Sorrows Sorrows
It’s raining.
I am four years old.
The TV is on but I’m not watching it. My hand twitches. I crawl towards my mum.
Stop crawling, she says. Use your legs.
I avert my gaze.
Oya what’s wrong? Nono, what do you want?
I point towards the study.
Her face scrunches up.
Kwuo okwu, Ada m. Use your words. I did not give birth to a mute child.
I look away.
So you won’t talk?
Books. I finally murmur.
Louder, she says.
Books, I repeat, staring at her.
She tells me to go.
I barely hear her say, “we need to buy children books for this girl.”
It’s raining.
I am 8 years old.
The priest tells me I passed my first Holy communion test, but I am too young, and besides, my older brother is receiving this year, so why not wait till next year?
Wait wait wait.
That’s all I hear.
All my life I’ve been waiting for something that still hasn’t happened. Does it ever end? The waiting, the hoping, the aching for that which I can never get.
Ọ na akwusi? Does it ever end?
Wait wait wait.
Wait, that’s all I hear.
I walk home that evening, my back hunched from broken dreams and heavy books.
It’s raining.
I am 12 years old.
The class hush their speeches as I step in. Why are there so many students?
Why are they all staring at me?
Abort, my brain says, you aren’t wanted here. Abort.
I barely hear the question thrown at me.
I turn to the voice.
“What’s your name?” She asks me. Her large frame towering over mine.
“Irenonsen,” I respond.
Eh? I can’t pronounce it. Don’t you have another name?
I want to tell her my dad said I must use my native name in school.
For him, if people can pronounce Schwarzenegger, then Irenonsen shouldn’t be a big deal. Big people go by their native names, he says, and I am big, so I must wear my native name with pride.
Here in this room however, I feel very small.
Like a sheep between lions.
I remind myself that I want to be on a good footing with everyone here. That’s the only way I won’t get bullied again.
So, I turn to her and say “Christine.”
My name is Christine.
It’s raining.
I am sixteen years old.
The darkness is getting bigger.
I have tried to explain it but the words get stuck in my throat. I wish you would look at me and see the stories on my skin.
Last night, you said I was frigid. I searched my mind wondering how best to tell you that you met a broken version of me.
See, I want you but I see his face everytime you’re on me.
I feel his hands grasping, probing for that which isn’t his. I feel his cold gaze and I remember. It’s you but also him.
Ọ nọ ebe niile. He’s everywhere.
I feel you above me, and I remember. It’s all I can do to just lie there and take it.
It takes every ounce of strength left in me to just lie there. I have nothing else to give.
Let me go if I’m too much for you. Or is it that I’m not enough?
It’s raining.
I am 20 years old.
They say grief lessens over time. I disagree.
E chem maka gị tata. I thought of you today.
My heart clenched.
I wouldn’t say the grief has lessened but I will say it has morphed into a part of me.
I carry the grief so comfortably now.
I can think of you and not break down in tears. I have begun to accept that you’re gone. I haven’t moved on, but I’m moving through this world with memories of you.
I step out into the rain and say, “you would have loved this.”
I smile.
I go back in.