Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Calling a Spade a spade


What I want to write today is an article I will love you to pirate. I’ll like you to dub it, and put it on your blog post. Modify it if you like, give me credit if you want, or give me none at all. They say we’ll achieve a lot more if we don’t care who gets the credit.

I have refrained deliberately for a long time to make any comments about our National Rebranding exercise. I hope I will be able to say what boils in my throat and wrists tonight, without making too much reference to it. For all it’s worth though, I think the fundamental error I can see, is that Nigerians have not been made to own it, and hence rather than having people championing it, and helping others buy in, what we have is criticism and condemnation by the same people who would have been it’s champions.


Having said that however, I have a proposition of an exercise that we can own as Nigerians. It’s a simple idea and it came as a fallout of a discussion that ensued in my office yesterday. It’s an answer of what we can do to focus our leaders on the problems that we have as citizens and to assist them in giving it the attention it deserves. We no longer need any assitance from any source to know that our most crucial problem in Nigeria is Leadership! If we are all on the same page in this realization, then our efforts towards a better Nigeria must be channeled to support, focus and direct our leaders.


I remember shortly before the elections last year I wrote an article I titled, “Power is all we need!” I pleaded with our would be leaders not to promise us roads or education, but to promise us just one thing - Power! That if in any leaders 4yrs we can celebrate 1yr of uniterupted power supply, then we should imortalize that president. Haven been to Egypt now to watch tombs, I say we must do the same, but before they die however.


First for the nation, then the states, then our local governments. Once we have a new president for example, we should as a nation analyze our most significant problem that we want solved in his or her tenure. After we have agreed on this problem, we should then go ahead and give that problem the same name with our president. We should substitute the name of our leader with this problem in our conversations, in our articles in newspapers, in our slang’s, in our music and drama. We should do this per state and per local government as well.


Let’s say for example that we have discovered that our biggest problem in Nigeria is Electricity, and for example that our president’s name for the tenure was Yaradua. Then everytime light goes, every time we are in darkeness, everytime we have any issues, our conversations should be like this.


When it is bad as it is - “Chai, Yaradua has gone again”, “Ah, we have not had Yaradua for the last 2 days”, “This Yaradua is so unstable”, “Ah what did we do today oh, we have half Yaradua today”,” What’s wrong with you, you are complaining that you haven’t seen Yaradua for 3 days, what about people that haven’t seen Yaradua for one year! or ever!”, “I wasn’t able to do it overnight, because Yaradua kept fainting”, “We have been using Yaradua as backup to our Generator”, “Iron your shirts, Yaradua may soon go oh”, ”

When this start becoming good - ” Up Yaradua!”, “Yaradua is really trying oh, we are not where we want to be, but we are far from where we were”, “Yaradua has been consistent for the past 24hrs”, “Ah, we need to celebrate 1yr of uninterrupted Yaradua”, “Yaradua is so much better these days”, “With Yaradua so constant, Nigeria is really becoming the most desirable nation to live in on earth”. “Yaradua is constant in all the states of Nigeria and the structures are in place to get Yaradua into all the local governments.”


Can you for your own new ones?
If we keep speaking this way, our leaders will know that we mean business with our desire for solutions. The next president will also know that one critical unsolved problem will bear his name until it’s solved. I recommend, that whichever president fixes electric power be given the opportunity to forever bear the same name with electricity in Nigeria and be forever immortalized in the lips and minds of Nigerians. The same for every future identified problem. A similar approach should be taken to the state levels. Whatever problem we align and identify must be instantly changed to the name of the Governor. If the issue in Lagos for example was Transportation and assuming the Governor was Fashola, then by now, people should be saying “Fashola is getting better in Lagos now”, or ” I entered one wrong fashola and they collected my phone and laptop.” or “Big Fashola (BRT) is actually making life easy for Lagosians”. We can identify the states one by one and identify the problems that need to be solved and replaced with their name.



My people say that whatever hurts one, must be primary in one’s conversation -
“Oun to ba duni lo n po loro eni”


If you use this on your blog, just put a litte comment here saying you are using it so I can follow on to your site and register my solidarity. I think this is something that we the people can own and gradually take things to the way things should be. We deserve more than what we are getting, and UNTIL we the people are clear about what we want and about our commitment to make sure it happen, then nothing happens. Let’s make this happen!
Now I really need to sleep before Yarauda’ goes!


Thursday, March 12, 2009

Thank You

Thank you,

To all who heard and cared
To all who celebrated it with a rueful smile
To all who quivered with fear, love and care
And those who smiled that I lost my smile
I wanna say a BIG Thank You

To all who stood by me through the pains
Physically and in their hearts of hearts
To all who flinched at sound of it
Praying and hoping that I will smile again
All I wanna say is Thank You

To friends who gave their all
And still felt it was not enough
And that fair maiden I say Thank You
For foes who smiled or cried
Not knowing t’was because they cared
To all I say Thank You

It is with a grateful heart I reach out to all
Whether you care or not, I don’t care
But all I want you to know is that
I have never felt loved like this before
From friends and foe alike

Tell Owoso that I am still alive
And our dear NACOSS
That I’m still a pain in their ass
Tell Adedayo Adeosun
That I’m saying a Big Thank You
With a capital “BIG”

And if you find your name on this list
Or somewhere in within it
You should smile and if not on it smile again
Cos’ it mean you are a part of me
But if it’s twice or more it means you are a thief
Cos’ you’ve stolen my heart away…….

To Sola Runsewe --- A Big Thank You
And Runsewe Olusola --- A Bigger Thank you
Adegunle Samson ---You are a thief
And Sammylee --- Thanks a Quadrillion Times

Adedayo Adeyomoye --- Sometimes you make me wonder
Ali-Belo and Belo Ali --- Thank you but this spot is still for Sola
Bricklayer Buki --- You are a pretty bad fwend
Opeyemi Dozen-J --- I know you dig my smile

BOY girl --- Thanks for going the whole mile
Chamé --- Thanks for being an extra-miler
Debbie and Deborah --- It’s all about welfarism
Luchi Mama --- Daalu a million timez

Anderline of God --- I know you care, thank you so much
Biodun Girl --- What kinda daughter are you?
Abbey Banj --- Thank you Thank you
Big Paulie --- I appreciate you more than u can imagine
Shogie Wale --- Thanks a Bunchs

Moye & Moye’s --- I know you care, you be thief
Sammy of God --- What will I do without you?
Alhaja mi Owon --- You bring the best outta me
Shynin star --- I love you too
Ay Lajibutu & Timi --- You make me head spin
Either your name is here or not --- There is not living without you!

He Saved Me

It was 10th of March 2009, I left home not so early in the morning heading for Yaba, knowing I have missed the first lectures already, but hoping to catch up on the next... but I never did... I thank God I’m still here with everyone.

The bus I was in, got me to Fadeyi, few meters away from the point I was suppose to alight at Jibowu, then the break failed, a bus was right ahead of us, parked in the middle of the service lane, passengers alighting from it, and we rammed into it… I was at peace, I didn’t panic, I was just thankful… cos I felt it, He was right there with me and He saved me.

No life was lost, I came out with a few scratch, and some teeth broken but HE’s fixed that already…thought I was gonna loose my cutie smile, but He gave me hope and gave it back to me all in good, better shapes. Although I’ve got them braces on right now, I should be yanking them off soon...

Watch Out for the Whole New smile
It’s gonna be off the hook

Saturday, February 21, 2009

A hand to hold














I have walked through each day

without footsteps to match mine

and thoughts to match and challenge mine

atleast, that's true for me

but i hope fate will wave it wands

and turn the tides


two minds meeting

two hands touching

two hearts joining

to make it all complete