Back to Sender

04/20/10  Print this post Print this post    15 Comments   Popular   Written by Lola Akinmade
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Lagos Traffic

All photos by author.

Lola Akinmade is confronted with the energetic survivalist frenzy of Lagos, one that was sheltered away when growing up.

Through loudspeakers connected to a van, a heavily synthesized voice belts out “Back to Sender, O! Back to Sender!”

These are the only English lyrics in the Muslim worship song he sings in Yoruba, a West African language. The once white rusty van is parked along the side of a one-way street yet traffic travels in both directions.

A poster of a deceased local engineer and “mentor” hangs next to a “Good Luck” sign, both pasted on the front part of a small bus designed for 12 passengers, but clearly holding about forty. Faces are pressed against its windows waiting patiently for the extra passenger the bus conductor is certain can fit in comfortably with the rest.

More buses roll past, emerging from a steamy bus park across from the music-blasting van. Stickers of “Adam’s Desire”, a sexual enhancer, are fixed to the bumpers and rear windows of some. Others have biblical quotes and references to God’s absolute might and protection. Patrons choose buses guided by how they spiritually feel on any particular day.

Okadas – motorcycle taxis – race up and down the street, buzzing and narrowly dodging cars as well as vendors selling oranges, phone cards, snacks, and other random items sitting close to the edge of the street with their toes within inches of rolling tires. The okada drivers don helmets, not because they want to but because of a newly instated law. Many helmets remain unbuckled or perched atop caps and geles — head-ties worn by women.

Okadas

There is a constant sense of mortality. Pedestrians and vendors dart through oncoming traffic with mandatory cat-like reflexes. All senses are heightened.The sweltering heat so violates the mind that one retaliates with aggression to stay alive.

Not quite ready to jump into the maddening flow quite yet, I temporarily slip into the Nigerian daze to survive. A semi-conscious state where one stares with no facial expression at everything, not fully observing yet subconsciously aware of one’s surroundings.

Hours can be spent waiting, sitting, wandering, and relaxing within the daze. I had slipped into this daze to conserve my sanity only to be jolted back when a tanker-trailer sideswipes us violently. An intentional act which left me perplexed.

“You need just the right amount of madness in this town. Give them the illusion that you’re ready to snap any second.”

He’d cut us off and our frustrated driver had given him the “Waka!” sign – right palm open, fingers arched, and a quick flick at the elbow in the direction of the recipient.

This means “God punish your mother!”

The trailer driver had been ready to kill us for insulting him, and had rammed into our small car, shoving us off the road. Minutes earlier, a dilapidated tow truck had already cut us off and given us the “Waka!” sign at the sound of our frustrated horn. Personal insult is feigned as a way of bullying to get ahead. Just a few days earlier, another tanker-trailer had run over a woman who’d probably wandered into its path, crushing her until her entrails burst loose from her body along the side of the road in full view of everyone.

In the midst of it all, air-conditioned sedans, borderline airtight seem to glide through the frenzy. Uniformed schoolkids, their cargo, stare out windows, their noses pressed against chilled glass, observing the sweltering world outside. Wondering what it sounded like, as people, cars, buses all seemed to move by in slow motion to them.

Early afternoon meant they were probably on their way to after-school lessons. I watch them drive by with a sense of familiarity.

I could easily recount their day, hour by hour. They probably woke up this morning to either Christian or Muslim prayers, took a bath from a warm pail of water, scarfed down breakfast of bread and tomato-onion omelets, and got carted off to school.

They’d scream the national anthem at the top of their lungs as competitive juices begin to bubble to the surface. They’d compete to be first to ask questions in class, arms shooting up like referee flags on offside calls.

Compete to be heard and seen.

Life is lived day to day here. Most meals are cooked and completely consumed the same day as refrigerators are at the mercy of the local electric company and small generators. So open markets thrive. Sole proprietorships thrive. Daily routine pulsates at feverish pitches here and it needs to be. Nigerians are alive today and this fact is celebrated with noise, organized chaos, aggression, and a sharpened sense of “now”.

Okadas

People exist vibrantly here and they need to. For any minute, they could very well be returned to their sender.

“You need just the right amount of madness in this town,” my little sister jokes as she skillfully steers a large SUV through thick Lagos go-slow traffic. “Give them the illusion that you’re ready to snap any second.”

One only spews from experience in this city and okada drivers remain the main traffic burn, whizzing by and squeezing between vehicles like mosquitoes oblivious to merging buses and cars switching lanes.

“Madam, wetin dey do you?!” one biker yells in Pidgin English after almost crashing head-on into her jeep in an attempt to squeeze by as she made a perfectly legal right-hand turn.

She quickly rolls down her window and lets out a crazed laugh.

“You want to die?! You want to die?!” she yells back vehemently. “ I go send you back to your maker!” She ends with a cackle.

The driver gives her the “Waka!” sign and speeds off.

As her maniacal laughter dies down, I turn to her. She’d been one of those little schoolkids wearing blue and white checkered gingham uniforms with large blue collars, taking in the world from the backseat, with her little snub nose pressed against a chilled glass window.

We’d both been.


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About the Author

Matador ID: geotraveler

Lola Akinmade is the editor of Matador Goods. Read her articles, view her photography, and follow her travels at http://www.lolaakinmade.com

15 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Julie replied on April 20, 2010

    Lola-
    I don’t really know how to say how much I appreciated and enjoyed this piece, but I’m sitting here in a t-shirt and it’s 68 degrees and I have chills.

    ↵ Reply
    • Lola replied to Julie on April 20, 2010

      Haha! Thanks Julie

      ↵ Reply
  • Tope replied on April 21, 2010

    LOL…good stuff..love Lagos…madness et al!!!!

    ↵ Reply
    • Lola replied to Tope on April 21, 2010

      @Tope – Totally dedicated to you

      ↵ Reply
  • Paul Sullivan replied on April 21, 2010

    Beautiful, Lola…intense insights, poetically rendered.

    ↵ Reply
  • Timi M replied on April 21, 2010

    @ Lola very, very nice! I’d been one too:)

    @ Tope…I can just picture the scene in my head :)

    ↵ Reply
    • Lola replied to Timi M on April 22, 2010

      Thanks Timi!

      ↵ Reply
  • Abbie replied on April 21, 2010

    This is a great piece, I really get a sense of the place :)

    ↵ Reply
  • Lola replied on April 22, 2010

    Lagos is certainly one of those places that must be visited to be believed. Though things are getting a lot better now in terms of mobility and transportation, it is still one of the most challenging cities in the world.

    ↵ Reply
  • Nana G replied on April 24, 2010

    Love this piece. Brave of you to take on the topic of the Lagosian transport “system”. lol. I could hear the accented annoyance, smell the fumes, visualize the helmets “perched atop caps and geles”, and the merciless heat. Lagos is definitely unforgettable place.

    ↵ Reply
    • Lola replied to Nana G on April 27, 2010

      @Nana – Glad you liked the piece. Lagos needs to be experienced to fully understand it.

      ↵ Reply
  • Manu Stanley replied on April 26, 2010

    Hi Lola,

    Interesting piece. Reminds me of the hustle and bustle of crowded Delhi roads I have to traverse everyday. It seems to me now that road rage is a global phenomenon and not particular to us Delhi-ites.

    ↵ Reply
    • Lola replied to Manu Stanley on April 27, 2010

      @Manu – Delhi is one of those cities I’d love to experience!

      ↵ Reply
  • Gabriela Garcia replied on April 26, 2010

    This is really, really beautiful, Lola! The kind of essence of place that can only truly be captured by someone with a deep personal connection.

    ↵ Reply
    • Lola replied to Gabriela Garcia on April 27, 2010

      @Gabriela – Thanks so much.

      ↵ Reply

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