What's Your Story?
Waiting for
the rickety bus to deliver me to my destination, my delivery time was fast
approaching. The walking dead bus forcefully stops; I climb in, walk close to
the window and sit down. I stick my head out – I’m dreaming of a better life –
a life flowing with the swiftness of dancing, the steadiness of peace, and
simplicity of hope. I dream on. Absently, I turn my hilariously hanging head
with hope, when she jumps in. She slowly slides and stiffens beside me, holding
her son firmly on one leg and her gigantic bag on the other. I notice her
hands.
These big
hands are sorely black, lined with use, squeezed from the wear and tear of
hours and hours of work; strengthened by the weight of carriage, paled from the
life of wash and ware.
I wonder,
what’s her story? Did her husband treat her hands with care? They desperately
needed his support. Her palms told me they had carried sons, daughters, chores
and life itself. Her face, strangely, bore little evidence of time. She wore no
colours on them – plain. No artefacts on her, except her eyes, which were
adorned with courageous audacity – a desire to do all she could to
survive.
She shuffles
beside me, adjusting her weight on the chair and her bag filled with a
juxtaposition of things for her life’s journey. “Was she leaving her husband?”
she seemed ready to run a new race. Those wilful eyes, will me to ask her name,
her story. Maybe show a little care.
Instead, I
stare at my fresh arms, well moisturized and fragile, wondering with a little
selfish fantasy.
Curious, I
look at her again. Her body cream hung to her skin with force – she shone,
shiny black, glittering like the fake polish on her shoes. She stretches her
arms filled with a N200 note. Surprisingly, her arms are free of smell,
vehemently washed clean, “gba owo e” (take your money), she
says to the bus conductor. He quickly grabs the money and places an old,
scruffy note of N50 change in her palm. She looks at the note, a titbit unsure
whether to accept it or give it back. “Should she demand for a better
note, like she was demanding for a better life? She surely deserved
better," the determination in her eyes seemed to be saying.
She had
persevered through the trails and pain, the beatings and the shouts of anger.
No more, she thought, her will was gone.
She then
decides to test her son’s will, looks at her leg and says, ‘oya, gba owo yi'
(take this money).’ Her son inspects the money and condemns it,
‘oti sha, mi o fe (It is faded, I do not want).’ Innocence, innocence
always wanted to have its way. Innocence was alive to possibilities and dreams.
It fought for better; but time dried innocence’s wings and drained the energy
to fight. Though, I hear the wise don’t let their fighting spirit die, they
only choose their battles.
As she
thinks, I think the word ‘faded’ fitted her demeanour. She
had faded along her path to train her son, faded from the handling of a man,
faded from the baggage of life.
The lady
makes me wonder,
Am I going to
fade?
Are my arms
going to wear out?
*********
“Conductor,
change this money o.” She says with urgency and anger.
He looks at
her with disgust, “I no get another one.”
“I do not
want this money o.” She shouts with all her might and threw it at him.
He is taken
aback, “wetin dey do this woman?” (What is wrong with this woman?)
He senses her
anger, and decides to let her have her way. “Take,” he hands her another note.
Yes! She deserved better, she stretches to take it.
***********
“Owa” she
says, disembarks from the bus, grabs her son with one arm and her baggage with
another. Everyone looks as she struggles with her baggage, her tears, but look
the other way.
She gets down
before I remember; I forgot to ask her name.
Really, what
is her story?
***********
Authors note
He was
despised and rejected – a man of many sorrows, acquainted with bitterest grief.
We turned our backs on Him and looked the other way when He went by. He was
despised and we did not care – Isaiah 53:3.
Daily, we meet people with different stories, but most times we are consumed with our own failings, that we forget to love those who are hurting or maybe just smile or make them laugh...
Thanks for reading.
Have a beautiful week.
There will be a new story/poem on Monday.
Awesome insight and imagination. Would love to know what she's really going through
ReplyDeleteMaybe that will be next week's story. lol! You have just given me an awesome insight... Thanks for reading...
DeleteWe go through caught up in our world forgetting we can't find our humanity except through our fellow humans.Wonderful insight.
ReplyDeleteThat's so true, we find who we are by helping others achieve their dreams, be happy and grow. Thanks for reading and the wonderful new quote. lol.
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