Tuesday, 19 November 2013

What Is Home?



Hey darlings, long time no see right? I've been having writers block or maybe I've just been too busy to settle down and come up with something. Anyways, I was listening to Vulindlela by Brenda Fassie the other day. My dad played this song on many Sunday afternoons on the way home from church or to and from a Chinese restaurant after church so the song made me miss home. After listening to the song over and over again, I realized how amazing it is that so many facets of my childhood takes me back home at random times. So I decided to ask my friends what home was to them. They weren’t expecting the question of course so I got many “what?”s then I explained to them what I meant. When you think about home, what comes to mind? What is something you love to do that makes you feel like you are at home again? Then they understood my question and for some of people I could see a glimpse of nostalgia in their eyes. I have attached a video at the end of this of their answers to my question. But of course I would tell you guys my answer the question first.

Right now, if you asked me what comes to mind when I think of home. My answer would be something like this;


Home is… bread and mayonnaise.
Home is the smell of my mum’s ogbono soup.
Home is my sister’s too loud laughter.
Home is my dad’s smile that wrinkles the sides of his eyes.
Home is my mum’s too high gospel music that woke me up on random mornings.
Home is the smell of rain on the sandy soil in Kano.
Home is the sound of the rain on the roof.
Home is my mum and aunt speaking Esan in loud tones. Standing to demonstrate the gist perfectly and me trying to decipher what they were talking about.
Home is those nights my mum would come back from work with suya.
Home is sleepovers with my childhood best friend.
Home is my sisters and I staying up until dawn gisting about God knows what.
Home is peppery indomie and ribena on cold rainy days.
Home is my mum’s pancakes on Sunday mornings.
Home is my dad helping me “prepare” my pancakes by putting honey on them and slicing them.
Home is the expression on my mum’s face as she sings and dances to her old school music while looking at herself in the mirror.
Home is the family house in Kano.
Home is family.

Home is always family.


:)
Hope you enjoy video! (sorry the quality isn't great, still working on my editing skills.) Please leave your comments letting me know what home is to you.

Background Music: Home by Phillip Phillips. Thanks Fritz, Devina, Malik, Grace, Sarah, Fareedah, Amos, Tapiwa, Samantha, Lenora and Cyril for being in my video :)

Monday, 30 September 2013

Thoughts of a sleepy teenager.

Hey awesome people. I have been extremely busy with school work(Finally started college!!! Might actually put up pictures later) hence my not being active over the past weeks, but I'm back, at least for now. It's past 2am and I have a class really early tomorrow, well today. But my hands were itching to put something down after not writing in so long, so I just wrote this. It was inspired by a conversation my friend and I had yesterday. Enjoy, and share your thoughts.




"I want to play in the rain!" Fade said. His eyes welled with screaming eagerness.
'No Fade, you will get a cold and fall sick afterwards!'


I wish we knew how to play in the rain. Without worries of how and why and when and what and what if.
How would we play in the rain? Why? What if we get a cold?
I wish we could still taste the doodles of childish abandon at the back of tongues.
I wish we knew how to laugh. the kind of laughter that cleanses the soul.
I wish we knew how to save, knew the power that lies in the opening of our mouths.
I wish we knew how to be happy, the kind of happiness that didn't run out.
I wish we knew where the end of the tunnel lay. Where we stop and say I think 'I have done enough now' and not look back and give into temptation to run again.
I wish we could see the finish line at the end of the race we run. Maybe it would be motivation to run faster.
I wish we had the key to the maze we lock ourselves in.
I wish we still sang the kind of songs that weren't heavy with age and experience.
I wish we remembered the aimlessness of sugary youth.
I wish our hands could fix the broken.
I wish our words were kind and humble.
I wish our world was kind and humble, and happiness came before success.
I wish we would try to understand what success is and maybe realize it cannot be tied to one thing.
I wish our wings were let to spread broader, discovering our limits or finding out we were limitless as we flew.
I wish our paths weren't drawn.
I wish we didn't lie to ourselves so often, we forget the truth.
I wish we could be thought the things we actually needed to know how to achieve.
But these things we really need to know, sometimes cannot be taught.
So I wish we at least knew how to dance in the rain and bask in the joy of the moment. Sink in this fountain of playful grace.
Until our minds are shut down or are reset to be what they used to be.

Friday, 19 July 2013

Me and The Music Rack

Hey lovely people! I once watched a spoken word poetry video in which the poet said that sometimes as he wrote/spoke he felt like a stripper; speaking to people he never met before about intimate things in his life. I definitely feel like I'm stripping with this one. I'm not one to write about myself. But something happened of recent that led to this.



If you rolled my heart out and laid it on a music rack, you would play the symphony of an old love song.
An 
embroidery of hidden faces and swallowed words.
It would be one of those songs that melt your heart. 

If you rolled out my heart and laid it on a music rack, you would find your voice as you played.
Hear the vivid drums of glistening eyes and thrown back heads.
It would be one of those moments you just want to scream. 

If you rolled out my heart and laid on a music rack, it would speak words of confusion.
Heartbreaks and hushed voices.
Tired minds and empty stories.
Heavy heads and avoided memories.
Deleted songs and regretted pictures. 

If you rolled out my heart and laid it on a music rack. The lyrics of my soul would change you.
You would look at life through the curtains of wonder and a new kind of fear, or is it love?
You would see yourself and would not recognize your features. 

If you rolled out my heart and laid it on a music rack. You would rebuke the words that you speak.
Lash out and recoil.
Run and pray and run again.

Monday, 1 July 2013

Slinky.

Hey guys! Hope everyone is having a great week so far. I was quite bored recently and wrote this very short story.


The colour of her skin was a mix of grey and pain. Her eyes held liquid fear, or was it anger? She walked with a tired feline gait, as though wasted hope lay heavily on her hips. She was the palace slave but a divine dancer. She would dance at royal ceremonies, waist adorned with the finest of beads, shoulders hidden in high and heavy ornaments. Her dance steps were slow and beckoning. How could an essence so strange carry such elegance on its shoulders? The stride of her hips, the expression on her face, spoke words she could never utter. The stamp of her feet against the rain-bathed soil left prints feet manipulation. The smile on her face carried men on an unsatisfying journey. And once in a while, as she moved towards the crowd, a frenzy of vibrations taking over her hips and shoulders, pride would flash on her face.  She was well aware of the empire she had created in our minds. This empire where the slave transformed to the dictator.

Monday, 17 June 2013

Book of the Week!

Hello Ladies and Gents! I've decided to have a book or short story of the week from time to time and give a little review of the book or short story. If anyone has any suggestions of books or short stories I should check out, do leave a comment underneath this post. I'll read it and put on here, a review of the novel or short story and the name of the person who recommended it.


So the book of the week is...... The Lion and the Jewel by Wole Soyinka.

This book is a play set in the village of Ilunjunle, western Nigeria . It's one heavy with literature and an interesting play of words. But at the same time, the story can be easily understood by the casual reader. It is the first Wole Soyinka book I've read and I loved it! Trying very hard not to give too much away, the book is about love and deception. It's quite a short play, the paperback having 72 pages. If you're looking for a book to read that isn't too long but is at the same time filled with character, The Lion and the Jewel is the book for you! If you've read this book already or read it after this post, let me know what you think about it. And if you have any suggestions of other Wole Soyinka books I should read, please let me know.

Have an awesome week people and remain positive! :)



Picture gotten from www.africabookclub.com

Sunday, 19 May 2013

Silent Nights.

Hello loves, before I go into my most recent short story, I would like to acknowledge that I write a lot of sad love stories, haha. It's actually not on purpose, my mind just likes to imagine a hundred and one ways people can love and loose. I promise to have something happy and about love (as you can tell, I love to write about love) soon! But till then, hope you enjoy the story below :D





They were ‘cool’ together, but she knew all along that it was the mystery and kept them together. Interwoven like birds tied down in comfortable but unfamiliar nests of wonder. On hushed nights, they lay on beds miles and miles away. In the sacredness of it all. The fearful mix of privacy, the dark and waiting for everyone to sleep first, gave their talks a sense of something more than just friendship. She would lay, legs crossed, on the bed waiting for the pleasant light to appear on her phone without a beep. And then she would wait for him to think she had forgotten about their unstated meeting before answering, sometimes with more of a sleepy accent than necessary.

The theatrics of it all gave her faint butterflies. But their real discussions were light and shallow. About their days and exes. He would call her boring because she didn't go out often and she would call him her sister or ‘woman wrapper’ because he was more obsessed with Justin Beiber than she was. He would ask abrupt questions soured with lust. Loud and simultaneously lulled lust;

‘If you were here, what would you want to do?’ He would ask.

‘Haha, I don’t know, play a game? I’ll probably beat you badly though, wouldn't want you see you sad’

‘Oh, so you care if I’m sad’

‘I don’t like seeing people hurt, don’t start feeling special’

And they would laugh like they didn't hear his voice’s displeasure.
The first night he finally said it out. She refused to talk about it.

‘Would you kiss me if you were here?’ he asked, his words sweetened with irresistible want.

‘It depends on the mood’

‘If I held your cheeks and kissed your lips. You wouldn't slap me, would you?’

‘Haha, maybe, you can’t be too sure’

‘So you wouldn't kiss me back? Even if I was really really good?’ “really really” would come out sounding childish and desirous.

‘Hmmm, well if you were really really good maybe I’ll kiss you and slap you afterwards’ she would reply, allowing her grin seep into her voice so he heard her smiling.

‘I thought you said you cared about me’

‘I said so?’ she would ask, knowing the conversation about kissing was over with that but longing for it to continue.

They had never met, were introduced by a friend over the phone, and it all stayed over the phone. He asked to meet her sometimes but she always declined. He lived in America as a child and so had an American laced Nigerian accent. Making his "o!"s "shey!"s sound funny. He lied about his surname. So the first time he told her his real surname, it made her feel significant like she knew something deeper than the shallow water surface others knew. Like she was finally getting comfortable on a couch in a new house. But there were always stories about various girls littered in his gist. And sometimes he would say some of the girls were imaginary, he only made them up to make her jealous. But she knew most of them were real. And when he said he had a call from his cousin waiting but he'd call him back later, she listened to the beeps in the background of their low voices and knew he wasn't hers alone. He was never hers.

‘Martha, I love you’ he said for the first time one dark woozy night. Nothing had led to the statement. It was as abrupt as his quest for kisses.

‘Aw, you’re sweet. Thank you’ she said for lack of better words.

She would lie and say she loved him too as she had done in the past, but she built this one on honesty and his feelings were too shallow to be rewarded, a lie. It did’t feel like love. It felt like want for what seemed so hard to accomplish. Like something that was his, but wasn't his and he really wanted to be his.
His accent was very entrancing and he spoke with words suspiciously sweet, frighteningly unnatural. Like over sweetened tea, delicious for the moment, but leaving lingering regret at the back of your tongue, or in this case, on the wings of the butterflies in her stomach.

But he wouldn't let go and with every plea for a suggestive or affectionate conversation, he grew a little shallower in her eyes, rising slowly from depth with every conversation. He would rest inveterate questions on her shoulders;

‘If I won one of our games for once, wouldn't you kiss me then?’, ‘What is the worst thing you've done with a guy?’, ‘You’re weird. Why won’t you have these kind conversations with me?’ ‘Okay what if we were on a bed together and I kissed you, will you push me away? You already got on the bed with me now’
‘What do you have on right now?’ and when she answered with “A purple silk pajamas” he would say ‘Silk? My friend told me she only wore silk on special occasions, is talking to me your special occasion?’ he would ask, a palpable smile bathing his voice.


Sometimes she would finally agree to imaginary kiss him, other times she killed his vulgar spirit with a well aimed fork. But both times, it didn't make him less shallow. It only made her slowly rise from depth with him and she despised it.

One night in the deep enchantment of his voice and the too cold AC, he said the words that came too often, too easily from his lips, ‘I love you’ and she finally replied in the best, real and soft voice she could make; ‘I love you too, Jonathan’ and she finally felt pulled to the top of the ocean, cold and shallow. But even then, they still weren't a couple. He had asked and she had asked for more time, he had begged over and over, saying he was kneeling in his room while holding the phone, ‘honestly’, ‘truthfully’,’ sincerely’, he would use these words like he was reading a well thought-out letter.

It was days later her best friend called her with “better gist”

‘Ah what happened? Gist me! My life’s too boring these days'

Her friend laughed excitedly before saying; ‘Remember Jonathan? That guy we talked to on the conference call only once. The one with the accent we were falling for badly?” she asked, excitement and pride unsteadying her voice.

‘Yes o! what happened?’

‘He called me again and asked me out! It was about three weeks to a month ago! He wanted to keep it a secret. I’m sorry I didn't tell you, you know we haven't been in touch, but he is a very nice person. I have met him once. The only problem is that he is short. But that voice, that his voice, I can die for it!’ she said, love ridden laughter oozing from the phone.

The words came fast, incomprehensible and inane. Suddenly she felt like a toddler trying to find her feet on imaginary grounds. Feeling cheated. Blinking in confusion and unusual, unwarranted heartbreak.

She did not have the right after all, to mourn what was never hers.



Wednesday, 8 May 2013

Two Hugs and a Kiss.

Hey guys! This was written about 3 years ago and edited recently. When I wrote this short story, I was furious about something, I can't remember what it was, but it birthed this.




It took two hugs and a kiss and I was sold.

     Mother had told me to keep way. She said my eyes followed him with the wasted lust of youth. But rebellious as I was, I didn't listen. By the time my eyes were cleared, we were married. Married two long years.

     His name was Obi, short for Obidimkpa. I loved the name, but then again, I was in love, nothing is short of beauty when you are in love. He was a hunter, and I was a singer. But he had a maddening passion for hunting and I just loved to sing, mostly as a hobby.

    As I now sway with the chains of mostly wonder than captivity (one of these foreign me staring at me like I'm a scientific experiment. He obviously hasn't seen black people before), I realise Obi had more than just a “passion” for hunting.

       But why would Obi sell me to these hefty young me for a gun? We had a fight a week ago and I left to a friend's house, but what couple can escape fights?  And I know he holds things to heart but I had no idea he was still furious. Furious enough to send these people to capture me just as I let my guard down and returned to his house.

      His usual antidote was hunting. Mother once said a day will come when I’ll be his prey. But I couldn't hear her words over the rhythm of his feigned love, over the tune of a one sided passion. Now it occurs to me that it wasn't  the songs I would sing for him with an exaggerated melody, or the meals I cooked with expensive spices that lured him home after every hunting trip. It was the joy of his satisfied gun, the scent of gun powder on his shirt and the serenity of the shooting addicted monster in his head.

They say the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach.


Ha! I tell you, there is no way to a man’s heart.

Frail.

Hey guys! So sorry I haven't uploaded anything in so long, it's been a mixture of writer's block and having so many things to do.


I'm listening to slow music right now and that's usually an easy source of inspiration for me. So I'm going to try writing something little. Sometimes I literally have no idea what I'll be writing about until I start writing. So here it goes. :)


We grew up in the warmth of our palms.
His eyes the only shade of happiness I knew.
And the first day we met,
I don't remember a lot.
But I remember the frailness of his fingers, mine were probably just as frail or maybe even worse.
But it made me worried.
Made me want to help him.
Play games with papers and stones.
And build castles in our heads like they could strengthen our minds.
So we played.
With intoxicating innocence.
We played until we forgot how not to smile.
Until we ran to heaps of sand to build with it, the castles in our minds.
We played until he was 22 and was trying to figure out how to ask a girl with eyes, the color of the morning sky, out.
Until they broke up 2 years later for reasons I knew would come soon but still helped him get the girl for fear that those frail hands would return.
We held hands even when his hands were frail again from heart break and his eyes were a different shade from what I knew.
We held hands until he remembered how to smile again.
Until we decided not to let him fall stupidly again.
And many foolish years later...
We held hands as we slipped on rings on our already destined fingers.
We held hands for many more years, as we fell and pulled each other up over and over again.
We held hands as the days came when the only thing that kept us alive were the feel of our palms against each other.
We held hands until our hands were frail and shaken with age.

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Dance.

Hey guys! I wrote this poem about two years ago after watching a lot of So You Think You Can Dance episodes, lol. I love to dance and I hope you all can take some time out to dance today. In the meantime, enjoy this poem. :)




We dance for we lack the words to express our emotions.
We dance for our speech's capability fails us.

We dance for the stillness in our heart burns us, and we find no better escape.
We dance for it fills our heart with immeasurable dynamic joy.
Joy even we cannot explain.

We dance for it brings a certain light to our souls.
To our minds.
A light so bright it blinds us all.

We dance for the blindness is pleasant.
In it we explore the darkness.
Darkness tinted with grace.

We dance for it gives a fulfilled feeling nothing else can bring.
We dance for its the best we can expand our playfulness.
We dance for it lets us release our attitude.

We dance for it breaks the invisible shackles we have been caged in.
We dance for it lets us utilise our freedom.
Lets us taste this new flavor.
And only we have dominion in this new world we have created.

We dance for it lets us escape our clumsiness.
Allows us create an effortless poise.
So natural, it becomes real.

We dance for in it we find solace.
For in it we cannot be discriminated.
Not by our race, nor by our accent.
For in this world, we are part of the puzzle.

We dance for it lets us explore.
Lets us express.
Joy.
Love.
Anger.
Despair.
The ineffable emotions we cannot utter.
We pronounce in the language of dance.
For even illiteracy cannot hold us back.

We dance for it takes us beyond.
Beyond the ordinary.
Beyond what you see.
Beyond what you could ever imagine.

For dance supersedes just an art.
It is a spirit that takes over us as we move.
And the movement of our feet develops a new symphony in our hearts.

Unfamiliar.

Hey! I like to explain a little bit of what inspired a write up before sharing it. So this was basically inspired by a short story I read recently about a girl that was in love with someone too old for her. I hope you like it :)



I was 15, he was 29.
Our love was strange.
Like cracks in an hour glass.
Our love was loud.
Like the beat of frenzied drums.
Our love was silent.
Like the sound of dancers as their feet grace the tiles.
Our love was aggressive.
Belligerent.
Stiff as a deep rooted tree.
Our love was kind.
Mellow.
Secret.
Shame.
Our love was servile.
I was servile.
Our love was speechless clenched fists,
Fighting our insides.
Fighting my insides.
Our love was intense.
Our love was bad words.
Curled toes.
Crossed legs.
Bitten lips.
Sore eyes.

I was 15 and he was 29.
And we kissed for the first time 8 days to valentine's.
My back against the rough barks of an Iroko tree in his compound.
The moon shining a little too dim.
Blurring the features of his face.
I was intoxicated.
By the scent of mint in his breath.
The cologne on the side of his neck.
The grip of his arms around my waist.
The pierce of his eyes into mine.
I turned away too late.
His lips were already on mine.
Seducing me, melting my lips like rain on snow.
Making it hard to think.
Or do.
It was unfamiliar.


Our love was unfamiliar.