Wednesday 9 September 2020

Heaps of Me!

There are a thousand heaps of me 

Neatly stacked, one on top of the other 

And the weight? - o, its hard not to bother 

Each day the world is too much of me 


There are a thousand layers making me 

To know me, you need to unfold all 

But what you will achieve will be dismal

Each layer is so thick, you will see 


There are a thousand dreams within me 

Each yearning to be lived at the same time 

They all ring like a thousand bells that chyme 

Each waking second feels like a stormy sea 


What's there to live when I am mere heap?

Of bones and flesh stacked together 

Of grating dreams that are a great bother 

Making it so hard to have a moment of sleep


Tuesday 8 September 2020

When The Rain Stops

When the rains stops raining 

And you finally feel the sun shining 

Enjoy the the scene 

Toss everything into the bin 

All the extra baggage 

And let you skin bask in the sun's glory 



Dawn!

 Whatever the case, 

Dawn all announce its arrival, 

Never too late, and never early 

Yet its punctuality shall not be welcome, 

At least not today, 

For there are many things that need hidden 

Under the blanket of darkness 

But, dawn - the ever insolent dawn, 

Shall walk in without an iota of shame 

Stacking itself among many unwanted dawns 

As if it shall stand out - it thinks it is the only dawn 

That was thought of yesterday as tomorrow 

It is in for a rude shock 

It will cry in the toilet of history, 

Broken hearted, because it was rejected before it arrived 

Like an aborted fetus 

Dumped, and never to fulfill its dreams 

It had no dreams 



Metric Disconnect

 It was an incident that, thinking more about it now, would be the hallmark of tremendous disconnect between the education system and reality. I had been sent to buy nails, and as you know, nails – just like certain influential male organs – come in inches. Not millimeters. And certainly not centimeters. That would be grossly demeaning to nails and the organ, who may write nasty comments if you do so.

I was in high school at the time (and on holiday) and seeing that I didn’t have much to do except loaf time, it was deemed that I was fit to run the small errand to Flax Centre to purchase nails. There was a little construction project going on, and as constructions are wont, certain materials suddenly become sparse or are suddenly needed.

“Three inches,” they said even though I had heard the fundi say it. I hauled my juvenile self, neither with ambitions nor hurry. It seemed a minor inconvenience, but the prospect of keeping change acted as the only motivator. Also, the project had stalled because of the slight. The nails were needed in a hurry.

After three kilometres (where did those who use miles learn it from? Movies?) of walking, I was at the hardware. I asked for a kilo of three inch nails. The attendant weighed them, handed them to me, I paid and began the long walk back home. Even if they were not needed that day, I still would have gone back regardless, because there were no suave ways of idling back them. There were, but I was not good at them.

I got home and delivered them to the fundis. One quickly rummaged through and announced grimly, ‘it’s a girl.’ Just kidding. He said that I got the wrong nails…not the wrong nails actually – it’s not that there are yellow nails or nails za kienyeji – but the wrong inches. The inches were nearly double than they ones they wanted.

I think that must have been the only time I felt good when one of them acknowledged our ignorance in a way that detached responsibility from my actions. “These young people do not know anything,” they said as though distinguishing three and five inches required the same intellectual depth as neurosurgery. As far as they fundis were concerned my knowledge of important things such as inches competed favourably with mucus.

Even then, I was perfectly willing to correct the anomaly by trekking back three kilometres. However, the fundis showed tremendous fortitude by improvising. They were in a hurry to get the project done, hit a drinking den, and probably brag about how people like me were clueless about inches.

“I thought he was intelligent, but he brought six inches instead of three,” one will say amid an uproar of laughter.

“How can one not distinguish between an inch and two inches?” a fellow drunkard, well versed with matters inches, will as ask.

I am not ashamed to say that they answer to that question is me, and I have plenty of reasons to back it up. We never learnt about inches in primary school. I have no memory attached to inches back in primary. This is special because I spent most of my last years in primary school pensive and a nervous wreck converting milimetres to centimetres and to metres. And vice versa. At no point in my life did inches feature. I do not remember being whacked because I could not correctly convert from inches to any of those aforementioned metric terms.

Even then, if the guy who had sold me the nails knew what inches were, he could have given me the correct ones. I guess he was as clueless as me. Either that or he was desperate to make a sale. It is not really a one man’s blame. It is two.

If you think like I do, then you must be wondering why what is taught in school cannot be applied in real life. Even metric system yawa. You can excuse learning about the hypotenuse or trapezium, but not something as vital and life-giving – if you get my drift - as inches. Another stupid one is foot. I haven’t got the hang of it.  and miles too.

Every time someone uses metric terms I did not learn in school I feel like smacking them in the face to atone for the beatings I endured back in school. Trust me, there is nothing as torturous as the thought that all your years of schooling were up to nothing. It is even much worse if you spent a few years getting so scared of being wrong – a small wrong would earn you an unforgettable beating. It does not do justice to the moments spent tucking your hands between your legs, trembling and your teeth clattering every time you were in class. All that and you were not taught about inches?!!? Gerrarahia!!

Thursday 27 August 2020

What Now

 What's that step you take when gripped by grief

What do you do when you alight by Hopeless Town?

What do you do when you are on knees?

Unable to get up, unable to move on, 

Unable to reason, 

Unable to eat not for lack of appetite 

But for lack of food 

What do you do?

You are sick - you've been sick

where is redemption that they often promise people like?

or was your name struck off the list?

What now?

Saturday 15 August 2020

Tiny Dreamless World

 The tide, the slow ebb of sorrow 

Advanced upon us appearing as if swift 

Yet the signs were clear in the distance 

And our hopes in better tomorrow

Saw us ignore what was in plain sight 

We drunk...no we gulped our little water 

Obstinate in our refusal to accept reality 

And then it caught up with us 

Exploding on our faces like a big bang 

Splitting our dream into tiny dreamless world 

Tiny formless and desolate worlds 

And there is no whisper of the gods and angels 

Speaking life into it 

 


Saturday 8 August 2020

The Talkers

They have an endless well of stories

Upon which they draw,

Take a sip and regale another tale

I envy them

 

I envy how they easily strike a conversation

And it is with a person they just met!

And then they talk and talk

When you think it’s over, they start again

 

And they laugh! By God they laugh

How are they capable of telling jokes?

And tell more stories

From sunrise till sunset

 

And they will be at it again tomorrow

Talking as though they last met last decades ago

Where do they get fresh stories?

Where do they purchase them?

 

As for me, I struggle beyond the greetings

I am have no well to draw stories

Although sometimes I have one for insults

And as you know, these cannot be repeated

 

Sometimes I do not want to hear stories

I want to live in my silent world

Stuck not knowing a thing about that person

For gripping stories often involve other people