I Gave It A Year

Abiola Biya
2 min readDec 12, 2019

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I remember where I was when I got the news, I remember knowing immediately what it meant when I heard my sister’s weepy voice on the phone. I remember the moments after that, I remember thinking about the shitty year I was having as I packed up my bag. I remember the days that followed; the visitors, the haircut, waking up to the sound of tears on several occasions, my sister completely losing it at my cousin’s baby’s naming ceremony. And I remember how I felt, I remember feeling relief, and guilt, and worry, and sadness.

I felt relief because I was certain that nothing worse could happen to me. That year had taken and taken and just when I thought I had nothing left, it took again. Somehow, I was sure it had had enough this time. It was my everything that could go wrong has gone wrong moment, the bottom of the lowest valley I could imagine, so, it had to mean that it was only uphill from there.

I felt guilty because I thought I didn’t deserve to grieve. Although he was my father, we were not really friends. I was convinced I wasn’t supposed to be hurting as much as everyone else and I really wasn’t, because what kind of a person feels relieved after getting bad news? Instead, I devoted my time and energy to cleaning and cooking, and I would slip into the bathroom from time to time, have a good cry, wipe my eyes, and slip right back into the throng of people coming in and leaving the house.

I was worried because it wasn’t normal for me to be feeling all the things I was feeling. I was certain something was wrong with me.

And I was sad because well, my father had just died.

N.B: It’s been a year and none of it really goes away. But I do love you, dad, and we miss you.

A ma pa de le se Jesu.

Laters!

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Abiola Biya
Abiola Biya

Written by Abiola Biya

scrim scrim like plantain chips.

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