So
the hype around 12 years a slave is strong; Lupita Nyong’o is an
overnight sensation, to some she is deserving of this and to others
she’s just an African who got lucky for taking off her clothes and
getting flogged in a movie. Whatever the case, she has an Oscar and bad
belle haters can at least pretend to be happy for her, I mean, Designers
send her clothes personally and did you see her pictures at the last
fashion show?, she sat beside Rihana and people flocked around her.
Lupita girl, it’s your time, enjoy.
The Hollywood breeze is blowing here in
Nigeria too. After all, we are the giants of Africa and Kenya cannot be
getting the American Media attention like this. First Obama of Kenyan
descent, now Lupita. So as I was saying, Hollywood notices Nigeria too
as our dear Chiwetel Ejiofor is also reaping the rewards of hard-work,
and between the Awards and his Sister’s emotional outburst in the
office, Nigeria has been mentioned a lot of times (and I choose not to
hear the part about their mother not having access to clean water).
The Enugu State government was not to be
outdone. Immediately Chiwetel won his award, they sent a congratulatory
message to their ‘illustrious son’ who had done them proud. It is
immaterial that Google search of his nationality puts him as being
British. No! Ejiofor is an Ibo name and an ‘Illustrious son of Enugu he
is’. Besides, if he had committed a crime, they would have called him a
Nigerian. No pun intended to Enugu State since I had my University
education, there but their act and indeed the reaction of Nigerians
reminds me of a song my roommates and I used to tease each other with
back then in Bello Hall.
‘Know me when I’m poor,
not when I’m rich
You claim relationship (2x)‘.
not when I’m rich
You claim relationship (2x)‘.
Yes, we Nigerians are just like that.
Someone becomes affluent and suddenly he becomes ‘the son of our great
grandfather’s sister’s brother’s friend who hunted with our grandfather
so he is just like a brother. In fact, more than a brother to us’. That
girl you never said ‘Hi’ to in your boarding house suddenly becomes your
really close pal becayse she is now on the cover of a magazine and on
various blogs.
It used to irritate me when a friend of
mine referred to a popular model as her friend just because they
attended the same secondary school even though this girl never
acknowledged her because my friend used to snob her way back in
secondary school. I cringed in embarrassment each time my friend sent
pictures and messages to her ‘Model friend’ without getting a response. Haba, friendship no be by force now, but I guess to this my friend, it was.
One of the past Gulder Ultimate Search
winners used to stay in the same hood with my brother in the University
and I know for a fact that they never spoke to each other. In fact my
brother never liked him and ignored him whenever he came to see his
neighbors. I was surprised when my brother saw his picture on the front
page of the newspaper and exclaimed ‘I know this guy now, he was my
neighbor, we used to play games together.’ We would have ignored it if
my brother didn’t call him up, congratulating him and asking that they
hang out and even started telling everyone who cared to listen stories
of their days in the University together. It took the combined yabbing of everyone in the family for him to stop his famzing and admit that they were just neighbors.
The truth is claiming relationships or
‘famzing’, as we Nigerians call it, is a natural human phenomenon. Even
the Bible says ‘the rich hath many friends and even the brother of the
poor do hate him.’ No disrespect to people who claim relationships, as
proximity to success can create the feeling of success.
On the flip side, we could decide to do
everything we can to make something out of ourselves. My father, of
blessed memory, used to say ‘Don’t struggle to belong, struggle to
become because once you become, you automatically belong’. We should
hone our skills, pay the price and do everything right and honest to get
to the top and then, once at the top, rather than famz others, people will famz us.
In addition to hard (smart) work, we
should have our money work for us. I recently attended an event where
the first personalized online stockbroking platform was launched (I
think it’s called the Meritrade platform- you guys can Google it). Lucky
winners of a raffle were given 50,000 Naira to start trading on the
Nigerian Stock Exchange and from the speeches and fact books given at
the event, it seems with a start up capital of N50,000, individuals can
sign up to the platform and buy, sell and monitor stocks anytime,
anywhere.
It got me thinking that a lot of these
opportunities exist, one could purchase land in Estates with monthly
installments as little as N25,000, not up to the cost of some of our
designer shoes and in 1-2 years become a landlord.
Our lives and indeed our money is in our
hands and we owe it to ourselves to make the best out of it.
Paraphrasing the Richest man in Babylon ‘The journey to wealth begins
when you realize that a part of all you earn is yours to keep and indeed
invest’.
I urge you to take a step towards making
yourself successful, study, make the first move, do whatever is
necessary and when the money comes, invest wisely and make sure your
money works for you.
And when you finally get to the top,
enjoy the view and smile when random people start telling you that
‘their father’s sister’s uncle’s aunty and your mum are friends’. Guys,
you can even go Olamide on the girls who dumped you in the past ( ‘Ya go
lona, shey mo jo Yemi my lover ni?’), it’s your call, you’ve earned it
and the famzing that accompanies success.
Everything else is Crinkum Crankum.
Photo Credit: jessieveal.com
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