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Twelve months ago, I was in a terrible place! Now read the previous sentence again and jump this before going to the next. The days leading to my birthday were dark. I was sad, I was angry, felt every possible negative emotion. Anyone who has gone through or is going through that evil thing called depression may tell me how close I was to it. Despite that, I tried to keep smiling. I tried like Lagbaja advised not to carry my problems around on my face.

Now, folks who know me personally would understand that I mostly don’t dwell on negatives. Even when I am surrounded by obvious negatives, I still find ONE positive that trumps them all. However, as much as I was trying to wriggle out of the ‘hole’, I was sinking deeper. I got into so much reflection about how the years had gone and I saw reasons to be angrier. I threw up a lot of ‘if it had not been’ and ‘what if I’ situations.

Those days, I would wake up and manage a smile for those around me before going on to where I worked at the time. I had the unhelpful situation of having to drive down to my workplace all by myself which was a fertile ground for those heartbreaking and annoying thoughts. No one really knew, not even my wife! In the middle of it, I still gave myself time to cheer my guys up while I retired to my pain.

You may be excused for trying to wrap your head around what the problem might have been then. The main reason was best known to me. Things around me got a lift in the mid-2010s and I was gradually hitting the spot with the motive to break through in different aspects. Much to my dismay, a few unpalatable events happened that took me from going up and sent me back to the level beyond zero.

I retreated and had to find a way to start again, but there was no way. You know how it feels when you are in the middle of nowhere with no escape route. That was how it was but thank God for support systems. If you noticed that I suddenly withdrew, that was it. If I was no longer communicating, it was because I was fighting to get out of ‘jail’.

So back to where we were coming from. My birthday in 2023 was approaching and I was almost seeing no reason to be cheerful or happy. Some folks around me who were not even as ‘good’ were having it good. It felt like the whole world had left me behind. It did not look as if my ideas made sense or if I could even contribute anything meaningful around me. I felt like a failure, a struggling failure.

One of my birthday mates was asking me questions on the day and my response was me not holding back. I could see that she felt like throwing a pity party for me but I was past caring. I opened up to some of my friends who also were on hand to rub minds with me. Not like they had solutions to my feelings but they made themselves available, and I remain eternally grateful for this.

Thank God I was able to snap out after a while. There is a ‘person who speaks to me that no one sees. I hear him audibly when it’s time to converse and he was my saving grace. My person spoke to me many times and I began to see things from a different perspective. I started getting bullish about things. It gave birth to my new mantra which was to “never worry about what you have no control over”.

These days, I have become a different person. I only bother about what is within my control and leave the rest. After all, my worrying is not the solution. With this mindset, I realized that things eventually evened out.

That taught me to reduce my worry or anxiety no matter the situation. It made me bolder that I would even start anticipating the next challenge so I can emerge victorious. It is no longer a ‘the-whole-world-is-against-me’, it is now me against the world. It is now a Declan Rice versus five Liverpool counter-attackers (apologies to non-football lovers).

Take a cue from me, leave the whole page blank. Don’t give it a title so it doesn’t scare you. Then come back and let us share success stories and tales of victory. And if it did not work out as planned, try again and again and again. You will win.

PEOPLE, WORDS AND BELIEF

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Today, my Facebook brought me the memory of writing a tribute to one of my father figures. It made me mourn afresh for this wonderful soul, one of those who encouraged me with words and actions. It further brought memories about people, both living and ‘living’ whose words and deeds continue to reverberate and urge me on.

I have had the good fortune of having some people pick an interest in me right from my early days. They said affirming words that made me feel on top of the world, and those words had this way of spurring me on. One of these people first used the Yoruba word ‘akikanju’ for me. Trying to get what that might mean led me to different web pages and the closest English word to it that I got had something to do with bravery or something heroic.

Now I am trying to see what might have qualified me for that Yoruba word that explains bravery or heroism because I do not in any way see myself as either of the two when I was younger. Maybe I had the will to want to get things done in a particular way but the person who used the word has now gone to be with The Lord so I really cannot ask why she chose that word for me.

Till today, the words people have said about me stay in my consciousness. The husband of this Mama, also a revered person in our growing-up community regularly spoke good words to me when I was in university. Fact is the course I studied was not a popular one around us back then but he always emphasized that he believed in me and was sure I would do well in that field. He has also exited this place, but his words remain a driving force beyond the time he spoke.

It would not cost me anything to mention these names but I am trying to avoid a scenario where someone feels my inability to ‘talk’ about them means I am an ingrate. Far from it! I appreciate everyone who has been there from the start up until now but I have done a lot of reminiscing these past few days and I don’t want to be in that place today.

While I was trying to find my bearing, another father figure called me into his office and gave me a ‘talking to’ to push me. His words cut me like hot iron but in those words, I heard what he wanted me to hear which was encouraging and inspiring. He wanted me to come out of my shell, he wanted me to push harder than I was, he wanted me to do better so I could achieve all I should. He wanted me in one direction which he thought was the best but having taken his message, I went in another direction and did far more than he thought with my ‘men’, an indefatigable team.

There was the Father figure again who praised my writing skills and would drop me messages at intervals to tell me how much he believed in me. My writing for today was not planned to go in this direction but I just sit in my chair and allow whatever it is that is making me type to take me in a direction, knowing I would be able to pass my message one way or the other. So this Baba, whose passage was brought back by my Facebook memory would give me writing tasks and remunerate me beyond what I deserved. He would come on my blog posts or other stuff and put down comments that nearly made my head blow off with pride. If he was my coach, and I was his athlete, I would take on the whole world and win, because he spoke words that could make me decide to take on the world.

Late in the afternoon today, I got talking with one of my big brothers and his words were that he was confident and believed in my ability to deliver on a certain assignment, even if I was unsure of myself.

All of these votes of confidence have a way of boosting our beliefs in ourselves as individuals. I know of myself and I say all the time that affirming words get to push me to do extra. The same is the response when I get unnecessarily scathing remarks from people in my life. While it makes some people want to prove the speaker of the harsh words wrong, it sort of deflates me.

Seeing Amir Khan’s Taare Zameen Par some days ago, I saw how a talented seven-year-old was almost ruined by the words of those around him because they did not care to know that he was dyslexic. He was not their normal ‘brilliant’ student because he would not comprehend the normal class stuff like his mates and so was ridiculed by all. To make it worse, Ishan (the seven-year-old) was also troublesome. Words and actions cut him deep and the normally lively young one started becoming a shadow of himself until his new Arts teacher (Amir Khan) stepped in to save the day.

The young one who had been subjected to different forms of ridicule by teachers, classmates, and even parents gradually started understanding because his Arts teacher took the time and talked him out of being frustrated to becoming brilliant in his own right, and becoming the best Arts student in the whole school.

Recall my post some days ago about the one who called me an illiterate. Stuff like that will not only make you lose the respect of those you are addressing; it may also prevent you from achieving the desired goal.

So, as I remember these great people whose words have done me well, I admonish you to say the right words to the people you relate with. They might just exceed expectations when you express belief, or they might become a shadow of what you desire from/of them.

Have a beautiful week ahead.

FROM TARABA WITH LOVE – Back to Origin, And Back to Base

Like all things in life, everything has an end. Before I could blink, eleven months were complete and it was time to wind things up. First, we needed to go to Jalingo for our low-key Passing Out Parade and the challenge was where to pass the night as I was no fan of staying in NCCF Family Houses despite holding a key post at the zonal level. I was already working on this when my mate, Kayode Ojo and another friend, Adetoun Okunlola visited from Wukari. Kay was on a tour of Local Governments across the state and it was easy for us to link up in Takum when he came around with Toun. We were meeting for the first time but we clicked like long lost siblings. They both attended our send-forth party where I was given an award as Ambassador of Peace. The rationale for the award remains a mystery.

Christiane was in Jalingo but staying down her end was not something I would consider at all. I reached out to Bayo Adewuyi, my egbon and old neighbour during our growing up years. He was serving in Jalingo and lived with his uncle’s family. He eagerly agreed to have me in his place, and his uncle’s family was equally welcoming. However, it was a bit boring for me as my host was in town grooving while I lay my fever-wracked body in his room. Its sad that Boyo has gone to be with The Lord. May God rest his soul and continue to comfort everyone he left behind.

Then my phone rang, and it was a call from Kay. Guy man was asking where I was and I explained my situation. He encouraged me to move over to where he was and I did that without hesitation. We tried locating a few of the guys in the Lions Den during camp but it did not happen. I also called Christiane but it did not look like we were gonna see so I let it go and went back to the place Kay had gotten for us to sleep.

It was 7th July, and the day started with a very heavy downpour. In my part of the world, rainfall on special days like that was a good omen. We eventually set out after saying thanks to our host, a clergyman who gave a room to the trio of Kayode, his Corper host and me the invited guest. Off we went to the NYSC state Secretariat to collect our certificates, the reward for whatever it was each of us was up to in Taraba state. Yes, I saw old faces again – Christiane, Titi, Wyclef, Judith and many other faces I did not mention before like Femi Gabriel, Dr. Ore and many others. Some of these folks I have not met since that day, others I have met once or twice again.

Time to go back ‘home’ at Takum. The bout of fever that plagued my days leading up to POP was finally packing its load but I could not exert myself much yet so I sat gently in the bus, the same one that took us to Takum the first time ever, and returned us to Jalingo for POP before taking us back to base. Kayode was his ever-boisterous self on that trip, making different comments and cracking jokes. He was called ‘militant’, right from camp and that tag sort of stuck. We returned to Takum at nightfall and I woke up feeling different. I felt free, like no one could harass me for not complying with rules and all.

For the first time since I took office at NCCF, I did not attend fellowship that Wednesday because I was no longer a Corper. Just like Lanre did for me, I also ensured the duo of Tunde and Anmak were fully brought into NCCF and made excos. They went to fellowship while I stayed indoors, enjoying my freedom and just lazing around. I had a guest, the delectable Amara. We caught up and talked on ‘what-might-have-beens’ and all. One person I have not mentioned at all is Chinenye! We started off antagonizing each other at any given opportunity and ended up being very cordial. Just maybe any of these people could have made my initial desire not to end up with a Yoruba woman come through.

Before I eventually became cordial with Chinenye, we would throw jibes at each other and she would massacre my name, calling me ‘Yeye’ while I in turn called her ‘See yeye’. Eventually, we became chummy and she would playfully call me ‘doughnut’ while I called her ‘chin-chin’. Interesting days those were. We remain cordial till tomorrow.

Once POP ended, my ever conservative and careful old boy started calling me to pack my stuff and head back home but I wanted a bit more freedom. The last two or three days in Takum were enjoyed with my friends – Tunde, Kola and Anmak. I also ensured I spent time with Jide Odeyale, our Papa who had become a very good friend from our time serving together at NCCF. Jide is one of my clients these days as I have had the opportunity and pleasure of editing the manuscripts of at least three of his published books.

Leaving Kwambai was something that gave me mixed feelings. My students composed a song for me. I remember the song as I type now. The part that got me mushy was when they called me ‘Captain of the School’. Indeed, Sikas was the place for me. I realized my posting there was the answer to their prayers. A certain Uncle Goodluck had finished service and left before me and they were desirous of getting a replacement for him. I turned out to be that exact thing they prayed for. It was then that I realized that God sort of orchestrated the delay I had that did not let me make Batch A so that I could be the round peg needed in the round hole needed to ensure the development of the students was not truncated.

I almost betrayed emotions but I stood stoutly and gave a parting lecture. I was sent off along with Jonathan Raoru. Our interactions these days are via social media. So much for social media!

I met up with Kay and one of his friends who I met through him, a beautiful petite lady called Kenny. Together, we passed the night at Benue Links Park, the place that we had come to understand as being safe to sleep after the brothel fiasco after orientation camp. It was a beautiful journey back home, with my 30 litre jerry can of honey which I was going to sell in bits and use to engage myself while waiting for a job.

How will I end my Takum experience without mentioning my Living Faith Church, Takum. That was the place! As much as I tried to hide, I was found out. That seems to always happen to me. I want to be in the background but I am brought to the limelight. I met Pastor Joel Yakubu as the Lead Pastor but when we were leaving, it was Pastor Sam Akor, an energetic Benue man that was pastoring. I remember him sending us forth and declaring that we would soar on the wings of help. Indeed, my story so far has been one of help in different ramifications.

You must be wondering why I used almost a week of my 28-day challenge to write about NYSC which is just a month shy of one out of the years I have lived. It is because that period left indelible marks in my memory. I learnt lessons, I made friends, I forged alliances, I saw things and I made memories I will continue to remember.

This week, we continue with another set of shared experiences and inking of thoughts.

Blessings!

More: The story of Tamuna by @lumi_slim

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It was one of those periods in the year when there was not much to do at work. The ‘less busy season’ as they called it, was a time associates and mangers looked forward to.

The office was usually empty as over half of the employees would have jetted off to various places on their annual leave, some to new countries, others (especially the associates) sitting at home enjoying time off work and praying the season never ends.

However, a small percentage of employees were always left at work to tend to whatever business that came up.

She was among the ‘unfortunate’ few that had some work to do, not a lot compared to the ‘busy’ season but it was still work nonetheless. She had taken her leave earlier when she got back from the Federal Capital with high hopes that she would have some time on her hands to read for her approaching professional exams and the solitude of the office would give her the needed space she would require. Unfortunately for her, few days after she resumed, a ‘small’ job came up and like her boss always did, Tamuna was the name that came out of the pot.

So there she was, seated at her desk on that particular Monday morning trying to make sense of the updated schedule the client just sent, the fifth in the space of three weeks. Issue was that some figures still did not ‘tie’ to anything. The accountant that she is or had chosen to be or is trying to become flared up and cursed under her breath

“How hard can it be to do simple debits and credits?”.

She had been struggling with this particular task for a couple of weeks and it was only a matter of time before her Line Manager would start questioning her competence, after all its only but a ‘small job’. They always seemed to ignore the truth; the ‘small jobs’ were the ones with the most issues.

She lifted her head up for the second time since she powered her system at around half past seven when she came in and saw five other young associates just chatting away. In fact it was the resounding laughter of the lady in red that brought her back to reality from the accounting trance that she had been in. That laughter struck her more than anything had in a while and for a split second she stopped in her tracks to figure out what it was that caught her attention. The answer to the question hit her like a flash of lightening piercing through dark clouds gathered for a raging storm and thoughts were translated into words; she couldn’t remember the last time this job brought her joy. She shook her head and got lost in thought but this time it was not about debits, it was about the credits she longed for.

Tamuna had attended a prestigious school, one that is second to none in the country, The Premier University. However, she was not so lucky to have studied as much of a prestigious course, or so the society she lives in brands it. She remembered being in a gathering of friends of a friend, the type where your friend brings her friends who you aren’t friends with and the only umbilical cord connecting the separate groups of friends is the one ‘friend’ who seems to be friends with everybody. Whew!! That’s a lot of friends!

In the middle of the conversation, one of these friends, a rather sharp-mouthed one, who Tamuna took care to avoid turned to her

“You’ve been keeping to yourself all day, did you study Silence in school?”

“No, it’s Agricultural Economics”, Tamuna replied, smiling.

She got the most annoyingly disrespectful response. “People actually spend four years to study that? How are you different from my grandmother in the village?”

Tamuna was furious. “Its a five year course you little witch”, she thought to say but restrained herself and managed to feign just another smile, that response would have done no good but add dry wood to the already burning fire. Such was the ordeal she had to face during and after her days in school and all she did was smile and hope that one day in the not-too-distant future she would do what she loved doing and no one would judge her for it.

However here she was, two years after the compulsory service to the fatherland which took her to the northern part of the country, still ‘struggling’ with every day life. She was one of the high flyers at work, she was not on top of the list and would not be regarded as the rising star of her department but she was not performing badly at all by any standard.

“I am smart”, she said out loud like she was reassuring herself of a known fact. Her job is one the society will consider as a ‘good’ one; in fact most of her friends will do anything to be in her shoes, to have a job with as much prestige. She was enjoying the respect it gave her but beneath that entire facade, she felt empty inside.

The past few weeks had seen her seriously thinking and longing for a change. She commits long hours into this job of hers, barely seeing her family, rarely having time for the little things that made life worth living. How she missed her painting sessions, singing with her friends, reading a novel or dreaming of writing one. How did she get to this point? The point where she was doing what the society dictated: graduate from school, get a white collar job, get married, give birth to kids and die?

A tear rolled down her cheek and she quickly wiped it. She would not let life deal her this card; a phrase from one of the books she loved while growing up thronged at her and she recited it slowly-“We are the architect of our fortune (or misfortune)”. It is her life we are talking about, her one and only precious life for that matter. She had allowed the waves of life toss her ship from side to side, moving in the direction of the tide when she could be the captain of her destiny. She was sure there was more to life than investing a third of her life into something she did not love.

Waking at five in the morning and not returning home till ten in the evening, all thanks to Lagos traffic. She knew in her mind that there was another problem apart from that. Waking up in the wee hours of the day was not what was bugging her mind; it was the fact that it was for a cause that was not her’s. She would gladly invest twice that amount of time into a job she loves without even flinching.

She had had enough of doing what the society and her family dictated; she wanted to be truly free to do what she had been called to do in this world where time is the scarcest resource any man has.

“Oh! how fools think there’s time on their side”.

At this point she decided it was not enough for her to just think of all the problems and limitations in her life, it was time to take action, to ‘just do it’ rather than sit and ‘let things happen to her’.

She took out her writing pad and like one possessed, she started scribbling down things she had always wanted to do with her life and how to achieve them. Funny how she started with her present job, it would be unwise to take an emotional decision by quitting immediately.

“Hunger go wire my head ehn!”, she blurted to herself and smiled. No, she would stop complaining about her day job.

“There’s a reason I’m here and I won’t let my complaints ruin that”

She decided she was going to learn as much as she could. Afterall if she was going to succeed at her own thing, it’ll be an added advantage to learn how to account for resources and here she was at an accounting firm, talk about all things working together for her good! She put a time frame to how much longer she wanted to stay there and the specific things she would like to learn. She wrote about her dream of writing a novel, she would start up a blog first and start writing every week.

“It will be a daunting task no doubt but if I love it then I will pay the price”

She also wanted to be involved in charity for bringing education to displaced children. On and on she went, putting all her thoughts to writing and coming up with ways to achieve them. By the time she finished, she was sweating and breathing hard. She felt like she had just taken a step forward in her life. Maybe baby steps, maybe she would fall but she would rise and rise again until her plan was perfected. Now, she knew a lot of things did not depend on her, and she needed the help of one who can make things work in her ‘favor’.

She stood up and went to the rest room and for the first time in a long while she committed her ways into the hands of God, asking for help because she knew she couldn’t do all she had written on her own. After the prayers she felt the kind of peace that had been absent in her being for a while.

“I should start praying more”, she soliloquized as she went back to her desk.

As she stepped into the office, she saw a familiar face that bore a familiar redness.

It was her Line Manager and she understood what that look meant.

She was not scared because now she knew exactly what she wanted.

She wanted more….

THE END.

Watch out for ‘Less: Gbade’s Confession’

LUMI’S MUSING – EMBRACE YOUR AWESOMENESS BY OLUMIDE OLAWALE

Ever wished you were someone else? A better face, more curves in the right places (whatever that means), less fat or more muscles, you know the six pack thingy right? Maybe for you it’s the preference for the British accent as against the thick Igbo intonation that flows freely from your vocal chords, a more rounded face, better height or what have you…the list can be endless!!! Whatever you think you are lacking or have in excess (as in the case of our thick madams), this is what I think.

*You were molded by the master in His own image, so you’re a master piece. He does not make mistakes hence you are not one. Yes, I mean that your bow leg is no mistake! (Inserts straight face)
* The person you wish you are like also wishes to be someone else. So you’ll probably end up trying to be someone else if you succeed at becoming your ‘model person’. Confusing right?
* It pays to be accepted for who you are without the pressure to be someone you really do not know how to be.
* You cannot please everyone! Even as awesome as I am, it is the one thing I have failed at.
* Stop looking at your imperfections as shortcomings. They are in fact what stand you out from the crowd!!! 

Finally, start everyday with a greater resolve to be a better version of yourself. You wanna get into shape? Exercise! You still remain the Yokozuna size, love you. No one can do that better. Look at it as standing out in the crowd.

Life as we know is short… live, laugh, learn!!! 

I am @lumi_slim on twitter