and cover his nakedness; ugly or clean. Though some might argue that not everyone finds it easy to achieve these two important milestones, I guess it would be a question for Adam and Eve to answer.
Was it not the good book that held promises of God taking care of our needs? Making reference to the birds of the air that did not have to worry about their means of survival since their Creator was in charge.  As spiritual as this may sound, we all need to believe in something to motivate us for the life ahead. Back to the story I was telling!
I watched as these folks returned to their homes with empty waste bins, probably anticipating the next time these bags and containers that were used for collecting waste would be filled again. A man had just mistakenly emptied some of his waste on a woman’s dress, and World War 3 was about to ensue. As I was about to see the drama that was slowly unfolding, the electricity came on and we had to dash into the office for work. All I could hear was UP NEPA!
Don’t forget the message; no matter the state of the economy, refuse to worry about tomorrow. May God provide us with everything that we require to keep us happy and satisfied in the year 2016.


Wednesday 24 February 2016

NPFL MATCH DAY 2: FIXTURES

     


                   
 
MFM FC
16
:
00
Rivers United FC
Lobi Stars
16
:
00
Sunshine Stars FC
Abia Warriors FC
16
:
00
El-Kanemi Warriors
Wikki Tourists FC
16
:
00
Heartland FC
Warri Wolves FC
16
:
00
Kano Pillars FC
Enugu Rangers FC
16
:
00
Plateau United
Niger Tornadoes
16
:
00
Giwa FC

NPFL MATCH DAY 1: RESULTS



                   
    
Plateau United
2
-
1
Niger Tornadoes

Giwa FC
0
-
1
FC Ifeanyi Ubah

Nasarawa United FC
1
-
2
MFM FC

Rivers United FC
1
-
0
Enyimba FC

3SC
0
-
1
Lobi Stars

Sunshine Stars FC
1
-
1
Akwa United FC

Ikorodu United FC
1
-
1
Abia Warriors FC

El-Kanemi Warriors
0
-
1
Wikki Tourists FC

Heartland FC
0
-
0
Warri Wolves FC

Kano Pillars FC
2
-
1
Enugu Rangers FC

NPFL LEAGUE TABLE

   
POS
TEAMS
P
W
L
D
GF
GA
GD
PTS
1
Kano Pillars
1
1
0
0
2
1
1
3
2
MFM
1
1
0
0
2
1
1
3
3
Plateau United
1
1
0
0
2
1
1
3
4
FC Ifeanyi Ubah
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
3
5
Lobi Stars
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
3
6
Rivers United FC
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
3
7
Wikki Tourists
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
3
8
Abia Warriors
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
9
Akwa United
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
10
Ikorodu United
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
11
Sunshine Stars
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
12
Heartland FC
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
13
Warri Wolves
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
14
Enugu Rangers
1
0
1
0
1
2
-1
0
15
Nasarawa United
1
0
1
0
1
2
-1
0
16
Niger Tornadoes
1
0
1
0
1
2
-1
0
17
El-Kanemi Warriors
1
0
1
0
0
1
-1
0
18
Enyimba FC
1
0
1
0
0
1
-1
0
19
Giwa FC
1
0
1
0
0
1
-1
0
20
3SC
1
0
1
0
0
1
-1
0