Wednesday, 10 August 2011
LIVING IN NIGERIA- from the eyes of a British person while London's burning..??
He wrote this piece in his blog and considering what is happening in London right now, I mean the riots, I couldnt help but share it....
Routine Life
I have now been in Nigeria for over 7 months, and things are going pretty well. The depression of the first few weeks are now but a distant memory and time is passing quickly. Like in all hardship postings, you need to quickly get into a routine to get through the days and stop time dragging, and that’s pretty much what I have done. In case anyone is wondering what a typical day in the Nigerian oil business looks like, here it is.
I am woken up at stupid o’clock by some b*stard cockerel which lives on the undeveloped plot beside by apartment building. It belongs to a family of somewhere between 10 and 15 members who have built themelves a shack for sleeping in but conduct pretty much the rest of their lives outside on the dirt ground. Dawn breaks in Lagos at about 6am, whereas this damned bird kicks off its racket at about 4:30am, every single morning. It’s the only thing I’ve seen in Nigeria that is early. I have not seen any shop selling air rifles in Lagos, and an AK-47 is too inaccurate, so I have been unable to silence it. Instead, I have taken to putting in ear-plugs for the last hour or so of sleep after I’ve been woken up. So really, my day starts at 4:30am.
At 6am I leap out of bed, remove the ear-plugs, and jump in the shower. Fortunately, the water is reliable and hot, which makes a change from Sakhalin in two aspects. Having squashed any ants which are wandering around my wash basin, making off with the soap, I have a shave and get dressed. Fortunately you don’t need to dress too smartly here. Working amongst the French, you soon realise that wearing anything Lacoste is considered smart (or at least patriotic), and no Frenchman will ever tell a Brit to go home and change out of his Lacoste polo shirt. So, getting dressed isn’t half as fiddly as it sounds.
I eat breakfast, which consists of cereal mixed with ants (for added protein). I then go downstairs past the snoozing halfwit who doubles as a security guard and hand the keys of my car to my driver, who lives in another time zone and had to get up an hour before he went to bed in order to be at my place at 6:45am. Having a driver in Lagos is not a sign of wealth or class, it is a sign that you are not insane enough to try to negotiate traffic which is more dense and less organised than a cattle stampede in which local miscreants ram the cars of white drivers in order to extort compensation monies. Besides, timewise, your driver is not paid to drive. He is paid to snooze in your vehicle once he has found a parking space – which is usually in the playground of a nearby school, or on a pavement somewhere – and wait 10 hours for you to go home. Anyway, I leave the compound (yes, we live in compounds. For those who think this is something we shouldn’t be doing, try living wherever you do without a front door for a year. This would be an act of equivalent stupidity.) at 6:45am and settle down in the back seat to read a book for the next half an hour, during which we will cover the 4km between my residence and the office. I try to concentrate on the pages and ignore the blaring horns, suicidal motorcyle taxis drivers with their unfortunately non-suicidal passengers, and the constant jerking of the vehicle. There are two movements to vehicles negotiating Lagos traffic: sudden acceleration and violent juddering halt. Half the problem is that there is no right of way at intersections: whoever can get their nose in front of the oncoming traffic far enough to persuade the drivers it is in everybody’s best interests to slow down or stop is the one who gets to proceed three metres. As a result, it is possible for as few as four cars to result in a traffic jam. The other half of the problem is a combination of drivers’ determination to switch lanes as often as possible for no discernible reason, and the ego of those same drivers. Once somebody has managed to get into one lane it is imperitive that he tries to re-enter the lane he has just left, usually having travelled no more than ten metres in the meantime. A gap of more than a metre is sufficient to try to squeeze your 3m car into, something which is made easier if the driver you are carving up doesn’t object and accelerate to close the gap, which he always does. In fact, drivers in Lagos react to somebody trying to enter a lane in front of them as if they’d just come home and found their daughters raped and the perpetrator still standing there. I’ll go into the reasons why some cultures’ inability to concede anything or compromise whatsoever leaves them shit poor in another post, but the same applies on Nigeria’s roads. Remove the egos and you’d have half a chance of free-flowing traffic. When you look around, the actual number of cars is not that high.
Eventually I get dropped at my office which is an impressive looking, glass fronted building. Well, it’s impressive provided you are looking at only the outside, and then preferably from a distance of not less than a mile. There is an underground car park which nobody is allowed to park in, so everyone parks on the nearby pavements instead, meaning the pedestrians have to take their chances in the road. The road at that point is covered in an inch of brown slime. I go into the building, through the lobby featuring marble panels fitted by somebody who had neither a spirit level or plumb line, and wait for the lift. There are three lifts, only two of which ever work at any given time, and often it is just the one. The lift has no logic system whatsoever, they don’t communicate with each other meaning both lifts are often on the same floor (there are ten), and they have an overide system meaning the owners of the building, who have offices at the top, can bypass all other floors should they so desire, and they often do. So it is not uncommon to be waiting three or four minutes for a lift and watch it sail gaily past you. Once you’re in the lift, and assuming you have been in Lagos long enough to have gotten used to the appalling stench of unwashed bodies and grease marks on the glass walls, you have to tell some cretin, who lives on a stool placed in the lift, which floor you want to go to. Half the time he is not listening because, the attention span in this city averaging at around two seconds, he is busy talking to somebody else or playing with his phone, and so you have to ask him a few times. If you lose patience and press the button yourself he will grumble as if you’ve tried to fly an Apache helicopter without the necessary training, presumably thinking if word got out people could press lift buttons all on their own he’d be out of a job. Actually, he is needed, because the lift buttons all reset themselves randomly and they need to be re-pressed or the lift just stops. Sometimes the lift just stops anyway and the whole system has to be reset. I heard a story about one bloke being whisked to the very top whereupon it whacked into the buffers then dropped like a stone for a floor or two before the emergency brake came on and it descended, at a snail’s pace, to the basement. The whole cycle repeated itself twice more before he could escape.
On my floor I am squawked at by somebody who is simultaneously the security guard and the weakest link in the floor security system. Like in Sakhalin, the prime suspect in any office theft is the security guard. Unlike in Russia, they security guards don’t dress up in Spetznaz uniforms all ready for massacring a Chechen village; instead they wear slightly gay gendarme uniforms, complete with Foreign Legion style hats. I guess it makes the French feel more comfortable. The security guard on my floor doesn’t like me much, because I don’t bother signing in on the sheet of paper he keeps on his desk. I don’t bother because when I go to leave, he asserts his minimal authority by hiding the piece of paper and making me ask for it, and I’m not playing this sort of game with anyone dressed like a gay gendarme.
My office isn’t too bad, except it is miles too hot, we have 6-8 power cuts each day, the toilets resemble those of a Salford nightclub, and we are not allowed to store paper copies of anything because the weight might cause the floor to collapse (seriously). The view is not too bad though, not least because I can see amusing instances of extreme idiocy on the street outside my window at regular intervals, and the transformer mounted on the pole outside often blows up with a satisfying bang, a bright orange flash, and a puff of blue smoke whenever it rains heavily enough.
I start my work day by checking my emails and deleting those which all oil companies send out warning of IT issues on random servers located in other countries. I then spend the day…well, I’m not going to go into this. There is enough material here to write a book, and that’s without using anything that could be considered company confidential. Some of the stuff you encounter in the Nigerian oil business would make Catch-22 seem like a serious tome of philosophical discussion. I witness daily instances of personal and organisational buffoonery which would be impressive even for the army. But all told, I rather like my job and I’m doing rather well by most accounts, and I’m not about to jeopardise that by writing something which will incur the wrath of anybody that could see me unseated. So, with that, I work as well as I can without murdering anybody or laughing loudly in people’s faces until lunchtime.
We take lunch in a building 200m down the road from our own, a journey which is more perilous than any undertaken on this continent by Henry Stanley. Because the cars are all parked on the pavement, you have to walk in the road, which is full of maniacal motorcylists and impatient, retarded motorists. The closer you get to the building where we eat, the deeper the water gets to the point where, even in the middle of a drought, you have to cross the road to avoid a huge lake of stinking brown water with stuff floating in it which would be kicked out of an open sewer for breaching the dress code. Yes, they built the road beneath the water table. Darting between the cars, you hop over a little rivulet, a tributary of the huge brown lake, and mount the pavement, hopping over a log which has been blocking the path since I arrived and nobody has bothered moving. Maybe it’s considered sacred? I did notice teeth marks on it. You jump over a tyre, squeeze between the bonnet of a car and an abandoned stall, walk five metres, drop off the pavement into some filth to skirt round some concrete thing which has been built in the middle of the pavement with no obvious purpose, taking care not to disturb the bloke sleeping on the cardboard at your feet. When mounting the pavement a metre or so further on, you need to dodge the stack of knock-off DVDs being sold under the tree, patiently waiting for customers to clear the way before proceeding. You go past a bin of rotting plantains, situated beside a drainage hole which looks like that thing in the desert Jabba the Hut tried to push the goodies into in The Return of the Jedi. It is honking. You cross the entrance to the school, which doubles as a car park and hang-out joint for all manner of weirdos, and squeeze past the fat cow selling plantains from a stall which blocks the whole pavement save for six inches. You get to the corner of the street where a restaurant is doing a merry trade, consisting as it does of half a dozen breezeblocks turned on their ends to serve as chairs and a woman putting crap into a wok over an open fire and selling it to the diners as crap which has been heated up a bit. It’s not the most relaxing setting for a meal, and I cannot recommend taking your loved one there for your anniversary meal, because the corner is packed full of phone card salesmen, an outdoor barber salon, crates of soft drinks being picked up and put back down, and a few dozen blokes doing what blokes do best in Lagos: standing around doing nothing. By now the pavement consists of mud with some random blocks sticking out of it, but even this is better than the street which is at this point covered in an inch or two of black sludge with all manner of detrius in it. You have no choice but to step into it and cross over. All of this you do in sweltering heat with tropical humidity. If the smell hasn’t put you off eating for life, you carry on.
You then go through a small reception room which is full of people who honk to high heaven and are standing about gormlessly for God knows what purpose. You squeeze past, get out the other side, and into the canteen where you join the queue for food. To be fair the food isn’t bad. I mean, those who went through the siege of Leningrad might have eaten it eventually, and who are we to be more fussy than they? It is free, after all. The menu is divided in two: local and continental. The local food consists of cow leg, sheeps innards, goat pepper soup (which would have justified the Iraq War twice over had Hans Blix discovered it in one of Saddam’s installations), fish in a curry sauce which looks as though it could be used to dissolve fire-bricks, mashed yam, polythene bags containing what looks like mud, turkey legs which would worry the dentist of a Rhodesian ridgeback, and a soya porridge which smells like the stuff you feed cows on a dairy farm back home. The continental food is made for us lot, and consists of a half decent soup with a main course of chicken with rice or spaghetti. I don’t like the rice much, so I tend to eat chicken and spaghetti, which I have done almost every day since I got here. Sometimes I have something different, such as spaghetti and chicken, but usually it’s chicken and spaghetti. This is washed down with some boiled fruit drink which, if they’ve remembered to make it the night before, is chilled. Otherwise it is still hot. This is eaten on rickety chairs opposite somebody who, if you’re lucky, is mannered enough to use cutlery and not spit bones out onto the table. There are several benefits to working where I do in Nigeria, but the staff canteen is not one of them.
Returning from lunch is the same pantomime as on the way, only in reverse. The afternoon is generally less hectic than the morning, a period of quiet reflection where half the company think of new and innovative ways to stop the other half getting anything done. By 5pm I’ve normally had enough and am outside calling my driver to untangle the car from the random pile of vehicles in which it is parked and pick me up. The way home takes a little longer, about 40 minutes, with the extra time used by dozens of street hawkers standing in traffic waving all manner of wares from knock-off watches to tumbler sets to shoe racks to bananas to bound volumes of the complete works of William Sheakespeare.
If the traffic isn’t too bad I’m home by 5:45pm or 6pm and within ten minutes of that I’m usually in the gym. Remember the fitness regime I entered into when I first came to Nigeria, and talked about here? Well, it’s still going strong, 4-5 times per week, and I look and feel quite a bit different than I did last August. It kills the time, tires me out, and enables me to loaf in front of the TV or computer without a nagging feeling that I should be doing something else. Most nights I’m cooking something, or else I’m eating what I cooked the night before, after which I try to do forty minutes of French study from a textbook at least three nights per week. That’s not going too badly, either. It’s an awful lot easier than Russian, and once you’ve learned Russian grammar a lot of French grammar makes sense. Je t’adore, Я тебя люблю, it’s all pretty much the same, isn’t it? I’m rubbish at speaking it though, preferring to nail the grammar before really trying to converse, although my French colleagues have to endure my mangled greetings and questions occasionally, something they seem not to mind one bit. I find French much easier to understand than speak, whereas with Russian, for me, it’s the other way around. And reading French is easy, it’s almost the same as English, again compared to a block of Russian text.
If I’m lucky my TV will be working and I can spend the last hour of the day watching something or other. As I said in my earlier post, self-disciplined lives tend to be pretty dull (and I am remarkably self-disciplined here save for an incident last weekend which involved a big Norwegian bloke, three bars, two nightclubs, Solichnaya vodka neat from the bottle, loss of memory, a 5am finish, and me being sick), but it’s the routine which makes things easier to manage and the time go more quickly. Fortunately, it’s hard for life to be dull when you live and work in the world’s largest and most populated lunatic asylum.
Tim Newman
Personally, considering some areas burning or about to be set ablaze/looted in London even as I type, I feel life is ironic with the riots and how it (and other factors) are affecting the stock market...I also feel God has a very 'wickid' sense of humour. What do you think?
Mena
Wow! This dude is ignorant.
ReplyDeleteUm, Tim, if you have nothing positive to say, please pack your bags and go back to your country.
I hate when people bring emphasize the negatives without even finding a positive.
www.oluwatobiadelakun.blogspot.com
wow! *shocked face*
ReplyDeleteOloshi ma leleyi ke? So he can talk about unwashed bodies whereas they sew themselves up for winter in their own countries, not having a bath for months.
ReplyDeleteWell, we have also seen London, and the feeling is mutual.
But it made for interesting reading.
Can someone please tell me why he endures what he obviously hates so much?
ReplyDeleteFor crying out loud, let him pack his bags and go home! People like him who never see any good in anything can never be happy anywhere anyway!
Wow, he had nothing positive to say about the country. Sometimes I wonder why people like him leave their countries to live or work elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteEven with all his negative comments, he has no qualms earning money from the country's oil... what an ass hat! He has been living there for only some months and feels like he now knows everything about the people and the culture...I can't stand people like this! :(
I love the way you write. Interesting and funny. I could almost describe driving in Accra the same way. You did crack me up a couple of times.
ReplyDeleteI hate the way you describe living in Lagos. You totally condemned everything and I doubt if you had a good word to say about anything. Do cows sell in Lagos? Thought I caught something about a fat cow selling.
Really, you mustn't be too religious or believe in God then who created everyone. I doubt if He'd refer to anyone as a fat cow. How dare you then, who's created no one.
See, it's not too difficult to talk about the positives and negatives about something in one breath. You should try it Tim. Gives your opinion a more balanced look and doesn't make you come across too much as the really, really, bad person. Btw, how much you being paid to work in Lagos? Must be a whole lot to get you to endure all that you obviously have to endure.
Mena, don't you just love God's sense of humour!
Interesting read, I took it as a comic relief from an ignorant English man at the most, I almost felt like choking a tree from the way he described our food, o well, I don't blame him, some of our people don't take pride in what they do. But seriously, has he ever eaten at Heathrow? the environment might be cleaner but their food tastes like spiced cardboard...The dude is pretty ignorant if this is truly all he sees of Lagos, I am sure no one is stopping him from going back to his "perfect country" ** I laugh in Swahili**
ReplyDelete.....
At first i was taking it at comic relief until i realized he wasn't finding it comical himself. He really does hate it in Lagos. He should start looking at some positive things or he is going to be one depressed and sun burnt man :(
ReplyDeleteAdiya
http://museorigins.blogspot.com
http://museorigins.com
I guess he hasn't got a Nigerian girlfriend yet. I laugh in London English. Psheeww...
ReplyDeleteHonestly, i found it quite amusing and interesting read. If for nothing else, his use of words. And his descriptions were true to form. Except some areas which was a bit personal.
ReplyDeleteHowever, knowing Nigerians as we are, we're very proud and will not condone others talking ill of our country even if we do the same.
I think Tim just needs to chill and go out some more and meet more people. I'm not sure he has many Nigerians even in his place of work. If not, he'll have fun and have a different view.
I think most people, if they find themselves in his shoes prob in another country, may do the same. But the truth is in living regardless of your circumstances.
In all, i'll say nice post. Forget the correlation with what's happening in the UK. They got that coming a while ago.
he EXXAGGERRAATTEED!!!! abegiiiiiii
ReplyDeleteWow... ur something else aren't u.... maybe if you weren't there stealing all the oil then the nigerian government could pay to repair the roads. as for the rest of your racist sentiments - grow up. are you one of those people who complain about immigrants not integrating in the UK? I've never seen an immigrant in the UK who is quite so obnoxious as you about the local culture and environment... ever thought that you are an immigrant in nigeria and, from this post,
ReplyDeleteit seems one of the rudest, most disintegrated one I've ever heard of. what a shame when you got your training before going to nigeria they didn't bother to give you some understanding of living and working in another culture.
However I would say to the others who have posted equally ignorant and rude responses about how s&*t the UK is are no better. don't lower yourself to his standards.
LOL!! Naija, why cant you people laff at yourself?? And Mena this is unlike you to be 'biased'. You would have noticed my comments on Tim's page, on this particular post in fact. He writes well. I could guess some of the places he was describing. like the eatery on VI....even though i hadn't been there in 5 years...His description was that apt.
ReplyDeleteThree days ago he also wrote a very 'true' piece about what is happening in the UK. He didn't mince words about the situation in his Country. I thought that was what you were reposting.
Abeg make una free Tim!! There was no lie in his words. none.
The article made for a very interesting humorous read about Lagos life despite the condescending tone. I would have been fuming and waving my fist - but I just remembered that I've felt the same way about a couple of other countries I've been to - not just in so disrespectful a tone. At least the Guy was candid.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI have two points of view:
ReplyDelete1) I spent 3 years living in Lagos and what he has written is everything I physically witnessed, I visually saw it, so therefore his actual content is accurate. He is also a very clever writer and achieves the objective of 'painting a picture' for his reader. When I go to work somewhere I elect to make the most of it and find the best in the place. I had a good time in 9ja and still keep in touch with my 9ja friends. My only regret is that we were not allowed (by our co security) to travel around the country.
2) Despite the fact I saw and experienced exactly the same things, it isn't something I would have written and published, especially not whilst I was still in that country. I've lived and worked on every continent except Antarctica and everywhere you go, you have to accept it for what it is and if you really don't like it that much then you should move elsewhere or go home. I have only worked in one country which was a horrible, nasty place, full of vicious nasty people and I wrote so. I was threatened with murder (seriously) and have since removed another blog about the place from my personal travel website. I now live in Australia and it ain't perfect either but if I don't like it I have the freedom to return to the UK.
Overall I wouldn't get too wound up about it. It's one person's opinion which he is free to express. If he's a Brit just go to Britain and look around you. Even after the riots have finished and been cleaned up, go out in any major city on a Saturday night and ask why there are riot vans on every corner and the mounted coppers horses wear head armour and eye guards to stop the pondlife sticking needles in the horses eyes.
Every country has it's good and bad points, it's a case of looking for them, finding them and deciding which ones are for you.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAnother barrel-load of English whingeing about everything and anything, from an insect in his bathroom to a log on the street. You sir are truly ungrateful, misinformed, ignorant and so on.
ReplyDeleteNothing is good down there, all you care about is your pay packet, your (Lacoste) designer shirt to impress the French, you French lesson, the Nigerian oil, the vodka and your muscle (gym).
But man, that aside you amuse me with your lunch time story of the canteen. You said.. "This is eaten on rickety chairs opposite somebody who, if you’re lucky, is mannered enough to use cutlery and not spit bones out onto the table."
I don't think for a moment that using your hand (to eat)is ill mannered, little do you understand. Spitting bones on the table may be considered ill mannered. Honestly speaking, you are an ignorant expatriate, little do you remember.
There are more positive things about Nigeria than what he wrote.
ReplyDeleteNotice how he does not say what it is he actually does at the office... hmm
ReplyDeletethen get the fuck out of Nigeria, you asswipe. you have no problem making money there yet you wanna bash it. GET OUT! you pink pig.
ReplyDeleteHmmm.....trying to understand what all the fuss is about this post. It is his opinion and his blog so? I was actually able to find out where he works, where the restaurant is from his descriptions. No biggy. Funny, the descriptions were spot on too.
ReplyDeleteMaybe we should teach him to keep his cereal in an airtight container in his refrigerator and it will keep it fresh and ant free. The ants come from living in Ikoyi and should remind him of the UK in the warmer months!
Hmm....even he must be a foolish man not to have found a Lagos chick to help him settle down after 7 months. He
must have heard of YNot? One of those girls could hook him up with a driver brother - sort of keeping it in the
family.
In fact he really needs to go to YNot if he is complaining about his chicken and spaghetti and spaghetti and chicken lunches. And then I wonder? There are so many eating places in VI for this oyinbo to go and eat so why is he eating shit staff canteen food? He must be as ijebu as they come.......figures why he does not have a chick to help him settle down.
And of course, this is my own opinion. Lol!
i read this, rolled my eyes, and shrugged. it's his opinion. having working with oyibo pple for close to 6 years now, am not surprised.
ReplyDelete