Have you ever had a time where
all you saw was you? A time where you were so immersed in your own world that
you literally saw no one? Well, I have. I guess then I was in my early teens.
All I saw was me. As a matter of fact, I never knew anyone whose feet were more
beautiful, or perhaps whose arms were slenderer: not because I was full of
praise and admiration for myself, but because I never saw myself in the first
place, not to talk of seeing another. All I knew was that I had a body and my
name is called Eniola. So any time the name is called, I went with my body to
take ownership of it. I was Eniola Olaosebikan and that was all that mattered-
not my feet, my legs nor my hips. I left
for school every day in my body with perhaps the maximum care I could give it,
but then, without a care of how it differed from someone else’. It was a point
where I never really saw me, not to talk of seeing someone else.
But then, that time came; the
time my eyes suddenly opened as though I ate the apple Eve ate. I began to see
whose arms were slimmer, whose skin was more golden and perhaps whose feet were
cuter. I not only began to take note of myself, but also of others. But then, the more I saw, and perhaps
searched, the more all I saw were differences, never similarities. Then
suddenly, I began to feel all alone in the world, because no one for some
reasons was like me. The more I compared, the more I saw things I thought I
didn’t like about myself and in contrast saw things I loved more in others. I
began to lose the primal love I had for myself though I never knew it existed.
Almost everybody that had what I seemed not to have either suddenly became
prettier or perhaps I suddenly became prettier than them. The comparison I
believe made me form caucuses with some in my league and others either below or
seemingly above. Aside from the love now
seemingly lost, I also began to lose the self-respect I had for myself I never
knew existed as well. Slowly, like a ceiling fan disconnected from its source
of electricity, I began to take my eyes off myself till finally I fixed it on
someone else, or should I say other people’s? People whose ground it appeared I
would love to worship.
But then, one thing I’m eternally
grateful for was that it never took me so long before I began to put my gaze
back on myself. This time around however, in a conscious way. How did it
happen? I realized two major things-
1. The
fact that I am a Masterpiece and that there is no one else like me.
2. That
my body is just a container, a container to be thrown away after the liquid- my
assignment- is done.
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There's a saying that says ''if have got to be successful, have got to be me. Then, have got to know who me is''. You are the special Eniola Olaosebikan (Aug7Damsel). Elegant with style and class.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words, and for being a great friend of the blog.
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