The sun is
scorching. It is typical in our part of the world. Today, the heat is unbearable;
it is at an all- time high. Other parts of the world are gearing up for the
cold. Well, same cannot be said of our part of the globe. We are lashed by rays
of heat; unimaginable heat. On this busy road, activities are taking place. The
passengers in the commercial vehicle are using whatever means they can to get ‘additional’
air as they sit cramped shoulder to shoulder in the hot and rickety bus. The
blind beggar is singing her tunes in a bid to get some munificence from
impatient, sweaty passengers who cannot wait to get to their destinations in the
midst of the endless traffic. The passenger in the front seat puts his hand in
his pocket in hopes of helping; he pulls out a note. He notes the times we are
in; two weeks to pay day. He retracts the action and shakes his head. The
handkerchief seller, under the mercy of the hot sun, is sweating profusely. His
plight is a classic example to humbly but in a funny way remind us that, “Possession
is not the same as ownership”. The government is on the radio and as usually,
they are announcing ‘unseen’ monumental developmental projects. The little baby
is crying. Its throat is in need of succour; the mother is woken up from her slumber
by an older woman and is scolded for neglecting the “future president”. The
newspaper seller is busy showing off the appetizing front pages of the newspapers he
has in his hands to attract curious buyers. This might not be his day, maybe
this vehicle has no occupants who are in need of ‘brain food’ at the moment. It
is getting hotter by the second, the only school boy in the bus is wearing a crumpled
school uniform. There seems to be an interviewee in the bus, he is wiping the sweat
that has gathered on his brow with his already wet and dirty handkerchief. The
sweat has trickled down unto his brown envelopes. This is not the time and
continent to be clad in a full piece suit at this time of the day. In the midst
of all this, we hope. We hope for brighter ‘tomorrows’ if there is any such
thing in our part of the world. We hope for better health care, better
educational systems not the ones inherited from tattered lecture notes of dead
professors, we hope for better jobs and with it, better remunerations so that
even in this hot bus, the journey to the bank on glorious pay day will be worth
every little sweat. We hope for human angels to grace our part of the world.
But till then, we will keep fighting on. We will do the best we can, to put
smiles on the faces we care about. Hard it may seem; better still, hard it is.
But we press on despite the odds. I need not remind you but, in this rubble we
may appear to be, but still; we rise. My name is Edwin Oko Lamptey and this is just a RANDOM AFRICAN THOUGHT. MORE AT randomafricanthoughts.blogspot.com
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