“Daring ideas are like chessmen moved
forward. They may be beaten, but they may start a winning game”…Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 -1832) German writer and statesman.
Who’s looking at
you?
You would most probably be relegated to the sidelines
of intellectual gatherings and high-level discussions as a Nigerian in Nigeria
if you remotely appear naïve of the game of football.
It may also interest you to know that in as much as
you would probably do well not being anxious about what people think or say
about you, trust me when I say that if you are privileged to at least have a
glimpse of how people perceive you, you might as well be on the rare path of
seeing yourself through other people’s eyes and you may have the infrequent
opportunity to adjust some aspects about you, if indeed you must.
Take football for instance, to be a great football
player, apart from having talent, which is not an absolute must, you should
genuinely have a huge interest in the great sport, which of course progresses
into passion, followed by sacrifice, and if you are in luck, you will stumble
on a good coach that will try to bring out the best in you.
He monitors your lifestyle, supervises your training,
watches your every game and keeps your career dreams alive as he blends your
performance with a team of gifted players just like you, instilling in you
discipline, humility and leadership, making you an apparently finished product
of all round quality.
Hope I didn’t lose you there in the heap of football jargons;
suffice to say we all need a coach to help observe our evolution, we all need
someone to honestly tell us how we look when we cannot see ourselves, and who
will criticize us perhaps in a productive way.
“What you see and what you hear depends a great deal
on where you are standing. It also depends on what sort of person you are”…C.S.
Lewis (1898 – 1963) Clive Staples Lewis was a British novelist and poet.
What is Nigeria
to the world?
Although the entire world has impressively become a
global village where messages are sent, received and exchanged with the speed
of light, all nations including Nigeria have shared and enjoyed the spotlight
for positive reasons and even otherwise.
Currently in this 21st century there is
virtually no secret whatsoever about any nation, the strengths and weaknesses
of basically every nation are known if not to all, definitely to some.
For instance we know the United States is a world
superpower with massive weaponry, diplomacy, intellectual research etc. We also
know that Russia and China likewise compete for the number one superpower spot,
which has constantly evaded them and caused series of diplomatic and espionage matters.
We know North Korea has a history of being power
hungry and long to be recognized and also respected at the expense of her
citizenry, in order to buttress people’s speculations, a controversial motion
picture was even produced to reiterate the notion the whole world already knew.
We know that Africa has been constantly exploited and
also dragged down perhaps owing to complacence due to her ignorance, corruption
and greed due to illiteracy and lack of foresight, power drunkenness due to
insecurity and fear of the unknown, and terrorism due to lack of love, which
clearly disqualifies Nigeria from the league of world powers and changers.
Nigeria used to be respected for her agricultural
products and her mineral resources which ranges from crude oil, gold, tin,
bauxite, coal and so much more, but just as we said earlier about needing a
coach, Nigeria virtually became a football player that practically relied
solely on her apparent talents and didn’t want to be guided by a coach, and
just as you would expect, the growth and development of a once great potential
came to a stand still, literally.
“Change the way you look at things and the things you
look at change”…Wayne W. Dyer (1940 – 2015) American Philosopher, self-help
author and motivational speaker.
What do
Nigerians think of themselves?
For the record, this is totally my opinion without
prejudice and bias. I am sick and tired of people saying Nigerians are good
people, come on, we really need to move past this, like what is the good worth
when we can actually be great and incredibly awesome?
‘Good’ is a baggage, it wears you down to a state of
complacence and some comfort zone thing. It appears to be some self-gratifying
abode, which takes you far away from reality, setting one on the path of
mediocrity.
Nigerians need to move past just reacting to issues,
but also need to act intuitively by predicting the future the way the philosophers
and world powers do, which is by making the future they desire.
What do Nigerians think of themselves? They are
insecure because their role models were afraid and did not inspire them enough
to make them believe that they can conquer the world without selfishness, greed
and corruption.
In as much as indications have arisen that it is all
about to change, it remains incumbent on Nigerians to amass the right quantity
of courage and initiative to make something creative of themselves as the world
is impatiently waiting.
“Do not let the memories of your past limit the
potential of your future. There are no limits to what you can achieve on your
journey through life, except in your mind”…Roy T. Bennett (1957 - … )
Zimbabwean politician and former member of British/South African police.
What is
Nigeria’s true potential?
I’m sure you’re probably somewhat disconcerted,
wondering if I cannot see the Nigerian heroes in diaspora, but that is the
problem, why just diaspora?
Thousands of Nigerians are superstars in other
countries, excelling in sports, medicine, science, law, politics, charity,
education and so much more. When they were studied it was found that they
performed greatly because they had the emigrant’s attitude, and they had a fine
environment to work in, better than the one they had in Nigeria.
This in someway means either they are not really
Nigerian’s anymore, or they eternally owe the western world all that they have
achieved.
In essence, we have not truly achieved much until the
western world can come to our shores and acknowledge that indeed we have
surpassed their imagination with our own
discoveries, and we not getting carried away by it, not just because it may
be a deception, but also because in truth, humility, which is the character of
the sages will make us sober, reflective and open minded in readiness for more
wisdom which is yet to come into our souls from the infinite and heavenly
source, with we being qualified as the gods that we are.
“At the end of the day the question comes what are you
doing for the world? You have to try to do something that’s going to add
something positive”…Paul Feig (1962 - …) American actor, director, producer and
screenwriter.
What is Nigeria
up to?
In the year 2050 Nigeria is tipped to be the 3rd most
populous nation in the world, and trust me, this is not an achievement and
obviously not good news even in the least.
Of the current 180 million people living in Nigeria
about 75% live below the poverty line of surviving under N500 a day. The
remaining 25% or so are simply fortunate based on the premise that ‘it is
opportunity that separates human beings’. Statistics does in a way show that
the wealth of the nation has somehow found its way to the wrong hands through
corruption, thievery and other vices, vehemently altering the eco system where
lions now eat grass and maggots, while the top of the food chain is reserved
for ants, scorpions and snakes, how weird and awkward.
Wouldn’t you know, that ill-gotten wealth, through the
natural order of things such as guiding principles that govern the earth,
becomes toxic? Especially if the unforgivable act of robbery has caused great
deprivation for the desperately needy, and which the act caused irreparable
damage or even loss of lives.
How many truly wealthy Nigerians have clean money and
have empowered youths and tried to sponsor research that will benefit the
citizenry and their future?
This is difficult or impossible for them because they
don’t really love the nation; they are only greedy and repressive.
When they expand their businesses, it is only to
improve their bottom line and not primarily provide employment; they couldn’t
do it alone in the first place, so they need us, as they cannot survive without
contribution of the masses that work with their hearts.
Believe or not, this is the time for Nigerians to wake
up and get up to reality for our lives and our future depends on it. We need to
seek knowledge the way we seek to breathe air in order to realize that we need
to understand and embrace the divinely set principles that govern the earth.
We surely must strive to genuinely love our neighbours
as ourselves, only then will our eyes widely open and we will not only look,
but we also shall see.
God bless Nigeria!
Thank you, and be awesome because you truly are.
Akin Abimbola.
Twitter: @akinzogee
Facebook: Critical Lyric by Akin
Abimbola
Instagram: Akinzogee
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Sources: Brainy Quote, CNN, Google,
Good reads, Premium times, The light in the heart, The Magician’s Nephew, UN
Report, Wikipedia
This article is an original piece, reasonably researched and
contains considerable opinion and a unique style of the author.
The names in actual stories are not real and the stories in this
write-up are fictional, consequently, people’s names appearing are
purely co-incidental, except for quotes and news that are typically referenced.

Nigerians should read this.... Including our leaders. This is a great piece.....and message taken. Nigeria can be better than this.
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