I am already counting days to get out of here. I am not tired of serving my country, but it seems my country is tired of giving me things to do.
So I guess this might be my last or 2nd to the last chronicle. No qualms, let’s get the day’s issues over with.
Today was visiting day. Old papa Seye came around and we had a swell time together with other great folks from OAU. By the way, OAU corpers account for roughly 10% of all the corpers in Lagos camp. How that happened passes my imagination. Welcome to Nigeria.
The chicken that stained the rice.
If you didn’t glance at the picture of the rice, please take a look at it again. Can you see the dot on the rice. That’s chicken, my brother and sister. Thank God for God. As a roomie put it, they used the chicken to stain the rice. How accurate!
At Iyana Ipaja, I had a rare opportunity of watching planes fly in towards the Murtala Mohammed International Airport. This opportunity I didn’t get as a kid having lived in Ile-Ife. Here at Iyana-Ipaja, you could see them very large and impressive as they prepared to land.
The part that interests me in this plane matter is that THERE WERE MORE PRIVATE JETS THAN PASSENGER PLANES. Roger that. I am sure big thinkers are feeling me. Nigeria is a great place to be from, forget the negatives. Who says I won’t buy my own jet?
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Why you dey form foreign? you’ve been prepared for this a long time ago. At least this stain is much bigger than what you were served in your secondary school. As for the 10%, we should ask you by what miracle you got into Lagos camp as well.
By the way, who be old papa?
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