Tuesday 1 November 2016

The Lagos of my childhood


I love Lagos, and I have never denied this fact, the love between Lagos and I, is like the love the people of Sapele have for local gin (popularly known as Sapele water). The love I have for this city that never sleeps is stronger than the love my Enugu people have for Okpa, sometimes it gives me goose bumps.
Life in Lagos is theatric, the city is a theatre of absurd, and it is impossible living here and not losing your sanity at intervals for various reasons.
Early morning sleeps were constantly interrupted by call for prayers from a megaphone in a nearby mosque, or the sonorous voice of an “Agege bread seller” announcing the arrival of hot loaves.
Friday nights were wakeful nights, we were held captive by the deafening sound from a 1000 decibel speaker and the shout of fire from the Pentecostal church two blocks away from my house.
While on bus (popularly called “Molue”) one is sandwiched in between stench especially at the close of business.
The city birthed the memory of my boyhood, which transverses across all nooks and crannies in the state.
Growing up in Mushin, in the late nineties was eventful, beautiful memories etched on the sand of time, I remember the week armed robbers wrote us a letter, announcing their coming, we waited anxiously, made bonfire on the street for more than three weeks, we scared them away, lol, they never came, someone later confessed that it was a stunt pulled by some young boys in the neighborhood.
When my age grade who lived in plush neighborhoods like Ilupeju, Maryland and Anthony revered Captain America, Samurai X, Godzilla, Earthworm Jim, Timon and Pumbaa, I revered “Budossa”, I loved him dearly, he was my childhood superhero and fortunately he lived on my street, not many people had the luxury of sharing neighborhood with their superhero.
I felt and ruffled the hair on his body, every morning, before I went to school, I sneak out of the house to pay him obeisance.
His horn was his magic wand; when he was charged up, he unleashed it, sending his opponent to the ground with a force that could crush the panel of a Picanto salon car.

Ogbeni La, the handler of Budossa could place his bet on him and go to bed, he was sure Budossa was going to win any fight, he had unrivalry confidence in him; Budossa never disappointed his supporters unlike Arsenal football club, Budossa was the reigning king, master of hat trick, lord of all rams in Mushin.
Years later, my family relocated to another neighborhood and I remember when I visited and I was told Budossa passed on few years after my family relocated, I was low-spirited for weeks. It is funny how this ram formed the basis of my childhood and growing up years.