IT IS NOT PEER PRESSURE, 30 IS SHEER PRESSURE.
Age is just a number until 30 is
at the horizon. I know you want me to talk of celebrated icons like Mark
Zuckerberg who was already breaking the weighing scales with his
multi-billion-dollar income before turning thirty. You would also ask me to
talk about celebrities in the music industry, sports arena and young upcoming
entrepreneurs. Well, I have talked about them and I am justified now to proceed
to talk about the me type.
My life before the crush stage
(crush to mean the place where cattle are immobilized) was always full of
passionate adventure, the deep sense of humour, rich feeling of belonging and
self-identity, desire for class and fashion, aggressive appetite and arching
desire for attention. When I was below this age bracket of 25-30, I was
inconsiderate about the changing times and dawning realities. It was always
fun, group activities and events, hike, party and unity. I managed to have been
in a well-paying career that pushed me two years into the dreaded bracket.
Then everything happened. All at
once. No more place to wake up every morning to work. No more assurance of
income at the end of the month. No more attention from the people I used to
meet every day. No more treating my friends at the end of the week. No more
long calls and long promises to my folks back at home. No more humongous bucket
of shopping to carry home. No more passionate night outs and no more promising
people that I will be there for you. It was my favourite statement.
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| I hope! I hope! I hope... |
Instead, I am lonely. Secluded by
reality. Held in the bondage of my own disbelief. Like a jailbird who has just
been released, going through his available options is what I always go through.
Nothing makes sense anymore. The appetite for meals is fast fading away, the
aroma that was once a factor in my life feels nothing. The only friendly aroma
is the one emanating from my armpits. Fashion and class are so last year and
even the choice of colour is becoming obsolete.
I step out of my cocoon to look
for a job, the remaining business venture that I have invested the little
savings in and the one that I woke up every day to ensure that I have completed
the tasks before me. The job opportunities are becoming the like magnetic pole
like mine. I move closer it moves away in equal measure of distance. Every
opportunity is scampering for its dear life when it is me and it, face to face.
The email has turned to be like my house. Am always inside the inbox room, then
sent box room then compose room. The number of words that I have written in
emails alone supersedes the number of characters I wrote down in all my KCSE
papers. Nothing seems to work.
Back at home, the peasant farmers parents
are absolutely aware that their son is still working in the city and is
occupied by work. He has not shown up at home for the past 6 months or so
because of his busy schedule. How can I start explaining to my parents that I
was fired? How will they comprehend their son who was working in a mzungu
company is broke and tarmacking on the streets? How will they reveal to the
villagers the sad news to overwrite the praises they have been talking about me
in the village airwaves and frequencies? I tried telling someone else and the
best words that came out of her is that when I had money, I never look beyond
my nose. She was right but right now I don’t care.
I have tried reviving my hobbies
in vain. I have tried doing something new like watch football. It feels good to
be in the midst of a crowd who are cheering but it breaks my heart that I still
feel lonely in their midst. I have changed my taste of liquor to go for cheap
ones provided it restores my smile to the strangers back and feels that
sweetness of smiling once again.
Taking a stroll in the streets is
a much humiliating endeavour. The looks from the people pierce through my body and rest in the heart. Immediately everyone seems a mind reader or a seer
who can foretell what I am about to do. The noise, the crowd and the haste that
the city dwellers are having scares me the most. I pity the beggars and wished
I could help or join them do what they are doing. I get bothered by Boda Boda,
touts and hawkers. Nothing is fun anymore in places I used to love walking by.
I am only alive because the
heartbeat has not let me go. My energy barrels are fast running dry and my
thinking capabilities are fast taken over by resentful feelings. I have no
effort to argue anymore. I have developed shock absorbers against any blame and
I feel nothing anymore when accused. My sexual appetite is fading away and my
eyes are almost giving up on holding on. I no longer have the energy to catch
up with social media and check on my social friends. I will use Atwoli’s words,
‘Sina nguvu, sina uwezo’
Advises are so blunt and
motivational words are thorns that never wish to leave the heart. Discussions
topics are diminishing in your list like dew during the sunrise. The list of my
friends suddenly dropped to zero. I guess they were volatile or I never had one.
Everyone seems busy to give you a listening ear. The events I have attended is
packed with energetic youngsters who threatens my existence. It feels odd being
around. When you speak everyone ask where you work, and the best answer is a
smile with a gallop of water to irrigate the drying throat. Then you walk away
smiling.
I was told not to look at the
past. It is a piece of blunt advice. I look back at what I have done and it
gives me the consolation that I fought a good fight. There was no other way I would
have done to avoid my current predicament. I fought a good fight. I provided
refuge to a lot of friends who shamelessly walked away when I needed them the
most. They made decisions to abandon me as quickly as winking an eye. I have
been there for a lot of people but right now I can’t recall one, or maybe they
don’t recall. We fought a good fight.
The death of Bob Collymore came as
a surprise. Not because I knew him personally or because he impacted my life in
a unique way. His life was worth a million times and the company would have
paid millions to see him back. I suddenly wish I would have taken his condition
and die because I was subdued by an incurable monster than to die of indecision
and frustration.
I have given up in a lot of things
and the last giving up that is corking is giving up on myself. But before that
time comes and while I still hear my heartbeat constantly beating louder, I
will remain to hope. I will make that new plan again today because yesterday’s
is gone. I will take another round in the normal streets to look for a job and
smile to strangers. I will wake up every morning to check my mail and peruse
through fuzu and star classifieds. I will add another ingredient to my business
plan and write an article for this and that.
I will stick to Morgan Freeman phrase
that he used when he was having a recap of 2018. I hope. I hope. ‘I hope.’...

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