Sunday, December 15, 2013

Secular and religious bashes: A comparison



Secular and religious bashes: A comparison
“Steve Mbego is thought to have consumed the banana leaves because no one traced the remains of his food. He tilted the mouth of a Krest and the last thing I saw was bubbles. He drank carbon dioxide and the ginger ale in a flash. And in the end he felt nothing. People joked that he begged for more.
This past week I had the privilege of gracing two totally different social gatherings. One was a journalism club end of year bash and the other was a Christian union intercessors’ end of semester get together.
Two weeks ago, Journalism Club laid down elaborate and ambitious plans to have a different sign out of the year. The members unanimously agreed that days of picking biscuits and a crate of soda and heading for the retreat are long gone. They agreed to part with KSh. 200 each so that they buy a whole goat for the event. The only matter of contention was the venue and who will cook. Everything else was running like clockwork until the moment of putting action on a verb came.
And so a fortnight is not a long time given everyone is in a perpetual mad rush to close the semester. What with looming exams and festivals? Thus when I was reminded by the organizers that the others are in the field playing hide and seek and other children games I was jolted to nostalgia. I had to excuse myself by telling a believable lie until they get serious items to undertake so that I sneak in.
It was on a Saturday and for the most part the sun shone. But came the afternoon session the clouds threatened to dampen the otherwise excited mood of the participants.
Common sense dictated that we exercise so that we ward off cold. The children games were revisited. One game aped rugby only that the runners were to run until they are caught then they stood still on the spot amid the gasping of their captor who by now is catching a breath with sweat dripping from forehead and other centers of action if you know what I mean. Without trying I found that game so demanding and fit for those struggling to lose weight and cut fat.
I stood and watched like a spectator. Soon another item on the agenda was introduced. We sat on the lawn in a circle. A rope was snaked out of a bag and instructions were issued. “I went shopping for a rope until I could not get a seller. Is it you? Is it you? ” When the shopper drops the rope at your back (remember you are seated), you are supposed to run in the opposite direction full circle then the “seller” also runs in the opposite direction. If the seller completes the round before the buyer, the buyer continues shopping meaning you continue running until you found someone you could defeat so that you get a chance to relax. Two runners did their circumference and I laughed at how an endowed member can outrun a trim one. Without warning the rope was dropped smack at my back. I was startled on which side to run. By now the buyer is half the circle running like a night runner and I have no clue.  Before I did a quarter I was defeated meaning I continue marathoning.
I had to use my head not heart. I jogged singing “I went shopping to buy a rope/ It is not you/” times five. All of a sudden I dropped the rope and ran wildly in the opposite direction. The person I thought I would defeat finished the run at the same time as me. I crushed into his face with a booming collision. I felt as if my skull was dented and my wrist joint got dislocated. As if not to empathize with me the other players said curtly that I am not done and I should dust myself and run again.
This time round I got an underdog unawares. I targeted a lady whose hobby is walking like a chameleon. I dropped the rope smack at her hips and run assured that the anticlockwise direction was a one long tape I can cut anywhere with my sprinting scissors. I won. The earlier opponent was a man and you can imagine how men cling to hopes even when they are hanging on a string they always believe it will not snap. This was further complicated by the massive turn out of ladies dressed in reclined costumes.
The mother of all plays came when most least expected. Like manna from heaven, loaves were distributed to six competitors and each given a bottle of soda. They were timed. All manner of tactics were employed including working up salivary glands and compressing the 400 grams of wheat. My, you didn’t tell me that it is air and holes. Eric Munene pressed his until it looked like a fist before sinking his incisors. Zain got it rough. She wetted the loaf in the false believe that it will be softer to her throat and grant her a win. Instead her soda got exhausted midway. Someone had to chip in and refill her bottle with water. Any wonder she finished last?
I wonder how Simon Ritho the topdog got knocked out of the competition. After starting at high speed he slowed down and forgot he was in a competition. He looked like he was eating breakfast.  Oooh I see!  A few minutes ago, he had participated in a banana and soda competition which he also lost. I came forth out of five. Anyway, I did not expect to win.
Steve Mbego is thought to have consumed the banana leaves because no one traced the remains of his food. He tilted the mouth of a Krest and the last thing I saw was bubbles. He drank carbon dioxide and the ginger ale in a flash. And in the end he felt nothing. People joked that he begged for more.
I hate hopping and jogging but could not resist the creativity of donning a sack like a teacher on strike or the Biblical Mordecai but this time round going with the sack to the finish line. Zain took a stab at the sack. As if she was born on Monday, she bore all the bureaucracy of waking up and cursing the sun against the reality that the boss is waiting for her at the work place. She was frustrated by being given a sack half her size. She could not fit. She was then given an oversize that she kept adjusting. Mwangangi, the former Journalism Club Chair, was expected to win but I do not know what happened at the finish line. Someone with a muscle of a frog edged him. Mwangangi looked wowed like Kibaki when Usain Bolt flashed his trademark sign before him.
The spoon- potato race was unexciting and marred with false starts. Vincent Kibet grabbed the potato and the steel and sped off leaving those who patiently balanced the potatoes behind.
The referee complained and warned the offending player. They got back to the starting line. As they ran the rains ran behind them. We rushed to the pavilion to shelter. I guess behind our back, Kibet still grabbed his potato and won. They later joined us at the pavilion.
We saved the best for the last. It was time to head to Godka Restaurant and munch nyamachoma and ugali. The rains subsided. Some walked others hired a cab. What matters is that we arrived safely. Another striking difference is that there were more non-journalism club friends than the insiders. The regulars will rue the day they decided to snub the party.
Between four and six in the evening the jaws were working hard. Chrispin Magak got a raw deal since as a vegetarian, I and Martin Wachira offloaded his meats to our plates yet he paid KSh. 200. He only fed on scattered sukuma wiki and waited forever for ugali to come. After he had finished vegetables he was given ugali to “follow”.
Darkness arrived with drizzles and our wisdom demanded that we take cab home.
The following night it was different cast and script. I attended the CU intercessors get together in a quiet bedsitter labeled Number 13 at JK Hostels. I am not an intercessor myself. When Regina, my hostel mate invited me to the party I told her I will be bored. Since admission I have shied away from Christian events as I thought they were boring and conventionally conservative. She had a game and a form.  She started by borrowing me plates and spoons and later chairs. I popped in and out of number 13 with whetted appetite. They were cooking chapattis and playing gospel hits.
By around 11 pm the music went quiet and the table was crowded with foods and drinks. What fascinated me are their rules of introduction. One had to state their full names, their home county, their likes and dislikes and imagine: their marital status. The final one involved taking the guest to task to explain what they meant by being single, complicated, on-it, taken and/or out of the market.
The CU guys were more organized and sticker to protocols. I learned a new lingo called Mungu ataongea(God will speak). This was consolation for the virgins in the house to press on with their principles and for the been theres and done thats to know that there is still life beyond heartbreaks and sobs.
In terms of contribution, the CU friends contributed only 50 bob and had all they wanted. They cooked for themselves and were disciplined.  As for Journalism thugs, they were constantly reminded to pay up the remaining bit of rwabe (200 shillings). But it was not too much to ask since the treasures of Christians are at heaven and they are not materialistic. The scribes wanted attention and look-at-me feel. They wanted to be seen carrying big speakers, dancing and uploading pictures on the social media.
The intercessors did it for God. They always addressed each other as brother and sister amid countless amens.
In the final analysis both groups socialized and bonded. That is the common denominator. In this festive season touch a person with a message of peace and goodwill. Help the less fortunate.  I wish you success in your examinations.
The writer is a 3rd year student of Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com



No comments:

Post a Comment