Dad's Retirement

in #story7 years ago (edited)

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“If this one were your first child,” uncle Essien began that all-familiar but no less irritating joke. I don't know how my dad found it funny. Was it for friendship? Was it the beer? Or was it retirement?

I hurried off with the bowl stained on its inner walls with palm oil residues from the egusi soup, the water in it now foamy and dirtier, with a towel dangling from my wrist. I hurried off from that dry joke of marrying me off to better my dad's financial lot, shared between two 55 year olds who just finished a plate of soup I helped prepare. More so because this had become a reference joke around my home since my eldest brother went to get the “list” from his fiancée's family, and they included generator and commercial tricycle as bride price. “Imagine the nonsense! I married your mother for just thirteen kobo,” my dad groaned.

Dad seem to have changed a lot since he stopped going to work at the secretariat three months ago. Everything irritates him, and he laughs extremely on those rare occasions he finds humour in anything, as if to compensate for past negativities. The hours he spent on the phone seemed to reduce with his statue, and the burrowing lines on his face got bumpier with his mood. A few days earlier I had to pretend I was deeply asleep in a fetal wrap on the armchair of his study, as he cursed into his mobile phone. I guess it was the accountant at his former office as he was demanding for his first pension after three months. Dad would be embarrassed if he knew I heard it all, especially after that burst off with my mum that very morning.

As we returned from church with mum I sat there staring at the display screen inside the long, blue public bus. I wasn't sitting on my mum's leg because one uncle said I was really beautiful and bought a ticket for me, went on to engage my mum and other passengers about the just concluded elections as the long queue progressed slowly to boarding. He was friendly and sounded intelligent. “What I know is that, if God didn't have a plan, no leader would be enthroned.” That was all I could remember my mum saying as she defended the new government that many people didn't seem to like. It was always mum against the whole world. The typical devil advocate.

I sat there on this seat my looks earned me and watched the countless advertisements that reeled, partly wishing there should be traffic on the road so the ride will be longer... on my comfy seat; and wanting to have lunch right away. Occasionally my mind floundered between the tension at my home of recent, and my Social Studies exams the next day.

I recall an advert of a pension fund management company beginning to play. I remember these kids talking about what retirement is. Retirement was when their parents stopped werrking and could spend time taking them on vacations round the world. Retirement was when their grandparent invested in their educations abroad. Retirement was really cool! Like sunglasses cool, they all claimed. These kids made retirement sound like what my dad needed right now, and what my grandparents should have if they didn't all die before I was born. Well except, my dad just got retired and he is irritated with life.
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These kids wore pretty clothes and spoke like my cousins at Corona when they stopped by our house last Christmas on their way to the village. I remember my dad saying afterwards that fees for Olivia and Daniel in a school year was his salary and allowance for two and a half years. “Sheer desirability,” dad called it.

The screen went dead. I caught myself right about to growl “NEPA!”, an exclamatory ode to the unstable power supply in my country. But it turned out the busman just killed the engine because we were stuck at one point due to traffic.

Just then I started to rehearse the story of the advert as I will tell it to Bunmi on Monday after our exams. It will be another chance to poke fun at Amina, our classmate who spoke ashubi-shubi-English because her elder sister is schooling abroad. I remember that term when Amina came back from school and said we were all "village girls" because she had gone to the airport and she claims to have made friends with a white woman. “You wouldn't even understand a single word that lady spoke. None of you would,” retorted Amina as she tried to sound posh to us. Her dad was a commissioner with the government in her state. Many believed they were mostly corrupt and put aside extortionate pensions for themselves.

I got home that evening contrasting the fantasy of retirement I saw in the bus with the reality of retirement in my home. My mum had to pay for much of the work going on at our family home currently being built, from her salary. The morning prayer time in my home seemed to grow longer every day with the frustration of my dad. The newspaper collection is piling up more rapidly. And I have to move more and more bottles of Guinness stout each time I go in to sweep the study.

I laid there in my bunk bed, my brother's guitar strumming from the other side of the wall, tunes I recognised to be Neil Diamond’s “I am… I said” -- a favourite he took off my dad. I am tempted to wish I were old enough to be married, so maybe dad will get a rich son-in-law. This time I didn't want a sewing machine for myself, I just wanted my dad to be happier. I wished he retired like a TV ad said he should. I heard my brother starting to play Sound Sultan’s “Area” with his guitar, this time singing along. My lids were giving in, but I hated the thought of dreaming about everything I feared I'll never have: a retirement where my dad could go on a vacation.

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I see you @misterakpan.

Well written, awesome post, can't quite tell if it's a story or a personal retelling of times past or possible future!

Either way I super enjoyed, Thanks for sharing. <3

Thank you @sammosk. I've got some plenty love for you. Thanks for reading and giving your thought. Means the world to me

I love your storytelling sir. You seem to have a sharp memory! It got me thinking that I probably couldn't reproduce many of the events I have experienced. Or maybe the details would come back in the writing process..? Or maybe we half-fabricate with other intense inner moments to weave these narratives. In any case, I'm looking forward to reading more of your stories!

I love that you love my effort to make sense to an audience. Thank you. Your remark buoys

What a set of scenery. These are the posts I was waiting to see from you. The ones that describe your life in a way I will never see on a television as the photo in the middle of your story suggests.

You wanted me to critique it, and I did spot a grammatical error here and there as well as some sentence structures that I had to read twice to full understand, but the parts are only parts and the whole still conveyed all it was intended to convey, so I cannot really suggest that you change much of it at all.

There were things mentioned that were purely local culture that I do not know about so I was left curious. The first one, was the opening Uncle joke, but it was resolved later in the 13 kobos section and then I understood the dowry joke reference. Not something an American would initially get, but you made it clear for us by the middle and end. The bus seat and your looks allowing your place there also seems to be a custom I didn't quite understand as well. But the writing remains pure and the intentions were clear. I had no trouble taking the whole as the sum of it's parts and getting the story straight. Your feelings and your meaning were crystal water to me by the end.

Neil Diamond. Didn't see that coming. The mix of cultural references beyond my comprehension, with cultural references it surprises me you even have in your paradigm, left me very thoughtful, and thinking of your last post, and your grandmother, and the kardashians on the television...

I am really enjoying this exchange, my friend. Very, very much.

Hello. I ain't done reading your remarks. I'll never be 😊. I don't want it to end. Thank you very much, sire. You sure are the man!

Seeing you rep at 47 !!! already and knowing you? I'm doomed to follow in your historic arc to fame and fortune!

49!

And the angels blushed 😊

The way this story is told, through the eyes of a stranger makes me want to know more, get inside your head and hear the rest of the story. You had me totally hooked from the very beginning!

Upped, Steemed and following you.

Thank you 😊. Sure there should be a sequel. Personally I feel I rushed the story in the final third. I owe you a look around inside the head. Thanks for reading me 👍. Following you now.

No worries. When you finish the entire story, you can rewrite those parts and print it in its entirety.

That's a trap 😂😂😂

Oh, no! :)

This post received a 5% vote by @minnowsupport courtesy of @sammosk from the Minnow Support Project ( @minnowsupport ). Join us in Discord.

Thank you very much, boss. I appreciate your reading me and the show of love 😊

So relatable to be on so many contexts. I have always been fascinated with the common African life after reading Chinua Achebe and Adichie. Sorry if I sound ignorant, I'm from Nepal, South East Asia.
I can see myself, my friends, my families and my neighborhoods in African stories. We really have similar ways of lives but are placed so far apart. Its like we're so close as human beings but so far because of the geographical placements and political divides. We hardly see anyone from the African origin here so I am not acquainted to anyone personally but I am sure that I'd love the company of someone from Africa if I get a chance to know him/her.

Wow. This melts my heart right now. Please take that chance. I will follow you right away and we will share experiences and stories. Thank you for reading 😊 How is Nepal today? Let me dig up all I can from Google Earth about there.

Thanks for the prompt reply. Nepal is recovering from the mega earthquake but it is as beautiful as it always has been. You should plan coming here if you can. You'd love our hospitality.

That's warm. You see why we need the steem dollars? 😊 I just want to board the next plane. I'm sorry for the earthquake. It'll all be fine soon.

I'm sure it will be fine. We're a resilient bunch. Hope you make enough of steem dollars to make it here man. I really wish you luck.

I felt the corruption of of the government class hanging over the whole of this piece, seems to be an omnipresent thing today. The girl, I couldn't quite get her age as you mention she often sat on her mother's lap when on the bus. Yet her musings belied a maturity beyond her apparent years.

I wonder if this older custom of arranged marriages is something the youth of your country are struggling with. I imagine that many seek marriage arrangements through the internet in a way to escape. Or is this something completely forbidden?

Retirement is often a difficult thing for a husband and father who has found little to do with the time they have on their hands and less money in their pockets. Pensions have always been a scam for any but those in "civil service" but that is just my observations here in the Americas. Sadly it looks that the father is going down the same fretful path many family men stumble on during retirement, regardless the country.

I also find it curious that the mum is paying for the building of a new home. I'm guessing that materials and labour are relatively cheap there? This was an interesting mix of blending cultures. An edifying read.

Thank you for sharing. ✌️

I have read all your comments, brother. All of them. I really want to respond to all of them, and I will. I am really really grateful you found me worth listening to, and have taken such time to comprehend every letter I put out there. I want to write you annotations for everything you've read and tried to understand. I owe you that. Thank you very much. Much love 😊

~smiles~ no pressure my friend...be you! <3

This post received a 5% vote by @nettybot courtesy of @sammosk from the Minnow Support Project ( @minnowsupport ). Join us in Discord.

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