Wednesday, March 16, 2011

12 TRUTHS FRIENDS SHOULD ALWAYS REMEMBER

I have lived long enough to know that friendship is serious business. It’s not just the passing phase of our lives or whiling away time with a bunch of buddies because you are lonely or because you are desperate for attention. Naah! Friendship is serious than that - it’s sharing, daring and caring. Friendship is a warm touch strengthening us in difficult times – the assurance that someone cares for us really keeps us strong. It also means standing strong by the people you care about, believing them and completing them. It won’t be out of place if I said; friendship is the shoulder to cry on without feeling ashamed or afraid that you will be judged.

I have never canceled a friendship no matter how bad things went – no not one. How do people do that? From today you are no longer my friend? That’s lunacy. Nevertheless, there are people who ceased being my friends. I don’t blame them – it’s their choice. I have always considered people who I have shared my life with, no matter how brief, worthy of respect. That’s a choice I will NEVER regret.

True friendship never ends. The energy might lessen by distance and it can be hurt by friction but it never leaves the heart. Friendship that ends was selfish from the start.

I fear many things in life but only few equal a serene friendship. True friendship is never void of disagreements. If a serene friendship ever existed, the parties were never honest. Friends must be frank with each other and frankness brings friction. Men abhor frankness – it shows our flaws. Friendship that is frank and yet finds a way to understand is for real.

I can never give up on life or be bothered by loneliness as long as there is still that one person in my heart who reminds me of brighter days. This is God’s way of providing us strength when we seem to approach the end of the road. I have experience the value of friendship in hard times than in good times. Isn’t a friend in need a friend indeed?

I don’t expect my friends to be perfect. Just like me, they have their flaws and idiosyncrasies but I accept them completely like that. I’m ready to sacrifice a few inconveniences and disappointments because I love my friends. This kinda mind is an imitation of God’s love. God loves us when we are covered in crap because when the crap wears off, we become assets.

Our journey towards success accelerates tremendously if we have true friends in our lives. It’s no surprise that people who fail in life dine with fake friends. The birth of noble friendship is the best token to a man’s success.

All I ask from God is a selfless friend as Jesus. With him, I need nothing more to conquer the world. His worth is more than rubies and the energy he creates can cause a change overnight.

Time is not the reason why friends are true – I have friends who are as old as my age yet unstable as the same. The love and devotion friends are willing to share is what makes some friends true and others fake.

No kidding. True friends have made my cry but when I did, I found comfort in moments when our laughter rang into miles, when their hands helped me from sinking and the thought that they care was what kept me strong in difficult times. I will never trade that because of the few moments of pains.

I think friendship is derived from the word FREE. Here are my reasons.
1. A friend is not a parent or a babysitter. A friend gives me the freedom to make my choice and respect them because I am an adult. When you try to make decisions for your friend, you are assuming a parent’s role and you aint one.
2. With a friend, I am free to be myself and not be caught in any form of pretence. A friend should grant me the luxury of being myself without judging me else he should be ready to put up with my deception.
3. A friend should respect my space. There are three spaces in friendship. My space, your space and the space we share together. If you want your friendship to be worthwhile, you should respect your friend’s space until you are invited. There are secrets and issues that your friend is not ready to reveal – respect that. There are levels he is not ready to go with you yet – don’t force or seduce him. There are habits he’s fighting with – don’t give up on him. Friendship requires a lot of patience and common sence.

When friendship goes sour, I don’t badmouth my friends because they have contributed immensely to my life and it would be out of place to bite the hands that has fed me. Many of us mess up friendship when it ends forgetting the lovely memories we shared and the hands offered us in our times of need.

Purest Love,

Collins Agboju

Monday, March 7, 2011

JUST THE OTHER DAY IN A RESTAURANT

For my non-Nigerian readers, the first four paragraphs of this post are crammed with Pidgin English because of my decision to illustrate this story clearly. But don’t worry, you’ll understand anyway. If you still have difficulty with the language, please let me know and I will try to translate for you.


After a busy day, I was famished and walked into a restaurant to eat dinner; no thanks to my singleness. I was working on a project the day before, and forgot to eat dinner until it was too late -my stomach is not use to going two nights without a meal. On this very day, no one needed to remind me to stop by the restaurant on my way home from the forum at which I gave a talk. Unfortunately the restaurant I chose was full, and after squeezing myself into a seat, I had to wait a little longer for my order to be taken. My mind was busy reflecting on my day; what I had said and what I forgot to say in my talk, when suddenly an argument brought me back to consciousness.

“Give me my change na!” a guy who looked respectable, dressed in a designer white shirt yelled at a waitress. “I dey come.” She replied calmly as she asked her colleague to bring the change and then stopped by my table to take my order. The dude got impatient and shouted, “Hey! No waste my time. Wetin dey do this mumu girl sef?” This time, the waitress replied in a manner the guy wasn’t expecting that from her, “Oga I don send for the change abeg. Take am easy!” and immediately mumbled, “This oga too do sef,” as she turned to me and took my order.

Deep within me, I knew a scene was about to be created because the dude, though looking respectable, will not accept a response from a waitress in that manner. Forgive me for my unfairness in judgment. My opinion is based on his tone when he speaks to the waitress; the tone is chauvinistic - you know the type of man who thinks that women, especially waitresses should not talk to men that way. Another reason for my point of view is that his beautiful girlfriend sat beside him and from what I know about men; they tend to create a scene if they feel disrespected in the presence of their women. I feared for the waitress. .

It wasn’t a surprise when he stood up and said, “Na me you dey talk to like that abi? I no blame you, stupid girl! See her like monkey!” The waitress ignored him and continued her work. I believe her silence provoked him the more and he continued to denigrate her in many words. “See me see trouble o! All these Calabar girls no get respect sef. See this ugly thing o! You dey craze you hear!” The guy continued angrily.

I still couldn’t understand why the waitress held her tongue from replying even though it was obvious that she was fighting with tears. Obviously some uneducated Calabar girls are more matured in controlling angry outbursts than some fine civilized dudes. I know a lot of women who would have preferred losing their jobs to give the dude a piece of their hearts rather than put up with his disrespect.

I pitied her and uttered words of comfort to her and held her hands, but I am not the regular kind of person who is obsessed with correcting people publicly while defending another. Even if I mustered energy to say something I was too hungry and tired for a fight. I faced my business squarely, and that was to eat. If anyone should have to control the excesses of the dude that night, it was his girlfriend, but she wasn’t saying anything, why should I? I don’t understand how some girls sleep well at night after watching their men abuse innocent and helpless women publicly and do nothing to calm even calm the man. “Na dem sabi jare.” I soliloquized.

Meanwhile everyone in the restaurant, including me, pretended to be eating until the dude got his change, made for the door, and gave his deathblow. “Hey monkey, next time make you mind the way you dey talk to people like me you...” Before adding another adjective, the guy sitting next to my table was vexed and spoke up. “My guy shame no dey catch you? Leave this girl alone na.” As if everyone in the restaurant was waiting for a cue, they pounced on the rude man in a manner of a rapist caught by a victim’s relatives. I ate my food quietly. Hey! Don’t consider me cruel. Cruel is what I call the “defender of the universe” who at this point were pouncing on the dude with equally unfair remarks. As usual, I also used the opportunity to study human behavior and response when hauled over the coal. I wanted to know if people will change when they are openly challenged by a mob and I got my answer that night.

Did the jungle justice change this man? Negative. Before he left that place, he had upset more people and busted more bubbles. I had to snatch him away before they lynched him because he had made more people angry in the restaurant and the scene was degenerating into fisticuffs. Like every one of us when reprimanded, we tend to listen to the only person who seems to understand us, and I was that person for him that night. I wasn’t supportive of his act and indeed I condemned it. But I believe if a person should be rebuked, we should choose the style of Jesus when he said, “he who is without sin be the first to cast the stone” even though Jesus knew the woman to whom he spoke was in error.

I believe the dude that night should be rebuked, but with an angry man jungle justice rarely works. He may be forced to shut up, but will end up leaving with resentment and ready to do worse in the future. At the time of writing this article, he had called me twice and we’re getting along … and yes, he’s admitted to me his regrets when I tried to explain the danger of his act. Nice guy I must say – just had a bad side, which can be managed with kindness, not with a loud jungle rod of correction. I know the guy has a bad side and it is unfortunate, but who doesn’t? I am not a judge, but I know that by being nice to him he would definitely change.

Here is my point: Reprimanding a person in public, especially in the presence of their partner, would cause a violent response in the bid to protect their image. Does it stop there? No. He will offend more people and then the essence of correcting the person will not be achieved. Most people will not change or apologize when attacked like this. Would you? I don’t know much, but I know that no one likes to be rebuked like a baby – I don’t. On most occasions, we’re so wrapped up by our desires to correct and protect others that we equally become cruel to the angry person - like using violence to extinguish violence. It doesn’t work that way and that’s why most times we miss the opportunity to be the face of change; people become pigheaded when they can be changing.

Finally, although there are times when it is necessary to stop someone physically from hurting another person, more often than not it is helpful that we show love and understanding to those lost in anger, allowing them to discover their tenderness, everyone of us possesses that good quality. When someone loses his temper or does something objectionable, it's up to us to extend love to them, not a “holier than thou” attitude. Only then can we make adequate change to someone who is lost in anger or offensive behavior.
Purest Love,

Collins Agboju

PS: This note is an atual experience written about two years ago.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE FAIL MORE OFTEN...

Take a look at an apple tree. There might be five hundred apples on the tree, each with ten seeds. That's a lot of seeds. We might ask, "Why would you need so many seeds to grow just a few more trees?"



Nature has something to teach us here. It's telling us: "Most seeds never grow. So if you really want to make something happen, you should better try more than once."

This might mean:
• You'll attend twenty interviews to get one job.
• You'll interview forty people to find one good employee.
• You'll talk to fifty people to sell one house, car, vacuum cleaner, insurance policy, or idea.
• And you might meet a hundred acquaintances to find one special friend.
When we understand the 'Law of the Seed', we don't get so disappointed. We stop feeling like victims. Laws of nature are not things to take personally. We just need to understand them - and work with them.

IN A NUTSHELL
Successful people fail more often. They plant more seeds. Go ahead and plant the next seed and be ready to sow another and another and another until you have good fruits. I am doing same.

Purest Love,

Collins Agboju