Pretty woman in my rear view; in the spotless, silver Corolla; digging deeply in your nostrils; checking out what you produce. You're the reason I don't look back often enough. When the traffic moved along, it took you ten seconds to note; you were balling up your goo.
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Sunday, October 28, 2012
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Open Barbecue in the City of Accra
In broad daylight, last Friday, on the ceremonial street at animated Nima, Birdie and I saw a group of muscled men singeing a whole cow-carcass with a blow torch and scorching the pavement black.
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Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Vacuity!!!
2012! It bewilders me, and I cannot say
which vexes me more – the superstitious teachers or the benighted varmint. The
ones have zilch to teach because they need a lamp too. The others are a
stupendously sorry sight: ignorant, petty, perishing, future-less.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
How I Stumbled Upon Blogging
In 2008, Accra was
a jaded jamboree. I preferred to float in bed and fantasise about far-flung frolicsome
places. I had happened on ‘personal websites’ without knowing their sexy name -
blog. Then, my friend, Sandra, introduced me her blog. I was besotted three times over. A poet in
hibernation, I dusted off my skills and became a seeker of ‘second sight’: that
hallowed ‘hang’ to see extraordinary sights in everyday scenes. To experience
and describe Accra’s rich, deep and colourful layers of sights, sounds, smells
and tastes in a unique way. Blogging has given me a novel, vibrant city that’s all my very
own.
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
The Fluid Traffic Lights in the City of Accra
I've heard it said about prisons, mental-health institutions and toilets. Now I add traffic lights. You can tell how civilised a country is by how its drivers mind the traffic lights (and traffic circles).
Five or six years ago, a friend and I saw a Nigerian businessman do a jaw-drop when visiting Accra for the first time. "They actually obey the lights?" He asked. He said the lights were useless décor back in his country. We had a sneaky suspicion that he was self-deprecating too hard.
That kind Nigerian gentleman; he visited five years too soon. Every morning at the Regimanuel traffic lights on the Spintex Road, I barely hang on to dear life after three 'Hail Marys' and four near misses.
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone
Five or six years ago, a friend and I saw a Nigerian businessman do a jaw-drop when visiting Accra for the first time. "They actually obey the lights?" He asked. He said the lights were useless décor back in his country. We had a sneaky suspicion that he was self-deprecating too hard.
That kind Nigerian gentleman; he visited five years too soon. Every morning at the Regimanuel traffic lights on the Spintex Road, I barely hang on to dear life after three 'Hail Marys' and four near misses.
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Racing with Cyclists in the City of Accra
My heart turns cartwheels
every time I see a cyclist’s thirty-second madness. Pumping pedals to race your
car, they’re in the lead for twenty seconds. Then you’re level...edge past... whiz ahead. Ten seconds scrape by; they surrender; admission of no catch-up chance.
It’s the human spirit in the race of life.
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