Monday, 9 December 2019

Oh My, I am an African Parent ...



Yesterday, I took my niece for her annual physical. She has a dual personality and will go from being very loud to speaking quietly all in the same moment.  The doctor was having a hard time figuring out what she was saying as she picked this moment to really speak quietly and on top of that decided to put her hand on her cheek. I tried to intervene and asked her to speak up, which she did but decided to leave the hand on her cheek. I pressed on for the hand to come down and she grittily left it there and her stare indicated she couldn’t figure out why this was an issue.

With the doctor still in the room, I plodded on, “African people don’t do that.”  This statement was ample enough and the hand came down. As the rest of the appointment proceeded, I mulled over what I had just blurted out and couldn’t help but wonder how so much I was acting like my mother, bless her. 

The above incident took me back to an earlier one where another niece, in keeping up with her times and environment had expressed she wanted to go out with her friends. The group consisted of 16 year old girls going out for a social event  that was not only miles away ,but also started at 8pm. The answer from both her parents was an astounding NO and no pleading from the friends or sisters got them to cave in to this ploy.

Yours truly, aunt dearest was called in to the rescue. After hearing what had transpired I of course agreed with the parents that they had made the right decision in not granting her permission to go.

As I figured out how to console my niece, I reflected back on my own memories growing up and I couldn't help but wonder when and how we had become like our parents; the stereotypical African parent.  Below are some of the things our parents did that had me in stitches.

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
Ø     The expectations are high. You are expected to handle every task you are given with due responsibility, from setting the table, washing dishes, tidying up your room. Failure to deliver on any of these simple tasks, you might as well have murdered someone. 

Ø    Whoever came up with the meme, It takes a village to raise a child didn’t lie...
.    I could never make sense of why my mum had to involve all those near and far should I err. When I was around 13, blame it on the hormones, I mastered the courage to talk back as she gave me some instructions on something I didn’t agree with. The next thing I knew she was telling every relative how I had abused her. In my young mind, I went over every word I had uttered and couldn’t for the world of me figure out how me explaining myself  had turned into verbal abuse.

Ø     Eating out is a treat. I always can’t fathom how some of my workmates walk in daily with fast food and bill up to $300 in just coffee for their morning boost.  There was always food at home; we didn’t have the privilege of demanding for McDonald’s or the next food stop. As a result I have fond memories from the times we went out as a family, being a treat; it was even the more special. And still on food, things like soda were for special occasions and for visitors. Sometimes we stared so hard at the visitors that they ended up pouring you some. Up to now soda has never tasted as good to me as it did back then.

Ø     You know how kids in the west run to Bank of Mum and Dad for their luxuries, African parents are also your bank, only that they are collectors and financial advisors that help you plan for your money. Any money from visitors was expected to be turned over to mum and then she would start telling you how it would best be used for your next pair of shoes or something to that tune.

Ø      Still in line with the above, it wasn’t the worst thing when good news was shared with all the family. I remember a time, I had a good report card from school and different relatives showered me with money tokens whenever they met me and applauded me on a job well done. 

Ø    Sarcasm was always used to get you to think on your feet.  If after being coached on what you should do, you still asked questions, a response like, put the pan on my head always woke you up to reality and you soon figured where the pan should go and what was needed of you.
Source: Onsizzle.Com


Ø     A friend of mine has had pressure from her parents about when she is bringing the ‘one’ home. As we shared notes on the plight of being above 30 and single, she recalled how at the prime age when everyone was dating, her mother assured her she would be dead if found with anyone of the opposite sex. This same mother now won’t stop demanding and throwing hints for a spouse for her.

Ø     Grades, you are expected to do your very best in every class. The pressure is real and even the schools go as far as to shame those who don’t do well in a class. In their defense it is to reward the top scorers and motivate those at the bottom to aim higher.  When I visited the west for the first time, I encountered a student, who had to use audio and visual aids to tackle her exams and was curious to know why. It is then that I came across the term dyslexia a reading disability. My mind couldn’t help but go back to a girl in my high school who easily picked up as the teachers taught and always brought history to life as she discussed with us and yet ironically she was always at the bottom of the class. She was not able to sit the final national exams with us as the school felt she didn’t meet their standards. Looking back, she must have been dyslexic, I can’t imagine what her predicament was back at her home and hopefully her parents were more gracious than mine with a bad report card.

Ø      When the mother calls, you must immediately comply, disobedience is not tolerated at all. Often times you are in another room and she is calling you to pass her something like a kitchen spoon which is within arm’s reach to her. This used to really annoy me as I could never figure out why she just simply couldn’t reach whatever she needed and call on someone that was a distance away to help. Years on, a friend told me this was a tactic used to supervise children and make sure they were not up to any trouble and could learn a thing or two as mum worked away in the kitchen.

Ø     Fathers are mostly authoritarian, you are supposed to be the most disciplined when dealing with them. The times you do engage with them, it is for serious business like discussing grades and career options and if all is good, you can throw in a request for funds. I had cousins who used to race to their rooms to act very busy once their father returned home. A honk at the gate had everyone sprinting off and the last man standing was warranted to be the one to open up for their old man and answer whatever hard questions that he had. I was once that person whose legs couldn’t carry them away fast enough and I remember looking blank as I was  quizzed about  the latest  on the gulf war and Saddam in Iraq.

Ø    The only time that African parents were compelled to show some love and pour
      out a bit of emotions towards a child was on only that ‘special’ occasion when a child was ill. That is when the parent would fondly touch a child’s forehead although the actual intention was to measure the child’s temperature with the palm of their hand being used as a thermometer.  The child would enjoy the rare opportunity of eating delicacies like rice, chicken and occasionally have fizzy drink. It would be the only time when one would be excused from house chores.

I could go on and on about my memories growing up.  I am relieved that I am reminiscing on them fondly which I guess goes to show that our parents in their own way were very loving and attentive.  As a matter of fact I couldn’t trade my childhood for anything, it is a true treasure.



Thursday, 21 November 2019

Years on, still Coextensive.



Long before there were phones or tablets, read as internet for someone like me who grew up in a 3rd world country, I fancied myself a poet.

Nights in school, rightfully called prep time, were dedicated revision times. And for me these were  spent mainly playing around with words as evidenced in the various scrap books I keep coming across from those times.
I recently got the courage to revisit one of them, and was shocked at how as plain as day some still held their truth and still stood for who I am.

Going through them, I couldn't help but wonder, what would have happened if I had grown up in an environment that fostered more the art of writing rather than pushing all of us in one direction. Back then, for someone like me who had minimal strength in the sciences, the forces within dictated that a career in law was the highway or nothing?  Ever so headstrong, I somehow managed to convince them, that a course in Mass Communication was just as highly commendable and I ended up doing that in college. My reasoning, It would help me cultivate my love for writing, I am not sure it did anything for me ,but well here I am .
Fast forward to 2019, a year that for the most part has hit me at every corner in my bid to pursue higher ground that the only way I can cypher it is as a  season of perturbation. It is a miracle that I have carried on as normal and daily continue to choose to focus on the blessings.  So, as I went through my old scrap book, it was very comforting that words I had written more than 20 years ago, were still very alive, true and gratifying to my worn out soul. Here goes;

Troubled Man
Troubled man
Will you listen to me?
I need to have your attention
I've got something to say
I've got all the answers to the questions in your mind.
Will you trust me this time
And let me be the one
I am not asleep
I know what you are going through
I have been knocking at your door
Please won't you let me in
Be your God, your friend, your joy.

Will you trust me
Will you give me your life
Then I will show you all the things that I have for you.
Will you love me
For I loved you first
On the cross, I gave my life that you would be free
You need to know everything is gonna be all right
Just call on my name and I will be there for you
I know you are troubled said I will take you in my arms
Take some time and call me
Coz i will never let you down.

Unedited version from my 1999 scrapbook.

Sunday, 10 March 2019

Peace in the Wilderness




And it happened again-Surgery! Given my cultural upbringing anytime one has to go through the knife, it is a big deal; so the over year long process to this ordeal was very heart wrenching for me. I am a very private person and I have struggled with the decision on whether to share this, especially as I didn't even share with my family until now. However thinking back, I would be cheating God if I just kept being ambivalent especially as even through this agony, He came out mighty big to show His greatness and never ending love for me. 

When after a few Emergency Room visits and specialist visits I was diagnosed with endometriosis advanced to endometrioma, I was initially mad at God and after bargaining with Him I decided I was going to up my faith and see Him supernaturally heal me. My faith did go up, I got closer to God but after 8 months there was no change, instead the scan showed the disease had taken a turn for the worse. The doctor referred me to another specialist and lectured me about doing something about it as clearly whatever I had hoped for, had not worked. When I left her office, I cussed her some for what in my opinion I considered being so loud and negative and quietly asked God that together we show her who was in control. I ventured into healthier eating but if am honest it was a cycle of one week on and then darn who cares. I tried alternative medicine and in the midst of all this, one of my friends who was helping me out with herbal meds asked for a doctor's note to get a synopsis of what was actually going down. 

The doctor’s office was so kind as to give me a report from May 2017 when I first visited. The report was very detailed and a big chunk of it was spent describing not the ailment but the counseling that went on. The wording of the report, rubbed me wrong as it made me seem like a big whiner who was in denial of what scientifically needed to be done. So after a series of herbal meds, at my next specialist visit, I told God to show Himself otherwise given my limited knowledge on medicine , I had no option but to give in to the doctor’s orders. And so it was, my worst fears confirmed, I put on a brave face and listened to the next steps from the specialist. On my ride back to work, I called my aunt to help me process the news, she started to fret and I rubbed my tears away as I needed to be strong for the both of us. When I got to work, I had to get on with business as usual however hard. A colleague asked me about my visit and with a lump in my throat, I said I'm having surgery, he tried to press for details but I didn't have the strength to get into the details .He tried to act goofy in an attempt to cheer me up but I wasn't having it and distracted myself with screen time. 

The true camper I am, the next days went by as normal until the call from the hospital scheduler came with options for the next appointments, pre-op, op and post -op. I was very cooperative with her and together we worked out some dates. And then after that phone call,  bang just like that panic mode struck again… what was I going to tell people, just where was my God , who was going to be there for me, it was a disarray of meaningless questions that only managed to depress me. As I spoke to a friend that day, she preached to me about not caring about people's opinions and to just consider my health. I then told her the reason I was not running to people, is that in 2015 I had been in the same spot with another procedure and was abundantly loved and supported, by these same people and it was just so uncomfortable telling them I was here yet again especially as I felt I still owed them. In my mind, I also didn't want them to question where my God was and why I got this load. What followed is the greatest miracle of my 2018.

 As the days rolled by, God in his great mercy gave me peace, so much peace that joy overflowed through me. And just as I was busy minding my business, my workmate asked me what plans I had for the medical bill, given my new acquired state of mind, I told him I was not thinking that far and would cross that bridge when I got there. He then told me, he had discussed my pending surgery with his wife and together they had agreed to contribute $1000 to my medical expenses. In that moment, especially with kind gestures becoming less common, I felt like God was hugging me and telling me it was going to be OK.
So on the D-Day, as I entered that op room, I was so oblivious to what was going on as I knew the Lord of heaven and earth was in control. My recovery has been remarkable, after living in pain for so long I can't believe I go pain free for days on and this is the new normal. In the period post my surgery, I listened to a song I learnt last year and this time the lyrics spoke to my situation.

The lyrics go...
No matter what it looks like I just want You, want You…
In every space of my life I invite You, invite You …
[Chorus 1] Like a fire, like a flood
 Come however You want, However You want…
 With Your power, with Your love
 Come however You want However You want..
 [Verse 2] You're breaking all the boxes, Tearing down the walls, the walls..
 You have no limitations You exceed them all You exceed them all...
 Link to Song-Come However you want...
It is worth a listen to put this in context🔺

And indeed, He did come how he wanted, through a medical procedure for me, He proved yet again to be Jehovah Rapha, my healer.  




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