Sunday, 9 June 2013

Lagos Hair


I’ve had a bad week.  I was ill on Tuesday and for the rest of the week I felt rather run down.  I have been tired, generally grumpy and look pretty bad.  I have pimples, red skin and my hair is dry as a bone.  I recall the same thing happened to me at this time last year.  It may be something to do with the change in weather; it’s raining all the time but still humid and pretty dusty which is not a nice combination.  Or perhaps it is because I need a break from Lagos.  Summer term ends in four weeks and I get to go home for a while.  I need this rest and recovery and so does my body.

While I’m still here I have to try to keep myself healthy and looking decent enough not to scare the kids I teach so, I try to eat well and do some exercise.  I also try to spend some time outdoors and take some vitamins.  Yesterday, I decided to visit the beauty salon in a bid to rejuvenate and relax.

I went to a new salon called Apples and Oranges on Victoria Island.  It’s really quite a nice place; very modern, very cool and calm.  I had a manicure, pedicure, facial and various other things.  Everything went well and I felt good.  I have tried many salons in and around Ikoyi and VI and I have experienced various bodily disasters, for example, the time I asked someone to tint my eyebrows and ended up looking like I had a large African man’s eyebrows transplanted onto my face.  There is also the time I asked for a straightforward bikini wax and left feeling like a plucked (and violated) chicken. 

After completing all of my treatments and spending most of the afternoon in the salon I decided to ask about getting my hair done.  I had observed a variety of ladies coming and going with lovely hair all afternoon.  Not many places in Lagos are experienced or have the knowledge to cut and style European hair so I usually just wait until I go back to the UK to have my hair cut.  Just like many salons in the UK either have people who can do African hair or they wouldn’t attempt it through lack of experience.  I asked if it was possible to have my hair washed and blow dried.  The woman looked at me in shock and said of course.  She said it was no problem at all.  I trusted them because everything else had gone so well.

Often, in Lagos, people say they can do things when they actually have no idea if they can.  They aim to please and, for whatever reason, cannot say no.  This is characterised by the ‘yes, ma’ answer to everything.  I understand that there are a lot of nasty folks around with too much money and a power complex who get angry at those trying to provide a service for very unimportant reasons and enjoy watching people run around after them.  But, actually claiming to provide a service when the reality is you HAVE NO CLUE is very detrimental to both client and provider.

I sat in the chair.  The guy told me how lovely my hair was and began to wash.  Everything was fine until he started scrubbing my head.  I asked him to be a little gentler and he obliged.  After washing he asked me stand up.  I asked him to use conditioner so he left me for a few minutes and after a heated discussion with another employee came back and proceeded to condition my hair.  After a few minutes we were done.  I resumed my seat in the hairdresser’s chair.

I guess I knew something was amiss when he began to comb my hair.  He couldn’t get through the tugs and knots.  He gave up and started blow drying using his fingers.  No round brushes in sight, which are the type usually used on my hair.  I stopped him after a few minutes as my hair was growing in size and knots and I could hear and feel the strands snapping under his touch.  He was horrified and so was I.  The Nigerian ladies behind me started to giggle and told me it looked like afro hair.  I said politely that I was going to go home and would wash it myself.  The manager came and sat me down again, insisting that he had to brush it out.  After another ten minutes of pain and snapping and humiliation I got up and left.  I didn’t take my anger out on the guy who washed my hair but let loose a little on the receptionist who had assured me they could do it.  It turned out they had washed my hair with products for African hair. 

Today is Sunday and I have just washed my tresses for the ninth time.  It still feels like there is a tonne of oil in it and I can hardly get a brush through it.  My plan for R and R didn’t really work out.  I’m still stressed and run down but now have giant, greasy hair to add to my list of complaints.

Another Lagos lesson learnt I guess. 

Monday, 27 May 2013

Thursday, 11 April 2013

Being Reckless

When we are young we jump into the pool whether we can swim or not.  We have no fear.  Either we swim or we drown.

Before the age of thirty important things begin to shape the rest of our lives.

The first is:
We become aware of ourselves and our own thinking.  We reach the age of reason.

The second is:
In our new found maturity we begin to think in a more adult way.  We become grown up.

Recklessness and risk are not compatible with age.  Risk becomes something which must be carefully considered.

Paul Arden

Monday, 1 April 2013

The Trap Door Theory



I meet new people all the time.  Traveling and living away from home forces you to be open and take opportunities to make connections and new friends as they come along.  The introduction of new people into your life can be very rewarding but it also comes with its emotional risks.  I like to think of everyone as having a trap door.

Yes, you read correctly.  This is a little theory I have about letting people into your life. 

We meet new people every day; we interact, talk, deal and make minor adjustments to ourselves and our lives daily.  Not all the people we come across will bring forward their trap door and many interactions will have no significant effect on us at all.

However, every so often, a person with a trap door comes along.  A person whom, should you fall into or step onto their trap door, will have an effect on your life in some significant way.  Once a door is open you can jump in, fall in or run in the other direction.  Whether you jump through with enthusiasm, fall clumsily, edge sideways with caution or slide uncontrollably, once in – the door closes and cannot be opened again for you.  No matter what happens, good or bad, you can’t go back.  If you walk away from the trap door then you will remain the same but never know what was in there.

Furthermore, each and every trap door changes you.  Whether a trap door represents friendship, love, lust, a means to an end or hate even; it’s going to change you in some way. 

Some trap doors are huge and easy to fall into; others are small and relatively easy to negotiate a choice with.

I see these trap doors in the image of my favourite childhood television programme – ‘The Trap Door’.  This probably goes a long way in explaining why I’m eternally single.  Ha ha. 

On a serious note – it is important to see these trap doors as opportunities.  Be wary and take some weapons with you but jump in feet first and enjoy the ride.  That is my philosophy from now on.

Thursday, 28 March 2013

Moral Corruption



Nigeria is morally corrupt.  To try to explain the true depth of the corruption in this place to someone who has never visited Lagos, would be like describing Mozart’s 1785 Piano Concerto to someone who has never seen a piano.  This analogy is really too pretty to be used to describe the scheming, stinking hypocrisy I’m about to share with you but you get the picture.

I was naïve when I arrived at the security gate in Murtala Mohammed Airport the first time, I caught glimpses of the ‘I’m out for myself’ attitude as I meandered through my first month or two here.  I was able to forgive people for accepting bribes and paying bribes and forever changing prices because they were a means to an end in the context of Lagos living.  I forgave many sins because I thought poverty excused them.  People are poor and have no choice but to make the most of a situation in a country whose government gives back nothing was my tag line.

I have changed.  It is this acceptance and excuse conjuring towards corruption, permeating all levels of Nigerian society, which is EXACTLY the problem.  Everyone accepts day to day corruption and, although they may not like it they accept it; even when it is startlingly obvious and unfair.  It is the norm.

The parking attendant making an extra twenty pence by extorting a bribe from impatient drivers has the same attitude as the President who condones the ultimate sin of bribery in the oil, electricity and import/export industries – effectively keeping the fat cats fat and everyone else in poverty, darkness and desperation.  No one takes any responsibility; people bribe, accept bribes and pay bribes in every which way you can imagine.  A side effect of this is that everybody is suspicious, unforgiving and pessimistic towards others.

Individuals in Nigeria literally own billions of pounds; they make thousands every day that they are alive but do absolutely nothing to help the plight of starving villages, people living in days of darkness or the deaths of babies born into impoverished, devastated families.  The rich don’t care, and so the cycle continues all the way down the class ladder to the poorest people:  The Oga of an extremely poor fishing village uses a charitable donation to secure a water tank and DSTV aerial for his house only (the only house in the village might I add), the raffle prize ticket picker who only adds the names of his friends and family to the box, the facilities manager who on receiving a substantial dash from a happy contractor to share with his pitifully paid team – keeps it to himself.

There is no ‘for the greater good’, there is no charity and there is no way Nigeria can grow economically or socially to become the successful and powerful African nation it should be until Joe Blogs on the street makes a stand and takes responsibility for others as well as himself.

The politics of corruption are so truly fucked up here it is actually too depressing for words.  The underlying agendas and deceit are truly too sprawling and impenetrable to comprehend, especially as a foreigner.

Of course, there are exceptions to the rules in Nigeria.  You have to take every situation as it comes.  For example, I always give money to children if they tap on my car window but only small notes as I don’t want them to get beaten by their brothers and sisters for a big note.  Also I recently read about Aliko Dangote, the Nigerian cement magnate and billionaire.  He established a humanitarian foundation in 1993 and has helped many.

I am aware of the situation in Nigeria, as you can see from my rant BUT I’m regularly told I’m too naïve.  This is because instead of being pessimistic and hating, I refuse to change my attitude towards people here.  Everyone, in my eyes, has a chance to be good and straight and morally above the water line. 

I try to meet everyone with an open mind and I try to give everyone the benefit of the doubt.  I take people seriously, I listen to peoples’ stories and I don’t immediately suspect ulterior motives.  I also don’t pay bribes (anymore), I don’t try to jump the queue at the airport and I don’t cut corners by flashing cash at people.  
 
Optimism, positive interactions and a stand against the ‘all about me’ indoctrination will make a difference eventually.

Phew . . . . . . . . . rant over.


Thursday, 28 February 2013

Dawg Sitting



A couple I met here, Iain and Judie, got me very drunk one night and talked me into caring for their two dogs while they vacationed in Malaysia for a month.  I enthusiastically agreed and thought that staying in their handsome, old Victoria Island home would be much more fun than living in my pokey apartment.  I made all arrangements while under the influence of about a gallon of my favourite Shiraz.  

Despite waking the next day with a hint of regret I embraced the house swap.  I met the dogs and we were a match.  They have a large garden so don’t require much walking and the live in maid basically takes care of them.  I’m just around to keep them company.  I moved in one week ago and have been quite comfortable.  

The dogs are great and I feel like I have a couple of companions while completing my work in the evenings.  They laze around on ‘their’ couches most of the day and let me know when they need the loo, water, snacks etc.  I have also embraced the house.  I’ve been cooking more in the large, well-stocked kitchen – which makes a change to my student-esque fridge.  I had a successful dinner party and I’ve slept like a baby every night.  The house lacks a pool but I can nip back to my place for that at the weekends.

The house is an Addax Oil house so is very secure.  It’s gated and has a security office, radio link to the company and large, reinforced security doors externally and internally.  It’s strange though that I feel safer in my wee place, which has less security but more people around generally.  If I lived in the house permanently I think I would end up feeling rather stranded, as if on my own little island perhaps.  It makes me wonder if this is the experience of other expats in Lagos.

Wednesday, 27 February 2013

Tune In, Tune Out

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120508-why-your-brain-loves-to-tune-out

Amazing little experiment and article which makes me feel like like I have a turbo charged, evolutionary miracle in my head.  I must remember to eat more oily fish - keep the old thing turning.