Showing posts with label happiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label happiness. Show all posts

Friday, 31 March 2017

Lonesome Dreams - Let Her Go

You know how it's a freaking sunny day in March and you miss the rainy season; or on a wet day in September, you wished the dry season was upon you? Passenger's "Let Her Go" hits me with that feeling all the time. And the flashbacks are nostalgic enough to leave me in tears, barring whether they are for joy or sadness.
I remember them days when my only companions were my laptop and my phone. The laptop which saved me from insanity. She which filled my every moment with work, letting me caress her with ten all the time. She was petite and light, that she could pass for a damsel with a lithe frame. Easy to carry, with a lasting battery. And then the phone which connected me with the all-time love of my life, my momma. There were days when waking up in Monrovia amounted to self-hate. Like, why couldn't I just wake up to the aroma of mummy's akara or puff puff? And indeed like Passenger said, I hated the roads -- whenever I had to up and travel to work through the crevices and arteries of some of West Africa's pristine and uncharted forests, because I missed home.
There were days also, when the rains would not stop falling and I would first bask in the warmth of my bed, sneak out to the varenda with the lads to crack old wily jokes, listen to BBC works service, talk about Liberia and our various futures which were punctuated here and there with near misses and triumphs. Days of orange sunsets by the sea, brought caresses from the sands that washed up recaptives who came to colonize a people, termed barbarians by distant cousins who had tasted the bile and guile of America.
And so, when Passenger says "...know you love her when you let her go", I giggle at the prospects of returning to Monrovia soon, to bask in the beauty that are her beaches and the shenanigans that glorify her slums, business districts and her living quarters of Congotown, Old Road and the Red Lights of Paynesville. Oh, and of the times when I planned and thought I would fall in love with you all over again on the beach. Because, yeah, I admit it that now and then, I think of when we were together. When for reasons I can't explain now, we had undiluted banter, chatter and laughter. You weren't all bad afterall. And I wasn't a saint either. But to treat me like a stranger surely feels so rough. No?
I thought I loved you so much, because what I thought you were, would not let me breathe. And I was cool with intoxicating me with you.
Ah, I told myself you were right for me, but you screwed me over and I can't even count how many times you did that with whomever you chose for the ritual. But being in love with my idea of you, was such an ache, and I still remember. Now, I am addicted to a certain kind of sadness, one which reeks of how I let myself down, how I could have stopped us both from hurting as much as we did, and how I have built a high hedge.
Like I have always done when love gets sour, I build friendships or acquaintances. But, you cut me off. I really wanted us to make out like it never happened and that we were nothing; because we got to that point where we didn't need each others' love no more. Alas, you were eager to move on and heal that pain, by running to the same things which had brought hurt in the first place. Now, you're just somebody that I used to know.
But, I know that in letting you go, I love you enough. Enough to let you find what brings you happyness. Sail on, I've gotta catch up with Monrovia now!

Tuesday, 24 November 2015

A BROAD SMILE IN DECEIT

I can see what the darkness does
Say goodbye to who I was
For now, a heartless being roams
His heart eaten by a beast
A beast without a soul or girth
That one which went to and fro
With a broad smile in deceit
And said "he's a fool for love".

Wednesday, 7 October 2015

THROUGH MY EYES

All my eggs are cast in one
The other baskets have shells
Rotten eggs don't sink in a basin
My heart flows like clear water
The honesty now reeks as lies
Its burst cistern will tumble with rage
"Do as I say, I'll do as I will
Bottle up my rampage, it's not for sale
See the world only through my eyes."
My eyes have turned to shells
The yolk tumbles from rage
And I'm blind, for your eyes are shut

Friday, 31 January 2014

ABUJA (8)

And the clouds have covered the skyline
Like migrant lovers; 
Ready to piss on Abuja's fertility.

Wednesday, 22 January 2014

A KISS IN YOUR SLEEP

My demons are here again
I'm cursed to watch you sleep
Depths of your slumber
Brings me wallow in stares
Thy long lithe frame
Wont for wrappers
Of my bossom's cusps of warmth
The calm of your face
Tells of the air of peace
As I crave a kiss in your sleep

Monday, 2 December 2013

ABUJA (4)

Oh! How I love you, Abuja; 
But there you go, spreading yourself; 
Wide open to other men - hustlers

Sunday, 16 June 2013

A Letter To My Father

Dear Dad,

I know you are doing very well.

Lois Kolo loves the fact that she sees you more often now, not like those days when work took you away from us for longer.

Sadly, it's not husband's day today, but Father's Day. To compound issues, I'm not home, so we can't play FIFA 2012 on my laptop, watch FIFA Confederations Cup together, or throw banters at our football teams (I hate it that you left Liverpool for Arsenal).

You've tried to be a very good father in our lives, but all we ever wanted was a father. A figure who's life reflects upon our paths as we grow. How can I forget the forced siestas, and the 10pm curfew, so that we don't stay out late, even though I was the only one breaking the rule.

You made our house Kolo, Kolo & Co., like a drama/comedy ensemble. Don't worry, even though I feel you gagged me in some of my poetry, you did a good job, and I love you all the way.

I couldn't have asked for more of a father, except that I turned out an Oliver Twist. Thus, like you always TOLD us to be our best always, I'd arrogantly throw the challenge back at you daddy, to be the best father you can be, to us. We dissipate a lot of energy loving you, and all we want back, is your love. Nothing more.

Today, we Evelyn Fatima Kolo, Kolo Kenneth Kadiri, Jesse Kolo and Rachel Kolo celebrate you. And lest you forget, Kolo Gloria is the extra you asked for. We love you, and pray that you stay around for longer and see all your grandchildren.

Happy Father's Day!