Okong' Okuna Profile picture
Nov 5, 2020 10 tweets 2 min read Read on X
I was tired - tired of my helplessness. I was tired of the fact that every time I tried, I would end up in the same place I'd started. And each time, a little worse than the former. My life was a constant struggle between hope and despair, never happiness.
The city was not motherly. I hated evenings the most. I had not the warmth of a woman, had no job: I had not even a radio to distract me from my wretchedness. It was exhausting that I had to sleep with myself through the night, into another similar night.
I longed for activity. Because even the most mistreated of workers have uncertainties to look forward to. I had nothing. I knew what the next day would look like. And the next, and the next after that. And each was just as miserable as the former. I thought I would die.
I secured some menial jobs to keep me going, but I was ever so tired at the end of the day. To alleviate my anxiety, I conceived a game that I would play on my way back home. In the game, I imagined all the ways I could escape from myself. I never won once.
I had considered begging online but my pride was too pronounced. I did not appreciate friendships. I figured I was too poor to deserve one. I had been to church once or twice, but it had felt so foreign. They said God was present, but he felt so far. In the end, I stopped going.
If people had been unkind, I would not have been as bothered. It would mean they saw me: that I mattered. It hurt me that they ignored me: that they did not see me like they saw the important people. That I could die without ever arousing interest beyond empty sympathy.
I'd stopped sending in job applications. I'd had it with hope. In the afternoons, buckling under the weight of a cement bag, I prayed for luck. It never came. One day, I called my mother. I told her I cared for her; I was sorry I had not been the best of sons.
I bought a rope on my way home. I cooked calmly and took care not to look in the mirror. I then set about tying the knots that the rope might hold firm when I kicking. I was afraid. Of life beyond light. But I was more afraid that if I postponed it, I would hope again.
It is a miracle that I lived through that dark night. I dozed off tying the knots. When I awoke, I only had a few minutes to get to my work station. Somehow, I ended up postponing the exit every day. Until one day, the phone rang, and they said, "Hello Mr. Michael, you are hired"
Such is man's journey. He dangles ever so precariously near death that if he lost a single step, he'd drown in its arms. Such is our fate the children of a lesser God. We are condemned to shuttle between anxiety and exhaustion for if we hoped, we'd suffer even more despair.

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More from @XivTroy

Apr 18
Growing up, it was always the odd couple with the longest, best relationship. He'd look like a man from WWII: laconic, lanky, awkward. She, on the other hand, would be utterly vivacious, short in stature. You'd never hear anything of their romance, except see them together.
On Sundays, you'd see them heading to the market: him with long strides; her with tiny, quick ones... telling a tale. And he would smile once in a while to acknowledge her, but otherwise look distracted. Focused on some clandestine pursuit. Ever in a world of his own. Square peg
And everybody would wonder, how they existed together being so different. Him so withdrawn, her the life of the party - it was impossible. So we concluded that he was sat on. She had something on him. Yet every evening, like a ritual, you'd see him rushing home to her with bread.
Read 6 tweets
Apr 10
There is a perfectly logical explanation for why Africans generally do not keep time as "diligently" as their foreign peers. It is rooted in historical African traditions, & continues to influence our interactions today.

Lateness is not necessarily a mark of baseness.
#1

In western society, time is a commodity that must be exploited or traded. Conversely, in traditional African society, time is not a pre-existing endowment to be traded. It needed to be produced. Or made.

So, Africans defined time on the basis of events, not numerical values
#2

E.g. Luo people didn't say, I'll meet you at 7 am. Instead, they said, I'll see you when the sun rises ("ka chien'g oyaore") - & that could be anytime between 5 - 10 am.

Similarly, for the Ankole of Uganda, cows are revered. So time was subject to events affecting cattle.
Read 13 tweets
Mar 30
Last time I was away, I met up with a friend I hadn't seen in quite a long time. In her 30s, quite successful, single. So later on I offered to link her up with a few buddies. But I said, they may not be as successful yet. She said, "I want an earning man. Not a moneyed man".
Which was interesting, because I had never had it phrased that way. So I said, "what is the difference?" She said an earning man knows the value of commitment because he is committed to something. He is not idle. He is productive & there is a tangible, scalable result.
I said okay, but the moneyed man could be committed too? But she said, not necessarily. She said some people are born into money. Others sell drugs for money. Others kill. That's centering money, she said. I want someone who centers earning. They understand commitment...
Read 11 tweets
Mar 26
1. Men are just getting brutally logical about relationships. There are no incentives in marriage beyond the romance attached to it. You can get a kid outside of marriage. Can get sex outside. Can get companionship outside it, why marry & risk losing your autonomy & money?
2. Men did not "waste time". This simple inference ignores the critical socioeconomics of relationships. It takes comparatively longer for men to establish themselves. Especially in my continent, where the few boomer men in power are governed by their loins.
3. Most young men just don't get as many opportunities to advance earlier on. & Career female peers do not give grace. Even the 20s/30s jobless will consider a jobless male peer a loser. Joblessness/an average salary is an accident on her part, but lack of initiative on yours.
Read 11 tweets
Mar 6
I remember one time, I was on a school break. Long holidays. Campus. I had decided not to go home, took up with a friend. I remember telling her I needed to make money, & she protesting profusely that she had not seen me in ages. It was not fair. I was 23 & she was 21...
4 weeks went by in silence. Then she called. It was a Tuesday, I think. Said, "I want to see you". I thought, this woman is crazy. She is like a 1,000 miles away in the village, she knows I cannot see her. Then she said, "I am in Nairobi. I need to see you!"
I said, you are playing. But she had this name she called me when she was serious. "Can I see you tomorrow, T.?" I said, but how? Turns out she had looked for - and secured - a job in Nairobi. Teller, Powerstar Supermarket in Zimmerman. Said, next day was her off. She must see me
Read 11 tweets
Feb 15
I learned to enjoy my free time from a friend who suffered divorce only 2 years into marriage . Never re-married. Met him in a gallery. I asked, do you not get lonely? He said, I do alone everything I would be doing with a woman. Women only complement. They do not complete.
It is the same thing my buddy A. told me when he landed in Kenya. I had been taken aback slightly. 50s. No kids. Relatively wealthy. I said, man why no family? He said, he got too caught up enjoying life to notice the absence of the womanly touch.
I said, is that not selfish? Conceited? He said, selfish is using other people as a bridge to one's fulfillment. He found his in traveling. People say, wait till my woman gets here, we would be in a cottage somewhere watching the sunset. He said, what if you did not have to wait?
Read 6 tweets

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