Me

I can’t wait to escape the walls of uni. Scaling them has crossed my mind. Once or twice. If only they are visible. I’ve also thought of doing stuffs that will make the school authority throw me out. But erm…I no just fit.

School work can really be a distraction. It looks attractive. Especially, when it is in the bikini of ajebutter schools. It is when you are done with it that you smell the reality it has always shielded from you. The fire that smokes out the rat-of-the-potential-in-you. That’s not my problem anyway. I am not waiting for the distraction to clear off. I’m facing reality. Head-on.

I allowed the internet and its trappings spill out of my life for some time. Passively o, because I could not but part the curtains for peeps sometimes. This was after Vero’ and when I discovered that my undergrad Literature texts were piling up.

In no time, Facebook, Blogger, Google+, Youtube and Twitter gave way to GoogleScholar and JSTOR. SparkNotes, on those occasions when I fail to meet the deadlines for the reading of certain texts. That didn’t prevent me from joining the Caine Prize arguments (‘brouhaha’ will be unkind) though. I read the five shortlists and fortunately, the only story I reviewed (and kept on my PC) won the prize. Don’t even try inferring anything from there. Of Caine Prize, miracles and the cocoyam tubers thereafter, I’m saying no more. E yaf end like that.

Of book reviews? That’s another part of me that suffered during my un-internet-ed days. I did one though. I read Chimeka Garrick’s Tomorrow Died Yesterday and did what a friend called an ‘exo-skeletal review’ here.

Gat to say something now!

I’m back online. And bored. The silence here is killing. It is too loud. I’ve got to hush it.


I’m back online and it’s like I’m seeing stuffs I don’t see before. Or maybe I’ve been insensitive all this while. The Facebook updates (I haven’t noticed it on Twitter though) I see these days are devoid of the intellectual depth I expect from this generation of ours. It annoys me; makes me feel that the internet has become a RANTOSPHERE. Log in. Post your personal rubbish. Earn likes and shares. Comments, sometimes. Log out!

That is not to say folks don’t put up reasonable stuffs on this medium. They still do (and I love group discourses, like those that happened while waiting for the announcement of the 2013 Caine Prize winner as well as those on the #childnotwife blah). The occasional irrelevances that feature just get on my nerves.

I’ve always thought that aside the social function the internet serves, it should brim with ideas meant to transform the cosmos. But what do we see? Updates on how delicious somebody’s last meal was; how a new pair of bum shorts stands gidigba on some ass…

Abegi! What significance lurks in those?

I am reading The Diary of Anne Frank, and I can’t but wonder what a thirteen year old would do with his or her device if s/he was to be in little Anne’s situation, in this Facebook era. Here is a possible update:

‘Just checked into the bush to do a number two. Gush! My backside’s shrinking!’

‘So?’ is not always far from my reach when I see such. I make a long face, hurling expletives at an imaginary poster.

Linda Ikeji could have passed for an imaginary character in some dreamer’s fiction, some ten years ago. The internet has made her realistic. Through her, I’ve come to realise the power the internet has in checking certain excesses in the society. My premise is contained in the fear big shots have for bloggers.

I wonder what people think when they say Linda is aproko. I ask them to take the nearest route to hell. She is making all the money from the internet and there you are, wearing your teeth and saliva, complaining that Nigeria is no good. You are no better!

She is making all the bread and there you are, spending on chatters that don’t fetch you a dime in return. BBM. Whatsapp. 2go too!

See! I know a friend who was outlived by his BB. It happened on a highway. He was smiling, fingering lols and SMHs into his qwerty-key-ed device. A car kissed his ass. And its driver honked: lol lol lol. He sped off. That’s all!


After singing the last hymn at his funeral, I said lol in place of Amen. His end, not the hymn’s, was funny. So is this generation. It perpetrates vices and nuisances with what it could have channelled into earning itself a distinctive voice. It’s the ‘no time’ generation.

The ‘no time’ generation conjures so many polopolo (forgive Olamide’s patois) to produce speedy results. They gat no time. They laugh scornfully at the old-school-ness and sluggish-ness of generations running before. Daddies and mummies will never understand them. Try tracking them. You’ll find them wandering aimlessly in the labyrinth that is them.

Excuse Them!

They own improvisations. Shortcuts. They avoid the sweat of the cursing Gawd of Eden, yahoo-yahoo-ing to fame. They prefer internet porn to the fun derivable from intellectual enterprises…

Though I exist in the same temporal space with them, I am not one with them. I am not of them. I hold a different view in matters that concern the internet and the social media:

The internet is a gift (certainly the best) to this generation; the symbol of a cunt with many orifices. Like Farad, it is a head made of many other heads. You do it well or otherwise. I’ve seen folks give it orgasms. Don’t ask me how. Do it your own GOOD and PURPOSEFUL way.
***
Lit ‘n’ Life  wishes our Muslim brethren a blessed Ramadan. Follow me on Twitter


Vero’, today’s Friday and it’s been ringing in my head since the break of dawn that it’s now a week that I lost you. I still can’t get the pictures of the moments we shared together from my mind. I CAN’T.  And I WON’T.

Miss you.

Saying Goodbye to Vero’ ends with Adeola Opeyemi’s piece. Read and drop your comments. Lit'n' Life appreciates you. 

***


FAREWELL DEAR SISTER
(For Oyemade Oyelola Veronica) 

By Adeola Opeyemi


“Do not stand at my grave and weep

I’m not there, I do not sleep

I am the thousand winds that blow

I am the diamond glow of snow

I am the sunlight on ripened green

I am the gentle autumn stream

Do not stand at my grave and cry

I am not there, I did not die.”


These lines rang in my head as I watched you lay there, an angel in blue and a white shroud. Did they know, did they guess, that your last outfit was the colour of a beautiful morning sky?

Words have failed to describe your passing on, but I refused to try as well. Lest I glorify death for crushing a flower so delicate, for felling young trees while dry ones stand. 
You did not die, I know of death. I know the way it zaps breath off a being. I know the way it robs a flower off its beauty. I imagined you played chess with death, and you emerged the winner. You were done with this life, with the incomprehensible pains born with man. You were ready to go and you left. You did not die, you went asleep; an eternal sleep as calm as you.

Do forgive us when you see us cry. We cry not because you are finally resting. We cry for our selfish reasons. We cry for the time we’d seek you amidst various heads and see you not. We cry for the days we’d call you and hear you not. We cry because while you sleep, we would be lonely. 

We cry for the day we would make such journey and others would cry for us.

As I stood by your grave, my heart wished for a shroud of words with which to cover you. I wished for rhythms to see you off. I wished I could sing with my croaky voice; a heavenly hymn befitting an angel. I wished for so many things but my mouth was glued. If I sing, I would cry; if I recite poems, they would lack poetic beauty. Your death has left my inside with a silence so loud, I couldn’t hear myself if I speak. I know this, because I tried. I tried to say some few words, but I couldn’t hear myself speak.

So hear this, dear sister, they are words I whisper at night, they are lines I hope the winds would carry to you.

 A tornado has passed this way

A flood has swept this street

An unripe fruit has fallen from this tree

The candle in the wind has lost a battle

This Fenix has lost a feather

And the calmness that comes after disasters

Has come to settle on this debris


Farewell dear sister,

And we would seek you, Vero

Futilely, in these pieces that was once whole.

Goodnight dear sister. I would not say goodbye, goodbyes are for forever and you, Oyelola has only gone to sleep. So goodnight dear one. Goodnight dear sister.


The Saying Goodbye to Vero’ Series continues today with more poets airing their muses’ words. 

‘…Only Poets are in the best position to understand and interpret the shady blurred reality of death…’
…Odeyemi John Law

Read and comment.


***

Two Poems


ETERNAL NIGHT

A POSTHUMOUS WREATH FOR A SISTER COLLEAGUE


ALELE TI LE, OJUMO O MO MO

ILE SUU KIRIKIRI---- WHERE IS THE ELEGANT MORNING?

Dawn has been assassinated; eternal night triumphs.

            I prepared soft and classical eba

Awaiting the herbal leaf of efo

Rather. My ear is fed with lullabies of bedtime

Eemo re o*** abomination* when did eba become mortal?

                        Chieftaincy is a corollary of royalty

A matriarch with peacock’s head and antelope’s feet

   Has been p l u c k ed by impetuous death; impish and peevish

Oyemade

From friendship, you’ve ellipted ship- detaining friend

 To aid your procession with the convoy of pioneers of a(fter)lives

 You have taken a pause and punctuated corporeal life

Just that we miss the vacuum you fill; the enduring requests.

I won’t make iku proud by shedding my eyes

Won’t grotesque my countenance with gloomy cosmetics

In the womb of my heart; the soil of my lead you shall gain life

OYELOLA, yeyeola, yeye- oye-laaa
***                   ***                  ***
VERONICA was abducted into death’s lair but engendered life.

Babajide Michael Literati


***

LAMENT FROM THE GRAVE

I deserve a funeral rite

Despite the plodding angst in the abyss of your mind

A six-feet at least

Even if I heaped sorrow on your heart


I was once the harbinger of your joy

The vortex that enlivened the happiness in your home

When I sprouted

You were all glad

I know


But why was I shrouded like a minion?

Lowered by mere acquaintances?


Blame not my destiny

For ramming into me half way

For bringing an end to my story

Take heart and be sad no more


Recompense looms

For I will return

Think not of me

But you

Maybe we shall meet.

Matthew Bisi Adewuyi



‘…In our hypocritical ignorance, we tend to cry and mourn the dead but always too quick to forget them. After the physical death, they even die in our memories - multiple deaths. We should endeavour to make their memory linger…’ …Odeyemi John Law

Poetry slips into my Saying Goodbye to Vero' Series as I feature Tola Adegbite. Let’s not forget the read-and-comment ritual. It's therein that our individual condolences are expressed. Thanks.

***


SHE RESIGNS

By Tola Adegbite

Help praise this warrior

Paint her picture with victory colours

Adorn her image with the flowers of splendour

With no weapon she broke the gate of illness

Exposing it to the breeze of shame

Praise this courageous woman

She was never enslaved to sickness

But rather brace the air of freedom

Leaving this cruel world

For eternity to dwell                                                  

With faith she signs her resignation letter

Written by fate with the ink of time

Amidst the tears, amidst the sorrow

I know the truth, the truth of it

Vero' is not dead, she only resigns


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