Monday 31 October 2016

The Day My Father Cried
He had large arms, a clean shaved beard and he combed his hair for minutes every morning – that was my dad as we were growing up. Often he would capture like three of us in his hand and spunk us seriously, he would always be alert all night that when something creaked outside he would walk out with a machete. He was a strong guy, well built and industrious – age has stolen all these from my dad. Now he is tied to church – an ageing man who now needs glasses to see who is calling on his mobile phone. He now spends the best part of the day herding his cows and goats, repairing furniture, checking his flower gardens, planting trees and tending the bananas behind our kitchen.

The year is 1988. That is the first time I saw my father cry. He cried deeply, he cried like a baby with a broken toy. He cried his eyes red and blew his nose shamelessly. He walked feebly and wobbled like a bat in the dungeons. Everyone cried on that fateful day – it was actually Christmas day. My grandfather, my father’s dad had gone to be with the Lord.

I really have a hazy memory of my grandfather, I can’t even remember his tone and voice; all I can remember is his white hair – really white, silk-white. He used to tell us stories, stories I remember to date, stories I kept for my kids only to realize today they will value my phone to play games on than sit like knights on a chess board listening to me tell ogre tales that make no sense. So, I have kept these stories to myself – maybe I will tell their kids – my grandchildren. By then I will have white hair like my grandfather – I will not dye my hair when I grow old. At least the hair will attract their attention and the stories will roll out.

My grandfather had been taken ill like three days before his demise and was better and discharged only to go down again on Christmas eve and depart on Christmas day. My father had lived with my grandfather the best part of his life in Muguga where grandfather worked for a Mzungu. They had such a friendship, so strong that one looked like the shadow of the other. That day my grandfather died, my father was broken. He was desolate and powerless. The pain and grief broke his eyeballs into teary streams – it seized and dragged the man in him to distant plains where it tortured him senseless. My father stood alone, like a shell of fossil. He was sick, sullen and sunken. His world gaped in and his hope spiraled away in a thin cloud never to come back. The strongest man was the weakest on this day of December.

I was young and quiet. I knew grandfather was dead and I didn’t understand the whole thing about death and the implications thereof. Grandfather was buried and after sometime everyone got back to their daily life. We often passed by the grave and hoped the old man would come out at some point. We feared to sit on the head of the grave because we thought we would hurt his brittle bones. We didn’t know that once you go down there where there is no light; there is no return path. Grandfather has been down there since 1988, maybe his bones have now powdered in to some grey ashes and his teeth hang lonely on his skull.

Death made my father cry. 
Death made my father normal.

A few years later, I had to stand before the knife. I had been told that men don’t cry – real men. On that foggy morning, in the mist of the thickets and eerie sounds of the streams, I waited for my turn. I had no shorts on – all of us naked in a single file. I learned that the cold was to thicken and numb our flesh to stand the dread of the knife. We didn’t talk. We simply waited. It was my time. I stood there in high spirits because my day was here – I was becoming a man in the most respected way. I did what I had been told: to ‘bite’ my teeth together. I listened; I writhed and swallowed pain down my belly. The taste of pain is so bitter especially as it passes the esophagus, as it passes by the lungs, it tends to borrow some more bitterness from the bile as it finally settles in the stomach – here it torments like someone was shredding your intestines with a power saw. I braved this and didn’t cry because a man is not supposed to cry.

Well, I have been in this life for a couple of years now and life has kept giving me different scenarios. Many of them haven’t been the best prompting me to cry and others have been so nice that they equally prompted me to cry.

I had a major setback like five years ago. At this point I convinced myself that I wouldn’t break down, I wasn’t going to cry no matter what! I was rocking under the siege of rage, colors of things around me changed, flowers around me smelt foul and the air was full of sand. I remembered the day my father cried and I said to myself, who am I? I did cry.
In my tears I saw peace coming down like a golden vista rolling from without, I saw nature clearing with each drop of tears I shed – I was washing myself with my tears – tears of my eyes. My bones felt strong and washed, shiny and sturdy I could even see them through my skin. I realized that power that is hidden and lying latent in tears.


You are still a man – even if you cried. Cry boy…cry when you must cry...



Thursday 27 October 2016

  You Can Still Capture your Dreams

You have ideally struggled all your life, even your birth was a struggle. Those days, there were no proper maternity facilities, there were no day cares and parents didn’t really see the need to have a house help. So, let’s say you roamed all over the house, you ate things including soil, you cried while your little older siblings played and would occasionally carry you in very dangerous and precarious positions – a couple of times they dropped you on the floor and your mum beat them and then you were silenced by breast milk.

Well, now you have grown, you have a degree or a diploma or a certificate. They told you education is the key – you grew up and realized the rich guys changed the padlock; but you still struggle. It’s about ten years since you graduated; you have a kid, two or more. They dress, they eat and they go to school. The youngest just crawls or walks in countable steps like a zombie holding onto everything and mumbling things that it only understands. You feel proud when you look at the little things shouting and darting all over the house like sodium cast on water. Your house has turned into a factory, you can never have the couches clean enough like you used to. They play and play – then at some point they will inform you they want to go to the toilet – and you wonder why they have to inform anyway. They make your world. You help with their home work and fight with them to have a meal – as if they eat while it fills your stomach by osmosis and not theirs.

You want to go to bed early because you have an early morning. Now you don’t even need the TV set you once loved; it now watches you as your tired frame rests on the couch every evening. You hardly turn on the home theater that you almost asked your neighbors to shut their small radios to pave way for the king of sound the day you bought it. You just drag yourself to bed after struggling to brush your teeth. When in bed you enter into your thinking flight. You think about so many things. You wonder why things are not moving. You wonder why you have no plot in Ruai like every other young person in office, you wonder why you have no mortgage commitment so far, you wonder why you are still plying matatus to work, and you wonder why you can’t go home every weekend like everyone else does in office because you know the cost implication. You wonder about everything else around your life. They say money speaks; the only word you hear yours speak is, “Goodbye”. Your eyes really want to close but sleep isn’t anywhere near you, you can peer through the dark and see it dangling on the veils of your sheers, you can see it open the bedroom window and fly away like a jinni, you want to cling to its tail but sleep slips out of your arms.

The alarm goes off. At some point you think it’s your neighbor’s alarm and then it rings incessantly and you remember it’s time to get up and start another day. You do everything in a rush until the time you leave the house you are feeling hot in the cold of the morning. You are stuck in early morning traffic in a matatu full of market women going to get fresh vegetables from Marikiti. You listen to Maina and King’ang’i not because you like them but because they will still talk whether you like them or not – it’s only the driver that has the power to shut them up. You go through your phone, you ignore the hundreds of texts from the whatsapp groups people admitted you to even without your consent – you even notice a new group created overnight – you don’t even know anyone in that group. You are now through with Twitter and walk in to Facebook. You read a few things and get a video with the tag, “Must watch” and you decide to watch. It is indeed funny. It ends and you can see many more funny videos so you decide to ‘jibamba’ until you get that text: Your bundle is running low…Blah…blah…blah and this reminds you that your relationship with Safaricom is purely business. Meanwhile, the matatu is just approaching the stage you are to disembark at, you alert the conductor but it’s too late. The matatu will pull aside a couple of meters from your stage. You are pissed. You just alight and walk to the office.

This is the place you have been for the last 3, 5 or 10 years: Nothing is new here. Everything feels and sounds useless like vocables. You have applied for internal vacancies – jobs that even your toddler knows you qualify but ‘Regrets’ have known you by name. You sit on that desk and the thoughts you had last night pick up from where they stopped. You wonder where you went wrong.

You haven’t gone wrong. It is just a period you are going through. And this period is calling on you to make some decisions – decisions that will change your future. Tough decisions that will call you off from the comfort zone; open a new window for you to transform knowledge to action and place a price tag on yourself - know thyself. Where I come from they say you don’t wait to dry from where you showered.


Alenga Torosterdt.