IN THE BEGINNING
There was a boy, one who learnt the synonym of anger is pain.
He tells the story of a gaunt man whose modesty is buried in the scars of a hidden trail,
A lost footpath in the land of booze while his teachings are inflicted
On that boy That once called him father.
This boy watched as that man fed his mother vodka of torment.
A swing down her throat reverberated in her spine,
Her happily ever after confined in the pores of her blood
While that boy learnt to live under the shadows of his mother’s suffering,
He is nuzzled with a chant, “the closest to the one who sins is guilty”.
His bedtime is showtime for a distraught man,
Listen, boy, listen to her cries, listen to his beer speaking.
Listen when that bottle shatters on her body, pounding her head, her stomach.
Watch! His hangover is her makeover. Watch! Learn! Look! See!
Here is a boy accustomed to a childhood of aphorism meant to simmer a notion,
A false explanation to an act of cowardice, pain a remedy for pain.
He is a ball of emotions ready to erupt, perhaps he will one day,
Hopefully, when he is not drowning in a pool made from his father's blood
Because he swears, it is heartbreaking flying with clipped wings,
One day. One day, but today, let him bask in the blood of his coward mother,
With the notion, "the closest to the one who sins is guilty".
FORGIVE ME (FATHER) LORD FOR I HAVE SINNED
Writing had been my only friend, for it is the only parent I know.
It held my words and embraced my feelings
When I watched time steal mama,
A strand of hair soothing warmth to her comb till it finally took her tomorrow.
It buried me in its fortress when Father Bernard realized my potentials as a child,
A profane tool for comfort, an appraisal to the god he served, he said.
As he desecrated my body, burned incense, a thanksgiving to my spirit.
Oh, forgive me, for a night came when I watched his blood sprawled
On the ground like eagles ready to soar, a reminder of our fickleness as humans.
His Bible, which he held to his chest, now rested on his blood,
Floating gently, obeying the Archimedes principle.
Forgive me, for I watched a man who buried my voice underneath his palms
Like seedlings as he watched them germinate into rage, then wither like a plant.
His eyes bore an innocence his vestments protected,
An exaggerated lie to hide the conscience of a depraved man
Who crushed my childhood, ruined my existence,
As he eloped with my hope of living.
Forgive me as I embrace the thurible incensed with his earthly scent,
For I wish to live, long to breathe and yearn to survive.
Forgive me.
In the first days after Funmi ended things, you simply refused to believe that it was nothing more than another fight...
Read moreYour waist beads glimmer under the faint light illuminating your room from the bulb on your ceiling. You like...
Read moreIt's been almost a decade since your dad died, but you remember it as if it were yesterday. He was wearing his navy...
Read moreDeath has its underbelly, the subtle finality, gone to be no more. Die and end our miseries. I mentally wave off the
Read moreThe men who put numbers to the crates bite their beer-soaked lips and shake their drunk, little heads at...
Read moreI flip through the pages of my mind nondisruptively — a boy in a manger, star in the sky, preacher on the...
Read moreA woman's wedding day is her happiest day, right? Well, it's not like that for Bolu. Her wedding day was...
Read moreThree times he had tried–picked up the pen, put it down, almost written a word. The other students...
Read moreIt’s like clockwork: our love. You wake up each day and sit at your desk. I wake up too and watch you do your thing...
Read moreYou have come to associate full moons with bad luck. It was on a night with a full moon that you pushed out your child, still...
Read moreMy father's father made love to the earth. He worshipped it, bent towards its rising sunafter rising run and fed it sweat that...
Read moreI don't talk to strangers. What I mean is, I don't have unnecessary conversations with service people. If I have an appointment with a...
Read more