THIS IS WHY WE LIVE
The first time you tried to hang yourself, you could not find a rope in the house. Later, you’d discover one rolled up in a corner in the storeroom behind the kitchen and wonder why you had not looked in there before. Your mum would be saying from the kitchen, ‘Don’t just stand there, bring me the plunger!’ and your heart would be hammering against your chest.
The second time you tried – ‘Homo!,’ John had said in class that day and seized your shoes so that you had to walk about barefoot – you were writing a suicide note when your mum came and banged on your door. ‘Ibrahim! Ibrahim!’ Perhaps if you had a heart of stone like John, you’d have ignored her and gone ahead, but your heart was made of foam rubber, which was why it squeezed in your chest so unabashedly. You crumpled the paper and tossed it into the bin.
‘What are you doing?’ she asked when you let her in, looking about suspiciously as if she knew.
‘Nothing,’ you said.
She gave you one long stare, then said, ‘Come and go and on the gen for me.’
After that day, you gave up. It wasn’t a decision – rather, it was the inability to make the decision. Weeks became golf balls emptying slowly into a hole of forgetfulness, and each night you lay helpless in your bed, all the emotions in the world pressing you down, smothering you. You asked God, why? Oh God why? Doing nothing to stop the tears that flowed. There were John’s words ripping through your soul. Fagilola! Homo oshi! The giggles of your other classmates casting a shadow around your heart, and you knew that you must do it. But your mother’s voice, it’s shrill, the way her eyes glistened at the news of your Unilag admission last month, the joy you felt at her pride, how could you do it?
And so you learnt to not struggle, to force your body to stay put, to make no effort whatsoever, telling yourself if death came or if it didn’t, you’d have no hand in it.
Why, oh God, why?
But God was silent.
Until Emeka. You’d think of him as God’s belated reply, the reason why He let you live through those nights of despair, the big brother you never had. You met him in the GT Bank in campus, waiting to pay your school fees – although with time you’d come to unlearn that fact, teaching yourself instead that you’d known him all your life. You’d come to unlearn also your initial guardedness, that you’d declined his request for your number and, after you relented and gave it to him, missed his many calls. (‘I saw you,’ he would say when you asked later why he had been so persistent. ‘I’ve been there before, so I know how it feels.’) All this and many more you’d teach yourself to forget, remembering only how you’d called him one night and cried on the phone, how embarrassed you’d been afterwards, saying you were sorry, God, you were sorry, you didn’t mean to bother him!
‘Can we see tomorrow?’ he asked.
You went to his off-campus apartment. There was Chuck his roommate, and you were uncomfortable being in the room with him. But then Emeka touched Chuck lightly and said could he excuse you please? Weeks later, as Emeka told you about Chuck and him, you’d think, but I knew. You saw the signs in the tender way he’d touched Chuck that first day, in how longingly they could lose themselves in each other’s eyes and the way everything seemed to stop when they did this, in the way they so easily leaned into each other, laughing or merely sitting, slapping each other’s laps playfully.
In the months to come, you’d come to feel for Emeka a deep wholesome trust, and for Emeka and Chuck, a searing regard. You went to their apartment often and watched them closely. Studied them almost, so that you had the feeling of taking a pen and a notebook and documenting every single moment of their lives, piecing them together like shards of a broken mirror with the raptness of a researcher. And back in your hostel, you’d imagine what they talked about in your absence, how they ate, joked, slept.
Soon, those nights of despair ceased and the only emotions you felt lying alone in your bed was longing. You yearned for their kind of life. Could it be possible? you wondered. But it was so strange, wasn’t it? Could it really happen?
Then Mark came along, a boy in your department, and it was so surreal, almost like drowning.
When you told Emeka, he said, ‘Wow! So you’ve fallen in love!’ and Chuck said jokingly, ‘Thank God, now you’ll leave us alone!’ And when Emeka met Mark, at Lagoon Front on a sunless afternoon, he whispered in your ears, ‘Chai, he’s making me think things I don’t want to think o!’ and you laughed and laughed.
The first time you and Mark kissed, on Christmas Eve, he looked at you in that teasing way of his and said, ‘Not bad for a first-timer. Or has Emeka been teaching you?’
You placed your head on his chest, right where his heart was, closed your eyes and lost yourself in the steady rhythm of his heartbeat. You kissed his nipples, making him catch his breath, then raised your face to his and kissed him again, moaning and loving that he moaned back. That night, you told him about your mum, and about the bully John, and about how there used to be a time when you wished you would die. He held you tight, and you clung to him in the dark.
‘I’m scared,’ you said.
‘I know,’ he whispered.
‘What if I try again?’ you said.
‘You won’t,’ he whispered.
‘How do you know?’
He sighed.
You believed him. You knew you shouldn’t, but you did.
Written by Atanda
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14 Comments
Mitch
October 01, 06:52There’s no greater joy than accepting yourself.
If it comes with love, good and fine.
If it doesn’t, please just fucking accept yourself already.
You’d feel loads better
Foxydevil
October 01, 07:12True beauty.
Hope you slept well and happy new month .?
Foxydevil
October 01, 07:07My new crush Atanda.
What a lovely read to start up a new month. ?
Foxydevil
October 01, 07:21Pinky butter cup.
This new month I wish you nothing but joy.
You’ll be the first Nigerian to get Dan Brown’s new book (he is my favorite writer, but I’ll give the honour to you)
Sense8 will finally agree to your proposal (? it hurts considering how much I love you, but I am willing to let you go, to find the one you truly love)
And that your shelf will be filled up with over 2 thousands books, why wait till you’re forty? Yes?
*Sighs *
Maxy
October 01, 08:12This is beautiful and, has really made my day.
Mandy
October 01, 08:18First the struggle, then the acceptance. The journey of most a gay man. Unfortunately not everyone gets to the point where they “believe Mark”.
Nice work, Atanda
Black Dynasty
October 01, 09:05Nicely written. Acceptance is a journey and with perseverance it will be attained. I wish there was a way to reach out to the lost and confused men, so many lives could be saved.
Delle
October 01, 11:12Beautiful. Beautiful piece to start a new month.
Suicide is never the answer. You didn’t solve anything, you simply lost yourself.
Thank you, Atanda.
Lopez
October 01, 12:46This is beautiful. Thumbs up Atanda
alex
October 01, 14:04This is splendid .
Thank you, atanda.
Ken George
October 01, 14:08Nobody should ever be made to feel less than the awesome special beauty they truly are. I dislike bullies. I remember trashing one or two who tried to take a ride on my friends in secondary school. The thought of injustice alone angers me deeply. Everyone deserves to be happy and nobody deserves to be alone
Jo
October 01, 14:52This.
You are an amazing writer. Ah-mazing.
Jide
October 02, 09:29This was so sweet and relatable. Bookmarking it so I’d use it for some of my future coming out sessions.
J
October 02, 11:26Nice one! I have been bullied severally while growing up, but I have never contemplated suicide… I guess that’s the more reason why I overlook homophobia, I feel most people won’t understand what I am going through, so I rather not give them the chance to hurt me. Love yourself, the world is not a perfect place and not everyone is going to be nice to you. Live, be happy and wait for your last breath. Life is a dream.