It is easy to get carried
away especially when there is applause; easy to get comfortable and never want
to leave. In fact the echoes of applause that have since stopped can continue in
one’s head so that you are not able to tell whether people love or are just
tolerating you. Mugabe would advise otherwise, but I seek the face of Mandela
in this matter.
I have offended a few
people while writing the “How To” series. Yesterday, a pretty rosy-cheeked
French expatriate struggled to tell me in imperfect but sweet English how one
of the articles, “How to be an expatriate” ‘hurt’ her. And I, with carefully
enunciated words, explained that this was only satire and that although it left
a bitter taste on her pink lips, I meant to describe only a certain type of
expatriate.
For all my friends foreign
and local who have felt offended by this series, I beg that they should not
allow common articles interfere with our glorious hustle. I am young. And many
times foolish. Forgive me.
Some of the articles have
resonated with a lot of people, like “How to worship the Nigerian
god”. Thousands of people read and shared that article and I received many
lovely messages of appreciation (and a few condemning me to the hottest parts
of hell). I will say that it was this article that God used to bless the hustle
of the series, drawing readers from around the world, spreading this gospel
from Austria to South Africa.
At some points, some people
tried to truncate my hustle. When I wrote “How to be angry”, I got a curious
passive-aggressive call at night from someone who claimed to be calling from
the Government House of Kaduna State. The fellow called to “set the record
straight”. That same week a writer had been kidnapped in Abuja. Understandably,
I panicked and alerted a lot of my journalist friends. I didn’t sleep at home
that night. God will judge that man appropriately.
I
thank all those who syndicated the series or even just put it up on blogs (and
acknowledged the source). I thank especially Daily Times Nigeria and Cheta
Nwanze with whom this hustle started. I thank Y!Naija and Chude Jideonwo who
always said yes to me when I needed a favor. I thank my dear friend Carmen
McCain who saved my readers from embarrassing mistakes, for always being there
when I needed a second eye; for always being there. Many thanks to Mirella
Mahlstein Ajibade, for giving me some of the great ideas that produced some of
the most popular articles; for being my bouncing board (and sometimes lab rat).
Malinda Seneviratne, the
kind Sri Lankan editor of The Nation who took an interest in my work and showed
my articles to Sri Lanka: God bless your Sri Lankan hustle.
A few people have flattered me by acknowledging me
in their own original “How to” articles. Joke Ajibola even mentioned my name in
the title of her brilliant “How to be a witness to injustice”. She didn’t have
to, but it was nice. God will bless her hustle.
I hope that many more people will write satire
whether following the “How to” style or otherwise. The stage is big enough for
everyone.
After over 40 “How to” articles and so much love, I
must leave. The evil spirit of Mugabe at this time reminds me of the many I
have not done, “How to be a police officer”, “How to be a doctor”, “How to be a
mother-in-law”… it beckons me to stay and keep at it. I say, “Get behind me
Mugabe!”
Hopefully, the entire series will be made into a
little book and you can all go buy it and further bless my hustle.
This is how to leave the stage. When you are still
loved, sometime before you are chased off with boos and bags of pure water. To
the thousands of people who have made this possible: may God meet you at the
point of your needs and immensely bless your hustle!

