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From Halloween

IMG_1104The Halloween weekend went without incident, mostly because I later found out that it was seen mostly as a holiday for children and not for serious adults. I noticed this kind of indifference early enough in my apartment from my flatmates who had promised not to leave the front light on – a sign for the roaming kids that the house was closed for trick-or-treating. On Friday, I had gone into town late in the evening with a friend, and noticed how creatively many houses decorated their front porches with skeletons, ghouls and other scary stuff, including carved pumpkins with lights in them. There were kids on the road going to different houses in little plastic bags searching for candy. On their heels were parents and older ones who, as I was told, were there to keep their wards/siblings safe from prowling pranksters or children kidnappers. According to my friend, it wasn’t always like this. “Growing up in the 70s, there was not much in the news about kidnappings and the likes like we have today, and it wasn’t because the country was any safer, but because the news circuit was not as paranoid.” She said. “We went out at night trick-or-treating, and came back at dawn, alone and without our parents, and it was much more fun.”

280920091447At her own house, where she lives with her mother, a professor from the University, the front porch light was also turned off, and the only glow outside were two carved lighted pumpkins. We rang the doorbell and she went to hide behind one of the shrubs while I put up the shrillest imitation of children as soon as her mother approached the door from inside the house, and said “trick-or-treat!” If she was amused by our prank as soon as she opened the door, I couldn’t notice it as much as I saw her urgency to return to the basement where she was working on the computer. In short, I could say that for many people with even a modicum of maturity, especially those without preteen children, Halloween has become nothing but just a weekend of lights and irritating kids.

On Saturday was the Halloween parade at downtown Edwardsville, arguably the biggest celebration for the day. According to legend, it features a parade of the craziest costumes in the area. I had put the parade in my plans since earlier in the week, but when the time came, nature played it tricks-or-treat on my ailing flesh. I did not treat myself to a good sleep for hours preceding the parade, and my body tricked me into sleep. But wait, that was not why I didn’t go.  Here is a better excuse: It was cold, and I couldn’t ride downtown in the inclement weather. Ben could have driven us there, Mafoya and I (who had made the plan together), but Ben himself was at St. Louis at the time, so we had no choice but to stay indoors and wait for news from those who went.

IMG_1089In the end, the news wasn’t so enticing anyway. The parade started late, the costumes were not so spectacular, and it was too dark to take good pictures. So there. The only pictures I will boast of from the All Saints Weekend were the ones I took some days before then, while messing around with an old mask. And of course with the large witch hat that I tried on while at Prof Rudy’s house on Sunday. His wife had worn it in the house during their bridge-playing session, and was gracious enough to lend me for a few seconds photo opportunity. She looked better in it though, and I wish I could put up her picture instead of mine. But without her permission, how could I? I think the main reason why I didn’t eventually dress up as a Pirate of the Carribbean was because I didn’t do my shopping early enough. And by the time I got to Khol’s on Friday, all they had were children’s costumes, and the workers looked at me strangely when I asked them if they had anything for adults to wear on Halloween. Oh well,  I’m not a kid anymore. Or am I?

New Camera

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No, not okay.

Grumbles!

10 Reasons Why I Hate The Cold Weather

30092009146910. It lasts for too long. I’ve been here since August, and from what I hear, it will get colder and colder until March.

9. It has cost me a fortune in buying coats, gloves, and boots, hats and shawls that I might not need anymore by the time I leave here in the spring.

8. It has a way of showing me out of a crowd. Wearing three shirts and a sweater, it’s never hard to pick me out of a crowd, especially when everyone else is wearing just one shirt and jeans each, and some in shorts.

7. I have to take hot baths every day.

6. It is windy, and often unpredictable.

5. It keeps me in bed longer.

4. It has dried up my skin, and now my palms look like a snake changing skins. I also think I’m getting fairer complexioned.

3. It’s unavoidable, inescapable. Being claustrophobic. I know that there will be a time when it will make me feel like I’ve been stacked in a cold freezer, with nowhere to go, and it will feel like the end of the world. What will I do then?

2. It will soon prevent me from riding my bike when it starts snowing, or typing blog posts when I have to wear gloves all day.

1. Nobody seems to have anything else to say to me when I broach the topic other than: “Oh no, this is not cold yet. Wait until a few weeks/months time.”


Watch out for 10 reasons why I Love The Cold Weather

Q & A from America

ktravula attempts to answer a few questions from America that he’s been asked more than once.

#10.

Q: How did you learn to speak English (so well)?

A: English is (one of) Nigeria’s national language(s). It was brought by the British along with colonialism and Christianity, and we’ve all been speaking it since (before) the 19th Century. It has developed a particularly Nigerian character over time, and the word flashing in Nigeria (among others words that have changed meaning) doesn’t refer to when a man/woman opens his/her clothes very fast to reveal a naked body or their genitals underneath in an effort to shock or be rude. Refer to this article.

#9.

Q: Were you very traumatised as a kid because of the war and military dictatorships in Nigeria when you were growing up? Do you have nightmares?

A: No. It’s funny that I wasn’t traumatised, but I do remember being very afraid of people in military uniforms while I was growing up. The war ended at least a decade before I was born so I didn’t know much about that either. It was bad at some point, but it wasn’t as horrible as it was broadcast in the West. I definitely do not have nightmares. Not about soldiers anyway.

#8.

Q: Do/Did you have a girlfriend back home?

A: Yes.

#7.

Q: What do you like most about the US?

A: People give you your space. Individuality is very much respected, as well as community, whenever it’s called for.

#6.

Q: Is this your first time in the US?

A: Yes.

#5.

Q:What has been your most notable observation about the US?

A: The abundance of ironies, the expanse of land, and the ubiquity of signs.

#4.

Holly

Holly R. is an artist who lives in a country cottage in Edwardsville. She is also a tennis instructor in a high school in St. Louis.

I first met her in church on Sunday last week, and since the first time she walked in to sit on the seat right in front of me, something told me that she would be an intriguing personality. I was drawn to her. She surely didn’t look like every other person in church on that day. She looked like a combination of a little nervousness, and a little out of placeness.  After the service, Rudy introduced us and we exchanged contacts. Rudy had introduced us to almost the whole congregation actually, since everyone wanted to know who we were and where we were from. In the evening of the day, I got a first email from her. We have been in touch since then, mostly through email.