ME AND MY PASTOR (1)

This is the part of Sunday service I don’t like.

Pastor, in a gleaming suit, assuming a conqueror’s stride mounted the podium to begin the altar call. “God instructed me to do this” he had said on my first day in this church. It did not mean anything to me at the time; after all I was a first-timer, desperate to please Jenny, the charming girl who had invited me to her church. You know me, normally I won’t go to a church because of any girl, but Jenny wasn’t just any girl. If I wanted to drink the coconut juice I may as well have to crack the nut first. Jenny was not the kind of juice you could suck without doing some work and I was smart enough to know that. Ok, this is not about Jenny…
As I was saying, I just don’t get along with this ‘sowing seeds’ altar-call part of service. Otherwise everything else is cool with me. Pastor is really cool; you should hear this dude preach. Besides the fact that his wisdom reminds me of Solomon, he displays this sense of humor that reeks of the comedian, ‘Sam Loco’. I could do with those attributes; only if he did not do this altar call every Sunday. Most Sunday mornings when I awake with a stretch on my conjoined 6-spring mattresses, I fight this eternal battle of “should I go to church or not”. Don’t blame me; I spent almost 5 years of my life in the university barely going to church 5 times. But I never failed to do that while at home because in spite of dad not really being a fan of ‘going to church’, to him it was rebellion for the children not to go to church, so I normally went. This time around, no dad, no mum and no siblings to make me look like a devil if I did not go to church, but here I was, courtesy of Jenny’s charm, carrying this big bible, wearing my only suit, sweating from praising God and looking so pious.
And we all had to stand while Pastor did this ‘seed sowing’ parade. It seems a sin to sit ‘when your pastor is standing’. In fact, maybe it is because I recall on my second day in church, I sat while Pastor took the pulpit; I was born a rebel you know. The coarseness of his voice hit me. “Those of you sitting are you bigger than me?” He seemed to be staring directly at me while he asked his divine question. So I stood, unsure of the answer to his question. Today I knew better, of course right now I am standing, waiting to endure the ritual of ‘sowing seeds’.
“Who can give the Lord N1000?” pastor’s charismatic voice rang out. “N1000 for the Lord” he said with the seriousness John the Baptist proclaimed “repent for the kingdom of God is at hand”. He seemed to sense the reluctance of the congregation. Even the ‘happy givers’ seem to be getting bored with this everlasting ‘instruction from the Lord’. Well I knew my role. I had perfected it over three Sundays now – just wait out the whole process, it would not kill. Too bad we all – the givers and the watchers had to stand through the whole ritual.
“A tight hand is a tied destiny” he continued. Blackmail! I thought to myself. I had N1200 in my pockets, carefully separated. N1000 in the most difficult pocket to reach – the breast pocket of my suit and the N200 in my right hip pocket, in case I could not resist the temptation ‘to give to the Lord’ this Sunday, I did not want to use the N1000 mistakenly, so I did a ‘separation of powers’
Then the usual persons began to come out. Two assistant pastors, a deacon and a deaconess and Pastor’s wife – they always had N1000 to give! The rest of us watched, many waiting for their turn to give according to ‘their pockets’. You can’t really blame us, can you? I mean in a church of about 300 persons just over 6 are married. The rest of us are young people, mostly students, looking up to the hills for daily survival. Perhaps worse off is the fact I am a corps member still bearing the government a grudge over my paltry N9775 allowance.
Five persons had come out. “N5000 down” I thought to myself. If I couldn’t give I didn’t see anything wrong in doing a calculation of ‘what the Lord was getting’. At the least, this book-keeping exercise relieved my boredom.
Pastor obviously seemed unimpressed with the turnout of 5 persons for the N1000 bout, so he kept on talking about how “givers never lack”, how “your harvest depends on your seed” and all. I had heard all those before, and those were not going to make me relinquish the N1000 in my pocket, maybe the N200 but definitely not the N1000!
“N1000 cannot buy your life” he went on. “Yeah, but it can cook me a pot of soup” I mused to myself, surprising myself with a smile - I mean, how did I become so cynical? But in point of fact, ‘the soup’ was why I brought the money to the church in the first place anyways. I had to go to the market after service to get some materials for cooking that egusi soup condemned to last me for four days. So now you know what I mean? I couldn’t be waiting for Manna when God had given me N1000 already, could I?
“The Lord is telling me that there is one person here who has N1000 but is finding it difficult to give out” Pastor went on. I was not impressed with his determination. “I do not know why the Lord is insisting but I know there is a reason”, he said again. This really was tempting message from the Lord. I reached for my inner breast pocket, touched it and reassured myself that the N1000 was still there - good. I did not feel any guilt because I was certain the message from the Lord was not about me. It said someone had N1000 but merely had a difficulty in releasing it. I had N1000, true, but I had no difficulty in giving it out; shoot, I did not intend to give it out!
Then an assistant pastor ‘heeded the Lord’s message’. He walked to the platform with a crisp N1000 note. The way he held his head spelled ‘gloom’; he did not seem ‘a cheerful giver’ to me. Scam! I thought. The dude had given earlier. Ok, someone had to bail Pastor or …the Lord, which ever it was. Either ways, I had no qualms because the bail did not come from my pocket.
“N500 for the Lord”, Pastor now changed course. “O thank God, at least we are finally making progress” I thought.
You know the rest. It usually starts like there was no room for people like us, but eventually it comes down to “bring to the Lord whatever you have”, perhaps a classic case of ‘half bread is better than none’ or chin chin, or whatever folks say these days. However what you do not know is the drama that went on between here and there…you would have to wait for that anyways, like they say in those home videos:
Watch out for “Me and My Pastor (2)”

THIS IS MY CULT

THIS IS MY CULT
This is my cult
Here violence is adored
So much blood and gore
Savagery, a treasured lore

Scribbled on several careless pages
A list…of victims
Piling, screaming so loud
Bearing scars from toddling strikes

And in this cult are brothers
Born of various bloods
Striking rainbow perspectives
Horning verses in pleasant rhymes

At the helm, a cap-on
A great light, musing
Sailing our Secret Communion
As we interact under a sleeping world

Awake in the initiation
Of several dissecting lashes
From palms hardened by ink
Awaiting my transition
Through a free verse rites of passage

And emerging from the den
Kitted in battle regalia
My weapon dripping blue blood
On age-long temple scrolls
Springing modern symbols
Pristine, even cherubic
New testaments, carefully lettered
As I await the laurels

Over time I fallowed
A hermit on a farm of metaphors
Shedding off fancy milk teeth
Chewing beyond mere root-words
Bone-words, now victims of my gore

Cracking, they beseech
Stirring loud screams
But I am now brutalized
In heartlessness, surely circumscribed

My brothers know not mercy
No such virtue in this doctrine
Dissect, horrify and if I choose, pamper
With such divine impunity

In the temple of great minds
Homer and Shakespeare beckoning
I offer my sacrifice
A libation of recitals
Obeisance, for hours
Nose-deep in these pages
Seeking refinement…and more blood

These words, humble toys
I pinch, hammer, transform
Forcing screams…and blood out
As they come alive

Gallantly I bestride the night
Solitude a loyal ally
This blank page, a worthy accomplice
Words…sheer victims

Then I prowl the grounds
Like a ghost, unnoticed
Manufacturing scary scenes
An uncensored escapade
Licensed to strangle you in your sleep

This is my cult
No divides between low and high born
Nobility defines us
Forged by talent, the muse and work
Minds refined through circumcision

This indeed is my cult!
Certainly here I belong
A scion from a timeless beyond
A recidivist, gutting words, spilling blood
An initiate, flagging a titled deed
In this noble cult of poets

Day One, Web2.0 for Development Workshop, Accra (7th March, 2011)



The training proper began at 10.40 a.m. and the opening session was handled by Mr. Justin. The program outline for Introduction to Web2.0 for Development included: search magic, information self-service, remote collaboration, online mapping, and communicating voice over the internet, online publishing and social networking.
Mr. Justin set us on ‘jolly mode’ by playing a video of some Chinese immigration officer who kept ‘thoroughly’ searching his female subjects. Laughter invaded the room, Ritz nearly lost a rib! Only Isaac Chanda, the self-acclaimed ‘Most Handsome Dude, South of the Equator’ refused to laugh. He looked extremely jealous. I think he wanted that officer’s job!
The trainer creatively represented issues on Web2.0 with the 10 fingers of the right and left hand. The right fingers captured the tools associated with Web2.0, which include: blogs and vlogs, wikis and social network tools, tags, RSS feeds and mash-ups. The left hand fingers embodied the issues that Web2.0 dealt with: people, access, supporting participation, content (texts, sounds, videos, images, etc.) and change (you may not like Heraclitus but ‘change is not only constant’ but necessary!).
Practical sessions involved the use of Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds and Drop Box. With RSS feeds we could gather news from various sites by subscription and having the news brought to a central account to save us the stress of having to visit sites frequently to check for new information. We started out by opening a Gmail account and then learning how to use Google Reader to subscribe to feeds from different sites. Simple process: get the url of the feeds, type the address in the ‘add subscription’ box in the Google Reader and then…you know the rest. Click!
Drop Box was a box office hit! This tool enables you to store and backup files; synchronize files automatically on two or more computers connected to the internet and share files and folders with your peeps! With Drop Box, you don’t need to attach or zip those large folders you send as emails. Just use your Drop Box to ‘share’. Now I love this one! It means I really don’t need to be walking about with these memory sticks that I have so built my ‘document life’ around. I got about three of those memory sticks for good measure, now I think I am going to sell them all to get some fries. Drop Box!
RSS is just as sweet as my mum! And hey, I think I have fallen in love again after my recent heartbreak. Don’t ask who jilted me; I am over her because I got this new love called DROP BOX!
Did I forget to mention lunch? How could I? I mean, it is one of the reasons I am in Ghana after all. Ok, I think I am adding some weight, but that won’t kill, will it?
For the records, I miss Maureen Agena. Ok, that’s enough peeps. You want more? Read my blogs. With this invaluable CTA-CSIR collaboration, I should have one by the end of today! Peace…





This Empty Road



Yesterday was the promise
Laced with choking hope
For me and you my miss
With such clasping stronghold

Time weathers this bond
Rather than brew a fine wine
Acting of our own accord
We brought us here, well aligned

What…what exactly?
A careless shrug…
An indifferent bear hug…
Just one loose tongue…

Life was much simpler
Without these gloomy sighs
Or our celebrity-styled smiles
A house ruined by guile

It’s the end of this line
Leaning all so close
I ponder on the resonance
Seemingly endless…it clatters
As I roam the promenade
Of our deserted beach

I ask me, rudely
Shouldn’t I have ridden more wisely?
But I falter for answers
Yet given another chance
Again I’ll still be camped here
With thoughts of you…
Down this empty road

My pictures

My pictures
we dey here

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