This will most probably be the most off-road of my
write-ups; off-road in the sense that it will take me along paths I seldom
tread. I will be forced to use words which, in my real self, I would never have
used; except, and very rarely, for educational purposes. There are certain words which I have never been convenient with; words which, even if I were left in complete solitary where no humans can reach, I would still not have used. If I have my way, I
would have kept the event to myself, but I just cannot. Writing, for me, is a
passion and, much more than that, an obligation. Therefore, whenever there is a conception upon
the mind it must be let out, else, it will be a passion unfulfilled. Every
conception on the mind is like a burden, and like any other kind of burdens, the
bearer alone suffers from the weight. So as not to fall victim of a known
outcome therefore, I write. I will not hold anything back even at the risk of
sounding unusual, as any omission will be a distortion of facts.
I had my NYSC orientation in 2008 at Iyana-Ipaja Lagos; I
was mobilized with the second stream of the Batch A corp. members of that year.
That day, we had gone out for the routine early morning exercise and, afterwards,
returned to the hostel for the day’s chores and to get ready for other
activities in view; it was a tiresome outing. For me, the whole morning
exercise was boring. Not about the physical trainings - anyone who spent one
week in the gates of Command Secondary School, Jos at the time I was there
would know that the NYSC exercise is just a child’s play compared to the drills
we got in the school; but sitting outside under the sun all morning taking
lectures most of which I had no interest in really do wear one’s mind off.
Having had so boring a day, we decided to get the mind a little bit elated.
Though I have never been a ‘Hip-hop’ person all through my
life, though I have always been trying my best to see that nonsensical music do
not get the better of me, though I keep a strong filter for sieving contents of
odd music before it gets settled upon my mind, some stubborn ones still find a
way of penetrating into the core parts of my mind taking advantage of my sincere love for music. Even when I tune my mind
completely off the frequencies producing them, there are still some emanating
from street radios, buses and other public gatherings that my antenna finds
irresistible. There are some amongst the lot, though, that I really love, those when
weighed against my conscience I find hearable and singable, those
whose level of perversion is light or considered reasonable and harmless. That
day, the operator in the OBS (Orientation Broadcasting Service) as usual was
playing some jamz, and he played one such song that I love.
“Photocopy – ko easy! You can never be like me, it is my
identity…Teni n’teni…Takasa n’ta’tan……Apa lara, Igunpa ni iyekan……………”
In response to the song, in order for us to amuse ourselves,
Alhaji, a good friend I met at the NYSC Camp who incidentally was from the same
school I graduated from, and I started dancing comic dance to the lyrics of the
music. Soon, some other guys on the first floor of the three-storey Camp
building joined in taking it more seriously than us. My favourite song ended
and I went inside the hostel to do one or two things, meanwhile, music kept
streaming out of the OBS. By the time I came out again to the balcony of the
first floor, it was filled with dancers, and Alhaji was in their midst. The
spirit continued spreading, and soon, everyone on all the other floors was out
to either join in the dance or feed their eyes.
Again the operator played.
“Lori’le – o di gonbe………E so fun Sisi Ologe koya faya…………………..!”
The people shouted. The dance continued. The operator kept
changing the music with increasing tempo. The dance continued.
I looked up at the space in between the building - it has a big
quadrangle at the centre, I looked up to see balloons flying in the air giving
the inhabitants of Iyana-Ipaja and passers-by a false sense of Independence
Anniversary celebration. The balloons all of the same colours but different
sizes flying in the space within – a thousand balloon in the midst thereof. But
these were no ordinary balloons.
Permit me to dwell a bit more on these balloons. These young
men, having preconceived upon the tablets of their minds to achieve certain
aims along the line of sexual immorality before leaving their houses to the
Camp trusting that they will meet their female counterparts who also would have
preconceived in similitude – like a case of a man going on the quest for
suicide who, at the point of crossing the road to drown in the river at the
other side, was knocked down dead midway by an oncoming vehicle: even though
the means of death was different from what he set out for, the ultimate was
achieved nonetheless – came with some of these items. Also, leveraging on the ‘generosity’
of the various health organizations present on the orientation camp, who
freely distribute these items, which, I suppose, was invented for the purpose
of birth control but which, overtime, has turned into an instrument for encouraging
promiscuity, to desiring persons. For the too-curious reader who claims he doesn’t
get what I am talking about at this point, not wanting to completely deviate
from my ideals with respect to decent usage of words anyday anytime, I can only suggest you find out
what modnoc is all about.
(I can see someone eagerly typing out the letters
M-O-D-N-O-C on Google; but that is none of my business! Curiosity is known to
be capable of killing any kind of cat!)
Armed with such
supply of these items, it was not surprising to see a quantum of strange balloons flying
in the air. The significance of this act is that these young men have
thrown sanity in the air, that whatever piece of sanity in their possession had
been thrown to the winds. And what is now left is lesser than the alertness of the
beast of the fields. What was left was a null!
The beat goes on…………
‘Gongo Aso…kutuke awo….anywhere I dey….Aji sebi Oyo la nri, Oyo o sebi Baba enikan.......!’
And the usual shout that greets every change came up again,
this time reaching to the high heavens. Now, everyone stood outside the veranda
on all floors - saints and demons united as one; some watching with great interest, some dancing like wild
beasts. But the jumping and dancing seem not to be to this particular beat
coming from the OBS, there was some other music from some other place…..but
from where?
If your inner eyes were half as keen as mine, you would have
seen Satan and his host ascended from the pits of hell and took the centre
stage; and he, Satan, sat at the Turntable and began to ‘cook’ such beat as to
make men mad being a Pro in the art of music himself; and his Sergeant-at-arms
holding a pair of cymbal one on each hand and hitting them against one another producing
an equally dangerous sound – I could almost swear I saw at least one of the corp.
members moving to this particular beat; and the other lesser demons clapping
their hands together while moving round and round in circles as we see in some
spiritual centres when demon is supposedly being cast out of a person. This
other music was the one dictating the moves even though it was not obvious to
the ordinary eyes.
In consonance with the new lease of spirit, the OBS operator
played the next line:
‘Omo na mental craze! Start to dey
craze…kolomental….ooohh..Oh..oh oh oh oh oh…Kolomenta!’
Having thrown sanity to the winds earlier, this song helped
to seal the deal. The spirit of insanity had been let loose on the children of
men. The noise went completely overboard; the young men jumping and shaking
their heads on this side, ladies dancing and screaming on the other side, the
devil and his host laughing hilariously for a job well done at the centre. I, on
the first floor standing a few steps from the main activities on the boys’ side,
was watching the drama with a mixture of confusion and interest - who would
have thought that a little fire could generate this much smoke? This was not my intention, this could never have been my making. God save the king!
Then the whole thing took another form, a form sharply different from
what a normal party should be. Seizing the advantage of the moment, the young
men, who have been on the camp for a little over one week or so, started complaining of
having been deprived of their right to ‘pleasures’ for so long, and started shouting:
“We want s***************************!!!”
To which the ladies on the other side (the shameless ones
amongst them) responded excitedly by turning their bums toward this side,
shaking it vigorously as if to say to them ‘Say that to the bum bum’. This they did several times responding to
the continuous call by the young men for the unimaginable, they have no shame.
Then the boys took the request many steps farther, as they say, give the devil
an inch, he will take a mile. They requested that the ladies pull off their
dresses. By then, the centre of main activities had shifted to the upper storey
of the building, and it was from there these weird acts and strange requests
were coming from.
I later heard that one of the boys actually went inside the hostel, pulled off his clothes and came back to the veranda with nothing on save a bucket turned upside-down over his head to conceal his identity, a bucket to conceal his folly. So, it was on this basis that the boys on this side were requesting that the ladies make bold to do likewise while displaying their now nude comrade as a trophy of some sort. Now, the spirit of nudity has been unleashed on the sons of men, and they were trying to infect the daughters of Abraham with it. I was on the first floor so I didn’t see this display, but I could judge from the outburst and excitement of the ladies on the other side while pointing up towards the boys’ hostel that it actually happened. The ladies, though, truly speaking, never obliged to this request, at least, as far as I knew; but they were indulgent of it, and were quite obviously excited by it.
And the beat goes on and on.
I later heard that one of the boys actually went inside the hostel, pulled off his clothes and came back to the veranda with nothing on save a bucket turned upside-down over his head to conceal his identity, a bucket to conceal his folly. So, it was on this basis that the boys on this side were requesting that the ladies make bold to do likewise while displaying their now nude comrade as a trophy of some sort. Now, the spirit of nudity has been unleashed on the sons of men, and they were trying to infect the daughters of Abraham with it. I was on the first floor so I didn’t see this display, but I could judge from the outburst and excitement of the ladies on the other side while pointing up towards the boys’ hostel that it actually happened. The ladies, though, truly speaking, never obliged to this request, at least, as far as I knew; but they were indulgent of it, and were quite obviously excited by it.
And the beat goes on and on.
Just at the moment when fire and brimstone was about to be
sent down from above to consume the children of men like the days of Sodom and
Gomorrah, Mr. Anthony Ani, the NYSC State coordinator at the time, who is the current
Director of Mobilization (I saw him granting an interview on Channels
television not too long), having first gone into the OBS studio located on the
ground floor of the building to stop the music, came into the centre of the
quadrangle - the same point where the host of hell pitched its tent, looked
up towards the source of the madness, and shouted passionately:
“What is wrong with you?! Are you all children?!!”
In the next instance, everyone disappeared from the verandas
into their hostels and the place became as silent as the Grave – not even a
bird was left to sing. Nothing was left save Mr. Ani, the spectacle on his face
and the echo of his voice. And that was how everyone was saved from imminent destruction.
I felt so relieved that all came to an end.
Had it not been for the intervention of Mr. Ani, that event
would probably have made headlines the next day. It would have degenerated into
something else. It would have been reported that some young men at the Lagos
Camp jumped off from storey buildings and took to the street naked. And that
before they could achieve their aims, fire came down from heaven and devoured
them all. And the face of a certain boy named Aji, and his friend Alhaji would
have made it to the front cover of all bestselling newspapers around the
country being the main culprits.
My Name would have been mentioned and my face as shown in the picture below would have made cover pages even though we started
the dance without any evil intention, we started it just for personal use and
it was meant to ease off the stress of the day. This, therefore, brings me back
to the title of this bizarre episode: NEVER START A FIRE THE FLAME OF WHICH
YOU CANNOT QUENCH. Ours grew into an inferno and would have gone worst if that word of caution hadn't come in time.
Let this word of caution guide your acts and attitude wherever you find yourself.
Let this word of caution guide your acts and attitude wherever you find yourself.
Great job Senior Arrrrrrrrj my Big Bros. It's an interesting read, got to discover some new words and their usage. Educating too. More grease to your elbow sir.
ReplyDeleteThanks my Brother for your support always. So glad you enjoyed it!
DeleteGood to see u putting ur talent to use. Nice narrative. Thank God I studied Comp Sci. I was able to decode dt code for the unusual balloons lol
ReplyDeletelol! You mean you wrote a C#.NET Code to decode that Bro? You are sure a genius!
DeleteFirst and most effective rule of blogging.....CONTENT.
ReplyDeleteBe here to add juicy contents here on a regular basis....
So hilarious....!
ReplyDelete