The final year in university is
usually an interesting one. Good thing or bad thing is – it only come once. It
is the year when it dawns to most comrades that they seriously need to make a
life for themselves – a great job, good money and less hustle. But in a country where unemployment is at forty percent, it is imminent that some comrades end
up hustling for quite some time before God visits them.
Truth is even before graduation
some comrades might have already secured themselves a source of income. They
are normally the envy of others who are still stuck in the hell of sending
application letters. Then there are others do not have any job but have some
god father somewhere in a government office paving a way for them.
and the rest have themselves and
belief that they would get jobs – without positive prospects or a godfather,
but not without slaying a giant or two.
This piece is dedicated to all
the ex-comrades who have turned hustlers. Those that the world of employment
has beaten them senseless. Yes!
As I write this piece Walker a good friend of mine is a few months
shy of his first anniversary as a graduate. Even before Walker graduated, some
daddy’s friend had told daddy to bring his son’s certificate so he could get
him a job; so father and son rest assured and waited for godfather to come
through.
Things went South and all the
strings daddy dear was pulling snapped. Every hope has been a dead end. To be
precise: Five regret letters, one failed interview and a very screwed aptitude
test down the line; Walker is still a statistic in the forty percent unemployed young Kenyans.
And his life has become a
quandary of sorts.
See, lately ‘weird’ stuff have
been happening; like being scheduled to partake in the house chores- a clear
indication his family might be losing patience of his situation. Some family
members have advanced to giving him looks that blatantly ask- ‘what are you
contributing to in this house?’ Just the other day he heard his small sister
sneer from the kitchen, “watu wengine ni kukula tu, hakuna kitu wanafanya.”
(All you do is just eating without making any contribution). Words is the
easiest weapon to destroy a man with, Walker has come to understand.
Walker does not have a hot hand for Sport Pesa bets. And Njoki Chege’s recent rant over sport betting fanatics has left him more devastated than healed. That lady is just a dedicated sadist, he believes.
She is a problem, but the least
one. His priority right now is to restore his ‘dignity’. Income or no income,
he has to. Even if that means creating an illusion.
Walker is not the only person who
‘life out here’ has screwed. There is Tee, also my good friend. Tee has always
gone for the big things in life. You know when we were oriented as freshmen in
campus, the vice chancellor described us as the – crème de la crème of the
society. Tee did not get the memo that, that was just a speech. And speeches
are meant to have sweet lies.
He let the crème de la crème
ideology get into his head. That’s why he rented a house in Donholm and invited
a friend with whom they would share the rental and upkeep costs. Each would
give 5,000 shillings monthly to cater for the rent. From his school of thought
this was easier than ABC…
That time of the month when the
landlord pry’s around knocking on the doors of tenants’ who have not paid up
the rent came. They ran out of lies and it all became clear: That accruing
enough money from hustle, to find enough for sustenance was a lot harder than
he had anticipated. Njoro their landlord had already threatened to lock down
the house and bring in the local administration to deal with them.
So on one fateful night faced
with the stark reality of being humiliated, they decided to disappear from the
house. Yes! Disappear. When everyone was sound asleep each packed their few
important belongings and ran as fast and far as from Donholm as they could. I
mean what do you expect from a man who was best friends with some local police
officers and the chief? That was a dangerous man to have for a landlord to a
rent defaulter.
And that is how my friend Tee,
started a new life in Mombasa.
And then there is me. Me-
Elizabeth.
Of the three of us I was the most
disillusioned.
I believed I was special, shock
on me! Everyone out here is special- everybody believes they have something
extraordinary to bring on the world table.
So being an adult in my father’s
house I have had to re-arrange my priorities. Apart from growing myself as a
writer I have to seriously up my game in preparing ugali. (Yes you heard me
right!). I have seen the way people in the house including my parents savour my
ugali – distracting them from the fact that I don’t contribute to the family’s
upkeep. You think am being paranoid? Look…!
The other day I was in my bedroom
as usual, busy typing my stories from my laptop. Then my dad came by and stood
at the door and in a voice that reeked of suspicion he asked, “What are these
things you do on your laptop?” I almost went defensive,
“Oh no! Am not addicted to
pornography”
then I realized it would not add
me any points. So I began to explain…
“You remember I told you am a
creative writer, well I blog”
The expression on his face had
only one question – “How does it make you money?”
I did not wait for the question,
so I went ahead to give an answer.
I licked my lips, scratched my
head then began to explain,
“there is this thing called
traffic…so corporates'…”
Yes you guessed right! He did not
stay for the whole explanation, he instead left me choosing words carefully to
sound economically correct and proceeded to do more valuable things like having
his four o’clock porridge.
I think he wants me to write a blog post and finish my explanation! (hahaha – this should stay between you and
me.)
Men! Out here is really cold. It
is really hard to find that person who will believe in your skill set and give
you an opportunity to make them money and get yourself a living. But there are
other people, who seem hell-bent to make a hard journey even harder.
The ex-comrades who already have
jobs.
These guys cannot stop posting
photos of themselves at work and captioning them with hashtags – “Work hard
play harder”, “#born to win” “#work tings” (BTW why can’t you just write
‘things’? what does plucking the ‘h’ do for your status?). Thanx to their decisions
I have inadvertently become a serial Facebook liar.
When these jobo comrades spot you
in town, with a hanging face from a failed interview or carrying a load of
envelopes with job application letters, they insist to say hi. Even though they
can clearly see you are dodging them (for obvious reasons), they make sure to
corner you, you exchange uncomfortable grins as they super annoyingly scan you
head to toe; hastily trying to gauge how good you are doing.
And as if that is not torture
enough, they deliver the infamous question
“Unawork wapi siku hizi?”
Then you are forced to either be
courageous enough to say you are still job hunting or lie to dress your
joblessness with witty words like am ‘self-employed and things are just picking
up’. Given the incessant need of human beings to uphold their ego, you choose
the latter. The devil bursts out in laughter while the jobo comrade walks away
feeling accomplished.
But not to worry ex-comrade you
and I are ‘#team ngori’ (sheng for bad-ass team), ‘God’s got us, and we gonn’ be
alright!
Now if you don’t mind excuse me,
because I need to google – how to perfect, perfect ugali?
Wow Elizabeth you always keep it a blaze to the reality.. Best for the best...you run it..keep it real..#Team ngori..kudos
ReplyDelete