Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Actions Speak Louder Than Words I


I am not a psychologist but I realised just the other day that I have learned one or two things about guys through interacting with them as family, colleagues, dates, friends, lovers, etc. and actually have more than a thing to say about what a girl should watch out for in deciding to ‘be with someone’. You’ll notice that I used the phrase ‘be with someone’ rather than anything concrete like [in Naija lingo] going out with, marrying, or whatever. People want different things from the opposite sex (or same sex depending on which way you swing). The other day my friend and I had a conversation wondering about the essence of a relationship. Some people want a companion; others want a lover, a provider, arm candy, a father/mother figure, a teacher etc. To each his own.

If you are a woman whose interest in a man goes beyond Friday night dates or someone to go with to a friend’s wedding so you don’t come off as the perpetually-single liability who everyone has to worry about her getting home, my tip-offs may not matter. Or if it’s strictly for the sex, it’ll probably matter even less. However, if you want a mate, there are signs to watch out for.


So, ... he has passed a couple of the initial tests- his head is not of the shape and size that gives you horrors about vaginal delivery, or your future son's dating potential; and he can actually pull off a ten minute conversation with you without his eyes roaming around for the next nice looking babe. In your mind, you have already calculated when your period will be in June of the following year so that you can fix the wedding date. But ... that nagging feeling just won't go away.


There will oftentimes be a certain level of desperation that would make the following character flaws seem kind-of-livable-with, but do yourself a favour and think carefully. He might be telling you something with his actions that he cannot coin into words:

i) Is he in the habit of standing you up when you have made plans for a date?
This is my personal ‘run and don’t look back’ cue. There is nothing sadder than a girl going through the lengths girls go through to go out on a date with a guy, and the guy pulling a no-show (secured firmly by a no-call-to-explain). It is THE UNFORGIVABLE SIN in my opinion. He either doesn’t like you very much or doesn’t regard you very much, and trust me one is no good without the other. There will be the unavoidable cancellation, but the moment it starts to feel all wrong and your self-esteem starts to take a battering, let him go. LET HIM GO!

ii) Does he pay you compliments?
Ladies, there is a difference between a taciturn man and a stingy-with-compliments man. And it isn’t such a thin line. A man who really looks at you and breathes you in, will find one or two things he likes about you and will want you to know that he likes that thing about you (and vice versa of course). But when he cannot find a single complimentary thing to say about you, even if it is a slight exaggeration of how your stubby legs look in that oh-so-hot Little Black Dress (LBD), then maybe he just doesn’t find much good in you. Think about it.

iii) Does he call when he says he will?
People say that women are stimulated by words while men are stimulated by touch. It is true. When a woman hears, “I will call you when I get home later this evening”, everything in her is waiting for that call. If he were mind-full of you, he would call- even if only to say he is dead tired and would talk to you tomorrow when he feels more alive. You know what’s even worse … when he calls you the next day and doesn’t apologise for not calling when he said he would. It means that he probably didn’t remember to call you when he should have, and even now he has forgotten that he did not remember to call you. It means one thing only, he wasn't thinking about you; doesn’t think about you; you are not priority [sorry: that's three things already!].
To Be Continued …

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Sorry Seems Not To Be The Hardest Word

“I have no one but myself to blame. I do not lay the fault or the blame of the charge at anyone else's feet. For no one is to blame but Jimmy Swaggart. I take the responsibility. I take the blame. I take the fault.”
Jimmy Swaggart, televangelist
February 21, 1988

“Indeed, I did have a relationship with Miss Lewinsky that was not appropriate. In fact, it was wrong. It constituted a critical lapse in judgment and a personal failure on my part for which I am solely and completely responsible.”
- Bill Clinton, former U.S. President and aspiring first laddie
August 17, 1998

“There is no excuse, nor should there be any tolerance, for anyone who thinks or expresses any kind of Anti-Semitic remark… As a result, I must assume personal responsibility for my words and apologise directly to those who have been hurt and offended by those words.”
- Mel Gibson, actor and director
August 1, 2006

“And so it is with a great amount of shame that I stand before you and tell you that I have betrayed your trust. I want all you to know that today I plead guilty to two counts of making false statements to federal agents… and I am responsible fully for my actions. I have no one to blame but myself for what I have done.”
- Marion Jones- Thompson, athlete
October 6, 2007

Won je bi, emi ni won ba hold responsible! Obviously these guys don’t take advice from people who know better; Milli Vanilli had said it all before:

Blame it on the rain that was falling, falling
Blame it on the stars that did shine at night
Whatever you do don't put the blame on you
Blame it on the rain yeah yeah


I trust my people. Take the blame ke? Never!!! Whatever happened to the devil? Jimmy Swaggart, man of God that he is and subject to all the attendant temptation from the devil, could conveniently have used that line: it was the devil. I have my suspicions about whether anyone would have bought it, but hey… nothing ventured…


Bill Clinton could have blamed it on the machinations of the axis of evil. Oh, there was no axis of evil in 1998?

And Mel Gibson, shame on you! Surely an actor and director could be more creative in coming up with a blamee.

As for Marion Jones, the dope was a ready excuse: “It was the dope, you dopes!”

This is just one of the things that separate developed societies from our African communities: social consciousness levels (doesn’t mean I buy those their phony apologies for one minute). But those guys do bad stuff, get caught, feign remorse, apologise, and hope to salvage their fat pay cheques, reputations, jobs or whatever else is precious to them. Some, like Akon even go a step further and take blame that is not theirs:

Even though the blame's on you
Even though the blame's on you
Even though the blame's on you
I'll take that blame from you


We on the other hand, do bad stuff, get caught, arrogantly refuse to accept any wrongdoing, and definitely through fair and foul means take steps to salvage our fat pay cheques, reputations, jobs or whatever else is precious to us. Just ask Patricia Etteh who has blamed everyone and every circumstance except her inexplicable greed. She started off blaming her antagonists in the House of Representatives who she didn’t offer juicy positions; then moved on to the National Assembly Management for not vetting the contract properly. Who knows what she’ll come up with next?

What’s in an apology anyway? Are we truly to believe these apologies? What is the apology about anyway? Part of a plea bargain? You get caught with your hand in the cookie jar and then your overly- paid publicist pens a statement explaining your foible and hoping that all your loyal fans who look up to you will somehow find it in their hearts to forgive you. And if you weren’t caught? No apology?


Newsflash: I don’t look up to you. And why should I? I am too busy with real life to concern myself with your antics, or to model my actions after yours. Plus unlike you, I don’t have the inconvenience of the limelight to prevent me from doing all the bad things I like to do.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Don't Hate; Congratulate

Really these comparisons of Nigeria to a 15... then 31... then 40 year old (and on each occasion of its anniversary) person that can’t crawl, much more walk at that age is really getting old and tired, and should stop. It just grates on my nerves. Who contrived the analogy by the way? Since when does it make sense to compare a sedentary 47 year old human who has a maximum life span of what, maybe a hundred years, with a sedentary 47 year old nation with a maximum life span of … er … I don’t know… maybe forever?

Ok… so maybe Nigeria hasn’t attained those great lofty heights which the largely unknown second stanza (I dare you to sing the entire second stanza. What am I even saying…? Sing the first one, if you can!) of our national anthem espouses, but that is not to say she should suffer the indignities of such unbecoming comparisons.

Let’s see if I can’t cast my mind back and come up with one or two heartwarming things we can be thankful for about Nigeria:

i) Our civil war lasted not quite three years. If this doesn’t seem like a lot to be thankful for, maybe the Angolans can explain the agony of being in a war from 1974 till 2002.

ii) Forget that he never should have even happened in the first place, but Abacha died out on us!!! That to me will always remain one of the greatest miracles in modern day Nigeria. I mean, what are the odds? Did Mobutu die on the Zaireans? Did Idi Amin? Has Museveni? Or even Mugabe?

iii) For the first time, Nigeria actually has a Servant-Leader; which is a whole new concept for us. Having suffered through boors like Obj, and brutes like Abacha, maybe just maybe, things will be different this time around.

For all the haters out there, Nigeria can choose to begin to crawl when it hits 100; and why not, we have till eternity, no?

Happy 47th Anniversary, Nigeria.