Story

Roaming

You know, one of the hardest things about you going away, was that for you, it seemed easy. For me, a part of me was being ripped away.

It was you. It was the world we had built. It was the circles of people within whom we lived, built upon you as the corner stone. It was the way your son looked forward to seeing you every night when you came home. Did you know that you are his superstar?

The lockdown was hard on many. That was well documented, spoken of constantly; but for me, I breathed easier each day that the Human Resource didn’t manage to take you away. I awoke and you were there. I spoke and you were there. I walked to the next room and there you were. I was not keen on the gates reopening. Any talk about you being locked far away for months without knowing when it would all end made my heart fall that I dared not even add to the conversation.

So in peace and contentment, I cooked and baked, maybe every day; and we sat down to watch MasterChef every evening. It was the year before our first born turned two. We watched him grow up, I, you, together, for the first time. I knew that a time like this would never come again.

You were home. You were mine. You were ours.

I never had big dreams before I met you. All I had was people I loved. You became one of them, and for a long time, you were suddenly everything; all consuming, all powerful.

Big goals, big dreams. I learned that from you. I did not know that someone could curate their own world. I had thought that we only took what was given and that was the end of it.

It seems as if I have spent a lot of time looking for someone to tell me who to be, to tell me who I am. To the person who walks to the stranger asking, Do you have any idea who I am? And they truly need an answer.

I felt like you left me to the wind, to deal with me as it pleased, accessible to the wolves of the night. You know nobody wants a lone, reactive, free-roaming particle [an unpaired electron] around their tired, quintessentially upset, breadwinner; nobody, except the solitary wave, on its path into the sea shore.

Now I wonder, if I am becoming who I was supposed to be. Do you remember when I prompted you to ask me what I wanted out of this bubble we surfaced in together? I have always said the same thing. It turns out that it has not changed. But maybe, it was a path I was always meant to discover myself.

I can’t believe Milton became more like Lydia and Lydia became more like Milton. The Carl Jung quote is true, “The meeting of two personalities is like the contact of two chemical substances: if there is any reaction, both are transformed.” Milton became more emotionally expressive and Lydia, less easily triggered. In him, she seems to have found the security of being claimed and seen as a standalone piece. Uche had definitely not given her that distinct singularity of person. To him, she seemed to have been one among many. Uche had his own journey of [self]love to make. Oh what it means to be special, to be made special to one! [Most of season 5 Love is Blind is laced with unnecessary swearing, boastfully spoken with the pride of a teenager who wants to fit in with the crowd. I had not really understood what it means to be assaulted auditorily on a daily basis. I make it a point to avoid contemporary American rap.]

*

Sometimes we look for validation in broken places, unmended scars, hurting people.

The bum of a [B]Ugandan woman is like an asset you can deposit in a bank and get money. The slow confident way its holder crosses the road, is like one who has assurance that they cannot, by any means, be knocked down.

*

I wish Ugandans would stop saying ‘dey-ta’ and ‘ra-w-t’ to mean data and route. How many times will we be colonised?

Story · Zenji

The Big Question

Where did the men go?

Not a Sunday goes by without the pastor of the controversial church I attend assuring the 30 year old age range women in the crowd that there is still hope for them to get married. [The controversial nature of the church is mainly based on the Princely can-do-no-wrong nature of the status bestowed upon the leader. This superhuman nature which is sometimes highlighted but also sometimes turned down by the pastor himself, I choose to obliviate from my observations since the more conservative church I used to solely belong to was too scaled down to help me when I faced matters which were beyond the natural laws of normalcy. If you have ever been caught in the supernatural, the soothing undisturbed rhythm of Sunday church as usual may cease to be enough for you. Just twenty years years back, this now somewhat conservative church was so radical that it was branded a new religion all together and I know for certain that one could be disowned for attempting to be wed in it.]

Anyway, Where Did The Men Go?

Why are women hunting husbands like they are the last Dodo bird?

I have written before about why I think that the nature of Apartheid South Africa and Racist [Slavery and Jim Crow]America have created the same type of men, enraged, violent, invisible, un-husbandable fathers with very low goals as far as employment and education are concerned. Meanwhile, the women, unloved involuntary century old holders of the community’s collective psychological trauma become single mothers, superwomen, can-do-it-all, a PhD is the limit high achievers.

The question should no longer be, why are women not getting married, the question should make an inquest into why marriage is not attractive to men anymore. Is it because of what these young children saw or maybe never got a chance to see when growing up? A stable home. A father and mother present as caregivers and providers living within the same household respectfully. How can they possibly recreate what they do not know?

As usual, women trying to fill in those gaps as hormonally and emotionally gifted nurturers, to recreate the mummy and daddy dynamic by sourcing for husbands everywhere they can find them, even if it is in another woman’s household. For some boys, their mummy-daddy game only replicated abuse, for some women, the mummy daddy game is only transactional- the bizarre ‘dzaddy’ peculiarity- a house and car arrangement in exchange for sexual intimacy to the highest bidder.

I wonder if the working culture is partly to blame. A way of life that allows men and women to spend long periods of time apart [first, no more lunch at home to no more weekends at home] naturally leading to a deficit of love, care and attention that is promptly satisfied by the new [or as old as the time when women entered the workplace as secretaries] phenomenon of work-wives and now, work-husbands. It is now becoming normal for husbands to leave for years, to far away locations, away from their primary wives and children. Our national leader himself stressed that he was away for six years fighting for our liberation from corrupt regimes and his own daughter thought he was some strange black fellow when he arrived at their doorstep having last witnessed her as an 8 month old.

Is this something to be celebrated? A Mandela moment perhaps? What happened to Mandela’s girls? For a country he sacrificed so much for, it seems his family paid the ultimate sacrifice for his absence. A hero to all and a hole where love and support should have been.

Should men not fight? Should they not become martyrs?

It seems as if to many men, you can either be great or you can have a stable family. Maybe the adage is true, you can’t have it all or maybe as Oprah said, you can have it all, but not at the same time. So for many men seeking greatness, Love is stupidity, Multiple trysts a norm and The all bearing, aging woman of virtue at home, bringing up the boys who will never see the need for a marriage, the standard.

I know, the change, I have seen it. Most men with dreams change when that first bundle of joy is placed in their shaky hands. The alarm bells go off. They suddenly remember the dreams the dreams they once had as boys, the ones they never achieved, the ones they had postponed, the ones they will have to fulfill for this their new responsibility.

Before I was pregnant, I knew that like most women, after giving birth I would forever after, always come second after my child. It is an idea that I contemplated, leaving space to remember who I was, before. It turned out to be true, but mostly from the people around me, that somehow my identity and dreams, if any [I can’t remember them] should be hidden under heaps and heaps of environmentally unfriendly diapers. Some women wake up to an empty nest at 60, lamenting about what they could have achieved. Though, the paradox is that, the very lamentation is a blessing some women do not even get to make.

So where is the balance?

I saw in one of the endless Korean vlogs I spend my money [data] watching, that South Korean men can claim up to a year in paid paternity leave at least three years after their child is born. Of course, that may be too much to ask in a country which can happily drown itself in plastic, fumes and muddy water when the rain falls because we despise the very regulations that could keep our population alive and effectively working for many years and also too much to ask since the number of children a Ugandan man pro-creates is a taboo topic.

Among the many things the lockdown taught us was that, people were waking up to spouses they had last seen clearly on the wedding day. Newspapers reported serious dysfunction. Parents couldn’t stand their children, some wanted their daughters [and now sons] back to school because they needed protection from drunk uncles and houseboys. Spouses could not wait for offices to open because that is where their hearts lay.

It is said that the family is the smallest unit of a community and that a group of communities makes a nation.

Is busyness and an unavailability a sign of productivity? We should have the German train system in East Africa by now.

For every Anselm, there is a gap which could have only been filled by the superstar of every child’s life.

When you are operating in a crowd, you see people as a crowd. It is easy to hurl insults at them, demean them. But when you meet the individual of the different tribe or group you disparage, you are face to face to with a person just as human as you are. That is why you can’t go to war without making a monster out of the people you are fighting. Most people, as individuals are complex intriguing characters, unless of course they are so absorbed in their identity as a group and have nothing to offer in personality.

I appreciate how the ATM sound for withdrawals does not change regardless of the amount withdrawn.

It is strange to see everyone grow old around me.

“Mummy, I saw God crying.”

“Where did you see God? People have been looking for him.”

“When we were going to the airport [school trip], I saw God crying.”

“Why was God crying?”

“Because He doesn’t have friends.”