Gay Wars: The Battle of the Bitches, Or the Tops and Bottoms of Being Out in Nigeria

Gay Wars: The Battle of the Bitches, Or the Tops and Bottoms of Being Out in Nigeria

1.

I would like to begin by saying that if you are visiting me, and you don’t want to be outed by association, then don’t bother. Add to that: I am not asking anybody to visit me; my school has just about enough people for that. Disclaimer: I am not trying to be bitchy, whatever that means.

The deal is, I am out. By out, I do not mean that I came on NTA or Channels TV wearing a huge pink sweater. Aside from the fact that I am lazy, and that colour can be difficult to wash, I do not think I can pull it off. Although once upon a time I could have, in secondary school. You ought to have seen me then: gliding through corridors, all feminine grace. “Stop doing like a girl,” a classmate once said to me. “Don’t you know you make some people high?”

What the fuck?

In secondary school, I fought a total of two times in six years. Cried a handful of times. Lashed out a million times: “Yes, I be homo. Na your father fuck me. Idiot!” I was a hell of an angry bitch. Still am. Back then, my anger hadn’t crystallized into the calm, insistent dissatisfaction that it is now. It had been a huge roaring flame. I was still praying to God to change me, not necessarily because I was tired of all the cat-calling and snide remarks, but because I loved God terribly, hopelessly. So, where did that anger come from? Did it stem from the fact that those boys, who were mostly sweet on good days, had no right whatsoever to tell me what to do, how to be?

Fast-forward a few years later, and I am in my final year in university, and my friend Ken has told me that “Louis said the only problem is that you’re out, even to the girls in your class.” Louis is a boy that I had asked out, a boy who knows I know he’s gay, and yet told me, “Guy, I don’t know what you’re talking about.” People think he’s sweet and kind, but all the bitches I know say he’s a bitch (see definition). He will not talk to you if you are obvious or out. In other words, you are fuckable insofar as you can disappear in the crowd and become like People see definition)

(Definition of Terms: People: Men who fuck women or women who fuck men. Bitch: A man who rolls his eyes, dangles his wrists, or simply says, “I am.” Do not use this word if you do not self-identify as one. Bitch [2]: Annoying prick. Asshole. Doesn’t mean his prick is big or his asshole tight.)

Fast-forward even further, and this guy whom I fuck out of a lack of options (I’m not trying to be a bitch. See Bitch [2]) tells me that, “The reason no serious person will date you is because you’re out, and it’s so childish, coming out to every guy you think you like.”

I cringe. “So I’m out to the girls too because I like them?”

“It’s just childish. UC thinks you’re a bitch, that’s why he won’t come to your room.”

I like to think that I have pretty thick skin, but even the thickest skin melts under intense heat. Alone finally in my room, I cry. I have not fixed my bulb, and the darkness covers me, fills me with a profound loneliness. This is not the place for me, I think. I am too real for Nigeria.

2.

I have a theory about love: We accept the love we think we deserve. (The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Stephen Chbosky.)

I have a question about gays: Who does the chores? (The movie, Pride.)

I have found the answer to life’s problems: We love to choose misery. (Plain fact.)

3.

The Guy Whom I (used to) Fuck Out of a Lack of Options is kind of right. Or, better, he would have been right a few years ago. I started coming out, actively at least, after secondary school. I had not yet taken up a boring job washing bottles at a pharmaceutical company in my neighbourhood. I had been self-diagnosed with a case of Post-Graduation Nostalgia, which meant that I watched and re-watched High School Musical, and cried. In the evenings, I went for keyboard class or choir practice, depending on what day it was. There was a girl and a handful of boys, my second family, with whom I walked home from church. On my way home, I branched off at Greg’s to chat. Greg was a year my junior in secondary school, and he had about him the air of someone for whom the world could bend. I told him I liked him. No, not in the friendly-hug-and-pat-on-the-back way. Like, really liked him.

Happened, dude was as straight as an arrow (even though I’ve never touched an arrow to make sure, and who else has noticed how suspiciously like a dick an arrow is shaped?).

He was surprised, he said. I was so into God, so spiritual.

Yes, I said. But some things cannot be changed. (On my uncle’s wardrobe door, the Serenity Prayer of Reinhold Niebuhr: God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, etc.)

But it’s unnatural, he pursued.

I was born this way, I argued. (Thanks to my father, I recently had a phone. Thanks to Iomfats.com and the life-saving stories of Grasshopper et al. Thanks to Nifty.com, strangely. Thanks to the over-twenty-five year-olds in the West.)

But still….

You don’t know what I’ve been through… (My mother told us stories as kids, and I happened to tell them as well, perhaps better, my brothers thought. The gift of a man maketh way for him. God is good that way.)

4.

Replicate the conversation in 3 above maybe dozens of times, add a few girls, then more, to it. At this point I just couldn’t stop, not with the reactions I was getting. In first year, when someone asked if I was, I told the same story: I was born this way. An apology of sorts. What if I wasn’t born this way—so fucking what?

Someone once asked, “Have you ever faced rejection upon coming out?”

The worst I’ve gotten: “I don’t believe you.”

The good, from an older friend, a spiritual mentor when I was still in the spirit, a wise lady: “I will listen just as you have asked me to.”

The better: “I kept thinking about it, and you’re still Rapum.”

The best, from my brother, Ulonna: “Is that your boyfriend @ dp?”

Maybe, one day: “Guy, get lost. I fit kill you.”

And I won’t give a fuck. Maybe a little fuck, but not too much; I would hate to make them sore.

5.

A little fact about coming out: There are two kinds of homophobes—those who will say what everybody else says because they have no head. Until you come along and give them brains. And those who will hate you no matter what. You will know before you decide to tell. Your guts will tell you.
Also: A point will come when none of these will matter. You will not have to make speeches, or give long lectures. You will be. And your being will give the haters nightmares.

6.

1. In third year, a classmate of mine stood up like the other people to talk about his “unrequited love experience”, and it was for another boy. He is a bitch, this classmate of mine. Perhaps the bitch of bitches. His role model? Lady Gaga. Lecturer said, in response, “It is also a love experience.” On Facebook later, where a “female sister” had put up a subtle post about it, our classmates came on to say, “He’s so brave” and “It’s his life” and “Some people will come and be judging now,” etc. Not to be outdone, the homophobes and As Yet Undecided came on to sputter and mutter, “Hmmm” and “I comment my reserve.” For once they were swallowing it and not spitting out a drop.

2. I have a number of pictures on my phone that I took with the two most special friends I have in school. Leonard and Oozy. They like to call me the Slut of the group, but it is only because I take it up the ass, and a lot of straight men can only define a slut in terms of who takes it in. Leonard is the real slut, however, and when we don’t have work to do, I pose as his Bitch and he my Slut, my arms around his neck, his around my waist, our bodies meshed together, and Oozy takes the picture. “And you say he’s straight?” bitches ask.
“I know, right?” I say.

3. “God, the girl was mad. I came like in minutes, and she made me hard again.”
“Wow, when I come, it gets painful. He has to stop.”
“You come when they fuck you?”
“Sit down here, guy. I listened to your own.”

7.

I am afraid of dying too soon. I am afraid of loneliness. I am afraid that I am too lazy to write a novel. I am afraid that someone I love might die. I am afraid of the day when I’ll come out to mum and dad, and to Uncle Okwi and Aunt Nneoma. I am afraid of kito.

8.

People think I am not bad looking. Some people think I am in fact cute, but if the opinions of our family and best friends counted, we’d all be hot. I think I am okay. I like to say funny things, to make people laugh, and most times I succeed at that. I am not Albert Einstein, but I can hold a conversation. (Albert Einstein wrote Oliver Twist, right?)

The world of movies wants us to believe that these are all we need to find love, or at least get laid. Good looks, wit, intelligence, kindness. God, in his infinite mercy, has given me tea-spoonful of each, so that, no matter how little my intelligence, or no matter how ordinary my looks, I can, with a little kindness, purchase happiness for myself in this world. But why, after hanging out with my friends on some days, do I return to my room hollowed out, full of the emptiness of the lonely?

“I am discrete,” I once typed, and hated myself immediately.

“I don’t out people,” I say often, too often, but already I know I have lost him, the object of my disclaimer. Sometimes, I try not to let it on that I am not really in the closet, but they always know, somehow. It ought to be tiring, to go through life always watching one’s back.

I finally worked on my wrists and my gait years ago, before university, because of the things I saw in gay forums online: If I wanted a girl, I’d find a real girl. Or, I want a man, a real man. Ironic, that the scared, ignorant boys in secondary school who were my family and my nightmare for some six years couldn’t get the message across, despite their numerous jabbing.

If happiness is the end of all our journeying, then why do we often choose misery? And why do we cause misery for others?

In plain English, Why are we such bitches?

Sometimes, I get mad at Achebe’s generation. I ask my friends, “Are you saying there were no gay artists and intellectuals then?”

I know they had a different war to fight, but it is the right of children to blame their parents for their woes. Zadie Smith: generations are known for the projects they undertake together. Why do I feel so strongly that this is our project—to make the bed, not necessarily for ourselves, but for our nieces and nephews and children?

Instead we fight wars within ourselves. “He’s such a bitch,” Ken, who has fucked half the boys in school, says. “He’s all over the place.” If I were not Ken’s friend, he would have given the same verdict on me. After all, I meet the specification: I say, “I am.”

Written by Rapum Kambili

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  1. Absalom
    May 16, 07:01 Reply

    Yass!!!!

    Binsh wey sabi!

    I absolutely couldn’t wait for this to arrive here. Profound. Commenting derides the stardom of the piece, the gods forgive me.

    ? ? ?

  2. bruno
    May 16, 07:03 Reply

    best post i’ve read here all year!

  3. Dennis Macaulay
    May 16, 07:06 Reply

    ?????

    This was hilarious; but underneath the humor is so much sense! Rapum is of course an amazing writer and I am a big fan!

    And Rapum stop being modest! You know you are cute!

  4. Mitch
    May 16, 08:11 Reply

    Yass hunty!

    The wit in this piece flows from the loins of Athena. Damn!

    Rapum, I owe you lunch for this.

    • Delle
      May 16, 12:44 Reply

      See his head! When was the last time you promised me lunch? Rhino!

      • Mitch
        May 16, 14:09 Reply

        Lekwanum eshishi!

        Bia Delle, respet yasef dia oh!

        Eromo!

        • Rapum
          May 16, 14:32 Reply

          Where is my lunch, Mr Man? I’m in my departmental secretariat.

          • Mitch
            May 16, 14:53 Reply

            I’m already home.

            We’ll see tonight.

            • Delle
              May 16, 19:03 Reply

              Waka to the both of you! We shall see…bias individuals!

  5. ambivalentone
    May 16, 08:43 Reply

    This was cray. I guess your friends are only worried about your safety when they tell u not to go on a converting spree. But being limp-wrist, swaying gait and stuff and sumbori tells u not to swing bcos u’d out them….they shud gaan die (well unless u don’t want to only orgasm on the fat shit that comes out the arse)

  6. Kenny
    May 16, 09:15 Reply

    Rapum!!! You must write a novel, I’ll buy it. Such talent!!!! ? ? ? ?

    • Dennis Macaulay
      May 16, 10:05 Reply

      Honestly! His short stories are amazing!

      *Carries Billboard*

      #GiveUsANovel

  7. Delle
    May 16, 09:35 Reply

    Gawd Rapum! I was spellbound! Love, love, love it!!!

    And hunnay, I can totally relate. You know, like I always tell you, you have this wonderful halo around you that has guarded you all through your ‘coming out’ moments, not many can say so for themselves. Just enjoy it.

    What about those like me that do not ‘come out’ or even plan to but instead, already has Mother Nature doing the ‘coming out’ for us? Yet, it’s like the yeye people are looking for the perfect opportunity to mow me. Lol.

  8. philips
    May 16, 10:00 Reply

    Awwwe….Rapum, can I just hug you already?

  9. DI-NAVY
    May 16, 11:53 Reply

    Rapumkambili, you are witty and gregarious I must say. very nice piece. It is long but worth the read.lol

  10. Mandy
    May 16, 13:08 Reply

    The worst reaction you got is ‘I don’t believe you’? With your coming out upandan? Wow. Your chi is working overtime.

  11. INDIGENE.
    May 16, 14:07 Reply

    Jesus! This is some piece! Jesus! Jesus! Jesus! ohh! am I still shouting? ….

  12. Chizzie
    May 16, 15:58 Reply

    Ehmm I don’t get the hype. The whole post is really frenzied and all over the place.

    I’m sure that’s how the author is in real life, if so ppl like that are just too much ?

    • chuck
      May 17, 13:33 Reply

      Lool. You serve what your audience will eat na. if they like dramatic imagery he will write dramatic tales.

  13. Khaleesi
    May 16, 16:48 Reply

    Rapum, you’re so talented … I get giddy goosebumps of excitement when i dare to think of the talent thats yet to be discovered within you … Gurl, you have the potential to touch the world with your writing, i can’t wait to see it!! Bravo hunny!

  14. Tobby
    May 16, 18:43 Reply

    Who is this Rapum guy?. I want to give him a kiss.

  15. Max 10
    May 16, 20:58 Reply

    ??? Amazing…

    What you did with words there.

    • Django
      May 18, 07:44 Reply

      Coming from an incredibly effeminate gay guy, well done.

      • Stranger
        May 19, 01:11 Reply

        Hmm. Seems like you know me more than I know myself.

  16. Cedar
    May 20, 18:33 Reply

    I stumbled upon this site and all I can say is wow! Enjoyed every piece of it to the end. OMG, guy, can you write? Am a newbie here btw.

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