Monday, 30 January 2017

Diary of an Abuja Commuter

My experience commuting round Abuja this past week has been hellish and difficult, yet funny. My “Baby Boy” decided to break down, leaving me with the choice of patronizing public transport. Without bragging, I can’t remember when last I spent this long days jumping from one taxi to the other. God has been so faithful that He has sustained me this long.
Well, that is not the purpose of this piece. I have to state that fact early enough before haters stop reading it as quick as they can. Or before they turn-up the control bars of the level of their hatred. Lols!

This piece is all about the many types of commuters you find in Abuja.

1.       THE TALKATIVE: This set of commuters can talk for Africa. Right from the very minute they walk up to you at the bus-stop, they start by asking stupid rhetorical questions like “Bros, how the road be nah? Motor dey bah?” Also, they can rush taxi like say nah the last flight to heaven. As they are rushing, they are also bargaining the price. And when they finally board the bus/taxi, their talking business continues to a top gear. They talk about any and everything. If they did not break one strange news that has never been heard of, they will talk about an old one with additions or subtractions. Even when their co-commuters are not responding, they shift the talk to the driver. Their case is worse if they dare sit in the front seat or by the taxi/bus’s window. They talk to every other taxi/bus or car overtaking the taxi/bus they are in. Did I hear you say “these set of commuters are annoying?” Wait till you read about the other set of commuters.

2.       THE PHONE/GADGET ADDICTS: I don’t know if I should call this set of commuters big boys and big girls or I should just call them bunch of attention seekers. Just like the last set of commuters (The TALKATIVES), these ones are ever busy with their phones and gadgets right from when standing at the bus-stop. They stand and mind their phone. Saying “Hi” or “Hello” to them is a waste of your time because their ears are already blocked with ear buds. Right inside the bus/taxi, they switch from Facebook to Whatsapp and then to Instagram before heading to twitter. They laugh out loud with reckless abandon as if they are in AY show. When they play games, they shout like someone that have placed a huge amount of money on home team to win on bet9ja but then the home team is one goal down. They make all sorts of noisy calls at the top of their voices. At the end of every call, they soliloquize and analyze it. “This babe think say I be mugu” Like we said you are! “Nawa for this man o, just because I gave him my number that’s why he is disturbing my life with phone calls” My sister, na your own hand you take give am the number o! “Hmm…I can’t do that job for #500,000, I don pass that level abeg” Mr man, you don pass job of five hundred thousand naira and you still follow us dey rush #100 taxi? Go tell that to the birds flying about in Sambisa forest. If I hear!

3.       THE DEAF AND DOMB: This set of commuters are just there. . I would have called them ghosts but that might sound ruthless on my part. When they board bus/taxi, they behave like they are in Mars. They don’t speak a word or reply any. Even when you extend the first hand of friendship through greeting, what you get in return is just a hand wave of “Hi”, “Hello” or “Hwfa”. The longest word you can hear from them is “Yes”, “No” or “Ask the driver”; depending on the type of question you throw at them.  The most annoying thing about this set of commuters is that even when everyone else is shouting “Jesus…Jesus…Jesus” at the slightest sign of a mishap, they stare blindly like they have a spare life chilling at home. I don jus gerrit!

4.       THE COMPLAINANTS: I will close this piece with this set of commuters –the complainants. They complain virtually about everything. If it is not about their family, then it is about the country. I would have combined them with The Talkatives but this set of commuters only complain, whereas the former talk about everything, including jokes. The complainants are also aggressive. Due to their unending complaints, they are cantankerous and get aggressive at the slightest provocation. God help you, you don’t step on their foot push them a little during the rush for space in any taxi/bus that comes around. Inside the bus/taxi, they never ever have enough space for themselves. They always demand the nearest person to them to “adjust” for space for them. They’ll narrate to you how they have been hustling for bus/taxi since after fuel subsidy removal if you pay attention to them. “This country don tire persin” is their anthem. The funny thing about this set of commuters is this: Despite their complaints of how tired they are with life and the country, they are the first to shout “Jesus…Jesus…Jesus” for little things like the car driving through a pothole.  The next thing you hear from them is a stern warning to the driver to drive carefully. Life don tire you, yet you no wan die. . . isoorait!

My word of encouragement to commuter reading this piece is this; as you hustle to have your own car, please accommodate everyone that you meet in a taxi/bus because people are just different in their ways.

Live and let live!
-centokoh

Thursday, 26 January 2017

Nigeria Literary Icon, Buchi Emecheta Passes On

Nigerian literary icon, Buchi Emecheta is dead. The novelist who hailed from Ibusa, Delta State, died at the age of 72. She was one of Nigeria's veteran writers and has authored more than 20 books.

Some of her foremost works include 'The Joys of Motherhood', 'Second-Class Citizen', 'The Bride Price', amongst others.

Buchi Emecheta received many literary awards during her lifetime. 
Her themes of child slavery, motherhood, female independence and freedom through education won her considerable critical acclaim and honours, including an Order of the British Empire in 2005. Emecheta once described her stories as "stories of the world…[where]… women face the universal problems of poverty and oppression, and the longer they stay, no matter where they have come from originally, the more the problems become identical." She has been characterised as "the first successful black woman novelist living in Britain after 1948" -Wikipedia

Wednesday, 25 January 2017

Women Are Polygamous In Nature -FB User

A Nigerian Facebook user named Nkechi Bianze took to her Facebook page with the same name to announce that women are polygamous in nature especially Nigerian women.

In the post which has generated tons of comments on blogs, she claimed 62% of women are "unfaithful".

Read her post in the photo below.


What no one knows is the intent behind the post; if it is for the women or against the women.
however, she has aired her mind.