I

THE ABILITY TO FLY

Where did I hear this? Or did I come up with it myself? That the children of a successful [or famous] man are usually unsuccessful. And I added the reason behind it being that they no longer have a cause to fight for.

A lack of scarcity leads to a scarcity of effort. A scarcity of effort, leads to poverty. Poverty leads to hard work and so the cycle continues. I saw a picture on the internet comparing the generation of people that went to war and their offspring today, too heavy to leave their seats due to obesity. It may have led me thinking about that, about what happens to the children of men who conquer the world, of men who change the world, of men who lead the world.

Is it true that there ever is a time or season when there is nothing to fight for?

For a long time now, I have been sitting in a season, where I suspect that some bees in my hive decided that it only makes sense that one can only shine domestically or professionally but never both. It disrupts the flow of the Universe and that apart from their regular duties, it is their job, within normal work hours, to maintain the status quo, by becoming a cause of disruption themselves.

I have been pushing back long before I even knew what I was pushing back on. How did I miss the portrait of concern when I could not come for weeks? Lately though, I feel the simmering jubilation, the slip-up of joys in what are supposed to be heartfelt observations.

It was in their express verification that I was out of the way in everything meaningful that was within their power. Power. Power. Power! It was the consistency with which someone could lead the band and play the drums disparaging your name with a wide helpful smile and a kind mouth, all the while, busy in the work of frustrating all progress tied to you. Many a Christian mannerism has deceived an unsuspecting heart. Yet, it is hard to hide a mastermind- a vortex of uninhibited slyness, darkness, bad expectations and an endless dredge of hand over mouth slander suppressed as girlish giggles, sucking in everything good in its path; a hand that is quick to blow up the ship, with everyone on it, if it makes their enemies look incompetent.

How someone truly feels about you is not usually a word of mouth expose. You can see it in their best friend, the people under their docket. You sometimes see it in their biggest moments. Sometimes you see it in their lowest moments. Some people say you can see it in how they treat you when they think they need you. Some people say you can see it in how they treat you when they think they don’t need you.

So, there is something to fight for…

When I was younger, I wished I could disappear, blend into the wall or curtains to escape danger. Later, I found that I could fly, in my dreams. I could fly over fences. I could float above the earth, low enough to keep a good watching distance but not high enough to hurt myself if I fell.

Not so long ago, I was reading Luvvie Ajayi’s The Fear Fighter Manual and she said that if she had one, her super power would be being “super-independent” and I shook my head immediately and just as I was about to think how different we were, it occurred to me that right now, I would not mind having that super power. In fact I no longer wished to shrink behind curtains and I no longer dream about flying but I could do with being superwoman. Maybe, I already try to be.

Between little fingers tugging at my clothes, sometimes for nights on end, seemingly months on end, years on end, sometimes with coughing, sometimes with noses blocked with flu, sometimes with a temperature that does not need a thermometer to tell, and driving to the place where the planes park on a pale grey evening to send my closest companion away for an endless amount of nights unknown, I have learned to do without feeling too much.

I have decided to feel again. Between when I started to write this and today, I have decided to feel again; and it hurts. But, I also feel a lot of the joy, a lot of gratefulness, a lot of the curiosity of recent entrants on to this spinning globe and I catch a lot of funny things- funny sentences, funny words and strange interpretations of things. Some nights I wake up between [brief, abrupt, short, unusually long] stretches of sleep, and find my older baby having a conversation with me as he stands next to our bed. Sometimes, he steals his little brother out of his crib, if he feels he has stayed in a second too long and then I hear the pattering of little footsteps stumbling around coming to find me.

***

I think all Bakiga should have ‘Mukiga’ as their last name since so many already love to hyphenate their identity with the word. The pretty Mukiga, Pink Mukiga, The Handsome Mukiga, The Romantic Mukiga, The Mukiga w’ekiniga, Shine Omukiga.

I have noticed that Ugandans feel free to enter into an official situation with shoes on, sometimes even with socks, and then take them off nonchalantly, politely, neatly, confidently, and set them to the side as soon as they sit down- at a church prayer meeting, at an IELTS exam, at a moot court session.

Whereas in English, one is only allowed to have one name, one complete static borrowed name, as in “My name is…”, it is appropriate when Africans to say ‘my names are’ because a child was named their own name, many names sometimes, and they all were independent names, gifted by different people sometimes, heralding different things, and easily changeable- rebelliously at youth or symbolically in war,, different when inside the homestead and different if you found yourself a foreigner far away from home.

I talked about Winnie Mandela sometime. I still believe in a drought of kisses, one becomes either a victim or a warrior, I would like to be a warrior. There is always a cause to fight for.

Kitt Kiarie and her mother were talking about life in general and on the topic of her mother’s over thirty year relationship [marriage] with her father, her mother said that, you need to make room for who he changes into over the years. He does not remain the same exact man and neither do you remain exactly the same woman.

I · LIFE · Story

THE MOUNTAIN

I was seated on our bed in the hotel room which you had decided to book even though we had gone through different options and I had chosen another place. We had been walking through the shops all day, stopping only to eat. I knew you would be leaving for a long time and so everything you did seemed like repentance. I sometimes wished that things could replace you, but all I really wanted was you.

You had wanted to show me how patient you could be and I had wanted to show you how considerate I am and how responsible I am with money, so you stood outside waiting for long while I walked around in circles and if you showed me two things, sometimes I chose just one and other times I chose neither.

Now I was inspecting, picking up and putting down items one by one. I picked up the ring box casually and as carefree as I could. I had planned to say something funny, something that would not show any partiality to love, rings or feelings. I started, but, suddenly you were on one knee. You took the box from my hand, opened it and held it out. I laughed, but your face was serious and cut my nervous laugh short.

My name_ I love you. I always have. Always will. Will you be my wife again? Through loneliness, you laughed shakily. I grimaced and held my breath. I don’t quite remember what else came after that. I just wanted to remember what you knew, what you said, what you asked. “… and when you see it shining,  let it remind you of my love for you.”  I said yes; again, a little too quickly, again, in my own opinion.

I have remembered why I followed you. When we met I was looking for stability and you seemed to know the way. I allowed myself to be someone like you. You were unbound, crazy, mysterious, free and you were a mountain physically but also as a force. We secretly called you that, my high school friends and I. Yet, the same mystery and freedom scares me now and this past year and half, your mischievous eyes that can’t see, your lopsided tongue in cheek smile, and the school boy I met 15 years ago disappeared.  The torrents that beat you down, the future with all its uncertainty before you, replaced you and I missed you, constantly.

You’ve been restless. You’ve been sad. You’ve been angry.

The tips of your fingers are warm when they touch mine as though they were a matching set of prints. My heart rests when it is next to yours. I hold onto you on the plane to anchor my fluttering heart. That time, when the waves almost swallowed us, I asked you one thing. “Don’t let go of my hand. If our boat capsizes and we find ourselves in the lake, don’t let go of me.” Next to you, I feel like I have lived. I have loved. I have nothing left to fear. Without you, I feel like, I have given too much. I want it all back.

The day after I put on my new ring we went back walking and I suggested that I wanted to ice skate. You kept whispering and grumbling about how I could  break my leg but I insisted, so you kept whispering, “It’s your choice. You know how difficult it is to walk around an airport in a cast? But it’s your choice.” “You know how expensive it is to go to the hospital in a foreign country? But it’s your choice.”  I responded with, “I told you not to go back mountain climbing without a doctor’s check up and you still did it anyway.” “That was different”, you said, sensing defeat. I looked at you firmly and said,

“I want to do it anyway.” 

“Okay, it’s up to you.”

“Yes, it’s up to me.”

I had never skated a day in my life. As soon as the thin curved hook of metal touched the slippery surface of the ice, I knew I was in for it. I still had to show you that you had underestimated my strength and resilience though. I had also realised that it was not only you I was trying to convince, I was trying to prove to myself that I could handle myself hereafter.

The ice was wet-glass slippery and the audience surrounding the ice rink had a constricting racial element to it. In as far as the pyramid of the eco system goes, our race was at the bottom, so the middle superiors watched with anticipation. The man at the entrance had asked me twice if I knew that they had a disclaimer for any injuries, but there had been another one of us in the shoe dressing area who like us, is described solely by colour as if it is a paint palette, ranging from light to dark with connotations construing actual lightness for good and darkness for bad. He seemed happy and enthusiastic to help me, almost even confident about me. I held on to that little vote of confidence. I put the diastasis from carrying our children aside and pulled myself together, literally; holding my core muscles together for longer than I have in a while or ever. More complicated was that I was also wearing a semi-cropped top which I had worn with you in mind, so I gripped the plastic dolphin and learnt how to push myself forward and sweep the ice in an outward v shaped motion, mimicking the foot movements of  fearless young children who were whizzing past me and the experienced ice dancers near me, spinning and waltzing with grace- all while maintaining my posture and sticking to my stance.

About marriage- You want to bamba? You wanna chill with the big boys? (Ameno Amapiano)

Do you remember how when we got engaged, you told me that love was like the mountain we were on. You said that sometimes we would be up at the top and sometimes, we would be in what you always referred to, with amusement, as the valley of the shadow of love?