ktravula – a travelogue!

reflections on the world

Browsing ktravula – a travelogue! blog archives for the day Saturday, August 15th, 2009.

Why Do I Blog?

I have also thought about the possibility of not being able to enjoy myself that much if I spend all the time observing the things around me. I have since resolved that conflict in favour of my curious mind, and my restless keyboard fingers. The main reason I can think of at this moment as cold air seeps in gently from the vent in my University hostel room is that I want to be able to remember all the remarkable things that happened to me on this first trip to the United States. There was the book “America their America” by the Nigerian poet J.P.Clark which resulted from his first trip to the country sometimes in the 60s. There have also been very many other sources of second-hand information about America which have for a long while conditioned the way I respond to the thoughts of the country. The perceptions are as diverse as the citizens of America themselves, and you could never successfully put them under one description. Another poet, Remi Raji wrote his collection of poems, “Shuttlesongs America” after a successful first trip. The musician Gbenga Adeboye landed in Nigeria and did not waste a second before releasing his blockbuster album “Exposure” which detailed his itinerary. So, here I am.

Here, Lin tries to teach me Chinese by showing me how to draw the signs

Here, Lin tries to teach me Chinese by showing me how to draw the signs

It did not occur to me for several weeks before I travelled that I would begin an online travelogue because it never seemed real enough to believe that I was actually going to land here. The visa interview lasted 5 minutes max, and my visa was ready in less than 48 hours, and even while I got it right in my hands, seeing myself on the sheet of paper that permitted me to enter the United States, I didn’t feel any serious jolt that was reported to accompany such as an achievement. On the one hand, it was the result of a conditioned indifference to everything and anything. On the other hand, I just didn’t believe it, and many times, especially during the last stretch of the flight from London Heathrow to Boston Logan, I had to stop myself from asking someone to pinch my skin just to be sure that it was indeed me sitting on a plane that now soared above a portion of the earth called North America, making a final descent.

Signs

Now all my friends advised me to start a blog. Some said keep a journal/notebook, and write the things that strike you, but make sure you write something down. I now look back, and thank them for those pieces of advice. They were the main force behind my deciding to put the first words down. As soon as I did that, the rest sort of came out on their own. I am now rounding off my Orientation Programme at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. Yesterday, we had a tour of the city, and we were able to do some shopping while meeting with the Lt. Governor of the State. Today is the Farewell Banquet and Dance, and we are all going to sing and dance to music from all over the world, socialize, exchange email addresses, and then go pack our bags again for another journey to our various parts of the United States to put into use all the things we’ve learnt.

My computer has just underlined the word “learnt”. It has suggested that I use “learned” instead. I have re-read this piece from the top and noticed similar underlinings at “travelled” and “Programme”. This is surely one of the things I will now have to adjust to in the next couple of months, alongside stop signs, weather readings, pizza, burritos, extralarge hamburgers, light beer and Starbucks decafinated coffee.

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What Would I Have Done Without MTN?

Me, with the nightline of Providence right behind me. Who could tell it was almost 8pm

Me, with the nightline of Providence right behind me. Who could tell it was almost 8pm

A couple of days after I landed, I discovered something that could have been a downside to the advantages I had enjoyed from my home service provider, MTN, since I touched down in Heathrow, and then Boston: I could be called from home, just like I was there. People who usually “flashed” my phone from Lagos and Ibadan kept doing so like I never left, and I sometimes wondered if I really was in the United States. Telemarketers from Nigeria kept sending me their text messages asking me to either open a bank account, advertise on NaijaRocks or watch the m-repporter show on Channels TV. Those who called me at midnight did so too, and that was welcome because by the time it was 12.30am in Nigeria, it was just 7.30pm here, and I could pick the call. (I know, this is not a perk I could rely on forever. I will be back home someday to resume that cycle of sleeplessness.)

Shopping at Radio Shack

Shopping at Radio Shack

Two days ago, a family member called me to ask where I had left the keys to the house well.
An unknown number from MTN sent me a “Please Call Me. I love you” message.
An old classmate invited me to her wedding taking place on 12th September, oblivious of my current immigrant status.
My mother (God bless her) sent a N750 MTN credit to me from her mobile phone. I loaded it first, then sent an email to my sister to let her know that I couldn’t possibly call back, but the money was appreciated. I am now able to send emails on my phone as well, even though I still can’t call back. (Thank you T-Mobile/MTN).

My most interesting discovery now is the fact that I could be sure that a particular close friend of mine (Bless you Omote me) will always call me between 11am and 12noon Nigerian time to say HI. What she probably does not know is that if not for her calls, I’d probably still be sleeping and snoring from all the tour and busy schedules of the previous day, and all the jetlag, and then miss breakfast or any other interesting activity for the day. She has almost now become my wake-up call.

MTN – Everywhere you go!
(Just like that friggn mosquito)

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American First Impressions

Me, and Lin, a fellow FLTA from China

Me, and Lin, a fellow FLTA from China

I’ve been thinking about describing America in one word. I am failing. There are too many first impressions and so diverse a people to push into one word. But constrained to describe America from the little outlook I now have from Providence, Rhode Island, I’d go for “Life” – that is, a country where the most conspicuous attribute is its constantly beating heart. Here are a few of the photos from downtown Providence city mall.

Noodles, fried chicken, grilled chicken and mushrooms - An american meal

Noodles, fried chicken, grilled chicken and mushrooms - An american meal

The meals are as diverse as the people. There is a spending culture that is quite infectious. The first dilemma a new visitor faces is choosing a meal that is satisfactory. So far, I’ve been lucky.

Borders

Borders

BORDERS is an amazing bookshop where you could pick a book out of the shelf and spend your whole day reading it within the cafe without anyone coming to tap you on the shoulder asking when you’ll return it, or whether you intend to pay for it soon. I have come across some other amazing bookstores here. The Brown University bookshop is well equiped and also allows for visitors to take their books and read, as long as you don’t attempt to go out with them.

I hear this is Obama's brand

I hear this is Obama's brand

Don’t believe everything you hear about Bud Light. It’s nothing compared to the bite or strength of the Nigerian Star or even Harp. I even wonder why they call it a beer when something like ginger ale would have been close enough. No, I’m kidding. But when I say it isn’t as strong as Star or Harp, believe me. I still wonder why they require identification and proof of age before they sell it to customers. Even if you couldn’t tell from faces who is eighteen and who is not, it might have saved them all the trouble by decreeing that whomever chose to drink this Bud Light is exempted from such restriction. They could drink a whole crate and still be fit enough to walk on a tight rope across a deep stream without falling in! Oh well, maybe this exaggeration is not needed, but I hope you get the idea. A more detailed post of that interesting experience of the city is coming soon. Watch out for a post on the amazing Apple shop, and why I may not own an Apple iPhone/product soon.

This travula must sleep. Now. It has been a very long day.

Signs is it.

Signs is it.

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Mosquito!

Yea, I want to tell you about mosquitos. If you are reading this from Nigeria, you might want to skip forward.

Now, why would anybody breathing the air of Providence, Rhode Island in the United States of America ever have to think of the insect, or ever have to title a blog post after the mosquito? Well, you are about to find out. Like listening to a good story, you will have to be patient to the end.

Providence from Above: Google Earth.

I have once considered a house in Bariga, Lagos Nigeria where a brother used to stay as the headquarters of mosquito colonies in Nigeria, and here’s why. They never died. They never left. And with all the numerous insecticides and mosquito sprays that my brother bought and sprayed the house with, all it needed was for you to go to bed, and the mosquitos came right back, out to get you: their singular purpose. It didn’t matter whether you had a covering or that the fan was running at the highest speed. They will get you and your skin will be full of blisters and marks when you wake up the following morning. It was the same in many houses in Lagos where I had laid my head, and I had long given up on being ever able to stay away from malaria infection at least once every six months, when I am lucky.

However, in the last couple of months, in my preparation for America, I had been sleeping under a mosquito treated net. With this net, all mosquitoes died immediately after making contact with it, and the person who slept inside it was safe and sound. If it wasn’t treated for mosquitoes, it still served as a net to keep out the intruding blood-suckers who were the main malaria vectors. In making sure that I didn’t bring malaria into the United States, I also gave myself a complete Atemisin Combination Therapy (a full dose of Artesunat and some other strong malaria medication, to give your body a complete malaria fumigation) and rested assured that I had nothing to scare my American hosts with. While on the American Airlines flight from Heathrow to Boston, I had about a half-hour discussion with someone about malaria, and what I came off with was a confirmation of what I had heard about the American dread of the disease, and their surprising ignorance about its spread and characteristics. Was it contagious? Did you get it by shaking hands with someone who had malaria? etc. I took time to explain and hoped that I had set his mind at rest that Malaria was not like Ebola or Leprosy which was spread by touch or any human bodily contact. It was a common disease all right, but with the right medication taken rightly, you’d be fine in no time.

An American Mosquito

So, here I am now, just returning from a very fulfilling trip round the city of Providence. We had met the Lieutenant Governor of the State, toured the Mall, bought some nice things, ate some nice stuff, and are now just getting down from the bus in front of the University Inn when something pinched me hard on the back of my hand. The pinch was familiar but it took me some time before I adjusted to the now shocking reality that a mosquito was indeed on my hand, sucking me out. It didn’t wait for me to get into my room. It had attacked me in the presence of my fellow scholars from Spain and Germany, and as I was not prepared to accept defeat, I reacted in a way only a Nigerian could, and defeated the blood-sucking demon. Now who would have thought that after flying for thousands of miles to escape away from the heat and troubles of deadly malaria in Nigeria, one of these suckers would still trace me down and actually find me here in Providence, RI? I may be screwed. It’s a good thing I came here with some more of those malaria medication from Nigeria. Time to get back to swallowing. By the way, did you hear the story of the Fulbright FLTA students from Nigeria that were delayed for five hours at the airport in the United States (some two years ago, I think) for telling the Customs Officer that they had brought “drugs from Nigeria” in their bags to deal with Malaria? The Customs Officer would not have batted an eyelid had they said they brought “malaria medication” instead. Drugs are another matter entirely.

Why did you think the mosquito was able to trace me down here. Was it my colour? Maybe. Was the mosquito racist? Maybe not. I think it must be because of all the personal information I’ve been sharing out on my blog lately. Darn Google Earth!

Update: More information about the American Mosquito here, since it will take convincing some Nigerians that mosquitoes are not native to their country.

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