It was lazy on Monday the 11th- February; I would turn 25 the next day and decided to take work a little easy. I thought to myself, I must do something different: buy my parents a gift; after all, you do not turn 25 twice.
Indulging in the slow pace of
work I created for myself, I brood over what gifts to get, and then it hits me.
My boss publicly presented his book, ‘The Accidental Public Servant’ 6 days ago,
I decide to give them copies of the book.
Both my parents love books. When
we were a lot younger, they would force us to read them. I did read, for a
while, and then settled for just the freshness of new books. On occasions, I
would sneak into bookshops, open books, take in the fresh scent, and then leave.
How mischievous I would feel!
Starting out as a journalist, my
father always had a passing interest in governance and my mother long ago
dedicated most of her life to activism, it only seemed appropriate that they
would be very interested in the memoirs of a politician. One as controversial
as Nasir Ahmad El- Rufai nonetheless.
I climb down two flights of
stairs to a colleague’s office where I buy the books. A bookshop agent waiting
to be attended to keeps smiling at me and I wonder what is wrong. I feel good; the
thoughts of buying the books make me feel good. I think to myself, remembering how
much of a gift my parents have given me.
For the 25 years I have lived,
the one love I have counted on and known would always be constant has been my
mother. At times when I took advantage of my parent’s separation, and collected
fees from both parents, amidst scolds, my mother’s love was constant. I
remember fondly a time when I took money out of her purse, she pondered over it
for days, and then finally asked,
‘Is there anything you want that I
deny you of?’ She had not accused, but I knew where it was headed. I apologized
and her forgiveness was quick.
Thing is, for mothers like mine,
my tongue would not cease to sing their praises. I do not doubt her strength for
a second: the things she went through, struggles she survived, anyone with will
not strong enough would have broken down. And I see this will in my 2 sisters,
it reminds me of a T-Shirt design I had seen previously ‘Protect Your Woman, Broken
Women Raise Broken Girls’
‘Momoh’! my colleague calls,
knowing my attention for a few seconds was stolen. I compliment his shirt, say
it is very impressive. He squirms happily like a puppy offered treats.
1 paperback and 1 hard back? Yes.
I pay him the N14,000 due. Collect the books and thank him.