Category: Life – The Midweek Magazine

  • Guide for self-discovery

    Guide for self-discovery

    Discover Yourself by Oluwasanmi Oyewumi is a motivational and inspirational book that guides both the young and old searching their inward minds on self-discovery.

    As a personal development coach, Oyewumi surveys the theme of success using practical reality and contemporary instances that people could easily relate to.  He does not only dwell on self-discovery, but also shed light on how fulfilling the purpose of human existence can be achieved by the unlocking of the keys of identity crisis.

    The author of the book explores extensively the right path to tread in life to achieve greatness through self-discovery. According to him, so many people have so many things that can earn them greatness and success in life. Those things are valuable gems hidden in them but the problem with these people is that they found it difficult to find the gems in them as many find it hard to discover themselves.

    This book, written in an easy flowing language describes and provides an antidote to psychological sickness that may derail the mindsets of people towards building a strong self-esteem whilst also seeking self-fulfillment and relevance in the society.

    One endearing quality of the book is the ability of the writer to simplify various concepts. The thematic concerns of the book are arranged in six basic chapters which are then discussed in headings and sub headings.

    In the first chapter, the author dwelled on identity crisis, addressing how people who have the innate ability to get to their promised land often falter as they fail to discover the hidden gems in their psychological farmlands. “They have potentials in them, but they appear like nuisances to the world,’’ Oyewumi intoned.

    Citing his himself, the writer presents the causes and consequences of identity crisis, noting: “Unless we all see the identity crisis as a common enemy and deal with it, we may not be able to give our best contributions to the world and enjoy the success we truly deserve”.

    In the second chapter of the book, Oyewumi wrote on the need for self-examination using the saying of Socrates which says, “An unexamined life is not worth living,” to buttress his point.

    He further adds that self-examination should be seen as “a great exercise that helps us to take stock of our life and make necessary adjustments toward enjoying our dreams”.

    Discovering one’s uniqueness is the overriding theme of the issues discussed in the book’s third chapter.  The author opined that so many people want to be called the best while they fail to realise that there is a difference between being the best and being unique.

    In chapter four, the writer explores the need to celebrate and accept one’s uniqueness. He wrote that failure to accept and celebrate uniqueness is the cause of many negative feelings experienced in the world.

    The remaining two chapters in the book feature topics on the difference between dreams and reality as well as the ways through which one could make a passion a profession.

    The author of the book however explicitly clarifies that the great ones are not just those who have made achievements in life but those who have made fulfillments of their purposes in this temporary world.  Projecting the belief that the best way to excel in life is for a man to make his passion a profession, he pronounced that until people discover themselves, they may never recover from life.

     

     Language and styles

     

    The language of the book is straightforward and can be easily understood by teenagers and adults. Both linguistic and literary stylistics are well deployed and tooled to convey the message of the writer to the readers. The use of proverbs, allusion, flash-forward, metaphor, and simile makes the book a rich motivational material to lay hands on for anyone who cares for quick self-discovery.

    The chapter summary and exercise also make the book a viable tool for those seeking self-discovery and identity. Lovers of short book will find it interesting.

    On the other hand, the author could have done a better job of thoroughness especially regarding some names mentioned where only first names were provided instead of the first and last name i.e Mr Pedro, MrAjibose.

  • Ekpuk exhibits Achebe’s book covers at Smithsonian

    Ekpuk exhibits Achebe’s book covers at Smithsonian

    As part of global celebration of the 60th anniversary of Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Nigerian-American artist based in Washington, DC, Victor Ekpuk, will hold an exhibition featuring artworks used as book cover books, including TFA, in the United States.

    The exhibition will hold at the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art on March 15, 2018. The event will also feature a panel discussion featuring Prof Nwando Achebe – Jack and Margaret Sweet Endowed Professor of History at Michigan State University – Ekpuk and others.

    Ekpuk’s art reflects his experiences as a global artist.  “The subject matter of my work deals with the human condition explained through themes that are both universal and specific: family, gender, politics, culture and Identity” says Ekpuk on his works.

    His art, which began as an exploration of nsibidi “traditional” graphics and writing systems in Nigeria, has evolved to embrace a wider spectrum of meaning that is rooted in African and global contemporary art discourses.

    Guided by the aesthetic philosophy nsibidi, where sign systems are used to convey ideas, Ekpuk re-imagines graphic symbols from diverse cultures to form a personal style of mark making those results in the interplay of art and writing.

     

  • Akinwumi Isola: Farewell, curator of Yoruba beauty

    Akinwumi Isola: Farewell, curator of Yoruba beauty

    In an earliest scene in one of Professor Akinwumi Isola’s classic films, with the title Saworo Ide, we learn that a patriarch is dying. This patriarch is surrounded by a group of young men and women who urge him to speak to them before he yields his ghost. The old man obliges and he begins to speak, and a young man amplifies his voice to the hearing of those who will carry out his instructions, and to the audience as well. The dying patriarch gives a specific instruction on the making of Saworo Ide, a drum that will serve as the voice of the people and, subsequently, seal a pact forever with their rulers in the town of Jogbo.

    The story is, of course, talking about democracy, and the mutual responsibility of both the leadership and followership to check as well as balance each other. In the wake of IcÍla’s recent passing, I find myself watching this film again and, in the process, thinking of him as that father, the dying patriarch, whose wisdom and insight created the culture, practice, and rituals that would forever serve the people!

    By any objective assessment, IcÍla’s impact on modern Yoruba culture is undeniable. He, indeed, burst onto the world literary scene in 1961 with his first play, ¸Efunsetan Aniwura: Iyalode Ibadan. He interestingly wrote the play as an undergraduate student of the University of Ibadan, a significant achievement similar to the origin of Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart. The play became popular by winning an award in 1966, organised by the Egbe Ijinle Yoruba (Yoruba Language Society) and, then, by being staged to public acclaim. When it was eventually published, the play became the defining text of its era. Efunsetan Aniwura: Iyalode Ibadan shaped the Yoruba cultural imagination in a way that IcÍla himself might not have envisioned when he started writing the text.

    The heroine and lead character, Efunsetan Aniwura, was an actual historical figure. She was the Iyalode of Ibadan in the 19th century. She fascinated me then, she fascinated me now! Isola’s Efunsetan Aniwura: Iyalode Ibadan was not meant to be an historical account; instead, the play was meant to be a creative rendering by an artist. The play was staged a number of times by different theatre production groups, but the most popular one was shown by the IshÍla OgunshÍla “I Show Pepper” theatre group. The play became hugely popular, and it was as well read by generations of Yoruba school children as well as their parents, who were all fascinated by the ¸funcetan Aniwura character. Remarkably, Efunsetan Aniwura: Iyalode Ibadan would go on to canonize the actress, who played the role of Isola, Iyabo Ogunshola, and who is today still referred to as “Iya Efun.” It was recorded that once, when the play was billed to be shown in Ibadan, the then governor of Oyo  State, Chief Bola Ige, the legal luminary, received intelligence reports that the theatre would be overrun. Therefore, the governor had the stage play transferred to the Liberty Stadium, and the place was filled up with thousands of spectators. The combination of IcÍla’s writing skills and the artistic virtuosity of Ogunshola, a phenomenal actress in her own right, was simply irresistible.

    The irony of Isola’s characterisation of Efunsetan Aniwura was that it made an “accidental feminist” out of Isola. His play, though a fictional representation of the story of a woman who had been buried deep in the rubble of history and cultural memory, fascinated the public so much that it became the official autobiography.

    Isola’s feisty wielding of the pen, which proved that it could be mightier than the sword, revived the faint memories of the woman’s story and turned her into a cultural phenomenon. There was, however, a major problem, and it was pointed out to him by the celebrated and iconic Yoruba historian, Professor Bolanle Awe: that the actual historical figure was killed in the nineteenth century by a male-dominated ruling council in Ibadan. Through Isola’s portrayal of her in his play, and his plotline making Efunsetan Aniwura’s death inevitable, Awe argued that Efunsetan Aniwura had suffered another round of male violence. On his part, Isola contended that he had created the character as emblematic of women’s power and strength, as he had witnessed in his own mother and grandmother, respectively, while growing up. Meanwhile, the question of whether the historical figure would have become iconized in cultural imagination, if he had not created her as he did, remains an academic subject. I should, however, note that the tragedy of Efunsetan Aniwura’s representation in the play was eventually redressed in the film version when Tunde Kelani, the preeminent film producer, offered the woman a more dignified death.

    Isola created other powerful female heroines. One of them was Madam Tinubu, another historical figure, who was a wealthy slave trader and a nationalist. Just as it was the case with Efunsetan Aniwura, his writing of the woman’s history has, in some ways, replaced her actual history and biography. Such was Isola’s compelling power on the cultural imagination that his creativity became the emblem of history that everyone related to.

    Also, Isola wrote on the great Herbert Macaulay, the fierce nationalist figure. IcÍla was not only invested in historical figures; he as well wrote such politically-charged stories such as Campus Queen, in which he put the power and agency to change the nation’s political culture in the hands of a young woman. He developed well-rounded female characters in his other works, too, and that was a factor that distinguished him from many other writers of his generation.

    Isola wrote plays that meditated on the social and political culture of Nigeria. His politics and his propaganda were never hidden. He was deeply interested in reshaping the social ethics that had become contaminated by the lack of values in contemporary society. He preached conservative values but the exhortations in his work never overshadowed his artistry as a painter of language. His works like Saworo Ide, Agogo Eewo, and Koseegbe are an alchemy of didacticism, poetry, and the masterful humor for which he was known.

    While Isola wrote works on political issues that poked at the tense situation Nigeria had experienced, and their aftermath that still imperiled the society, he also wrote on love and social relationships. O Le Ku is one such offerings, and perhaps, one of his finest outings as a writer. Isola wrote O Le Ku, originally a novel, before its adaptation to a play on youthful love and its intrigues, indeed without framing it too rigidly with the puritanical patronage which older folks can be notorious for when addressing the lives of young people. The novel is delectable, humorous, and perceptive.

    From drama, IcÍla would go onto fiction, poetry, and, much later, film productions. His repertoire of works includes Belly Bellows, Two Contemporary African Plays, Eru Owo, Ofin Ga, Aye Ye Won Tan, Abe Abo, Afaimo (collection of poetry), Fabu (a collection of fables) and Ogun Omode, a memoir of sorts. He also translated Wole Soyinka’s outstanding work, Death and the King’s Horseman, and his memoir, Ake: The Years of Childhood into Yoruba, Iku Olokun Esin and Ake: Nigba Ewe, respectively. His plays or novels, when they were adapted into films, would define the contemporary Yoruba cinema. In collaboration with master filmmakers like Tunde Kelani, he artfully translated the beauty of the Yoruba language for which he was known for into a modern medium for his growing audience.

    Isola was a deep-seated practitioner of the language, and he was never apologetic about narrowing his audience to just Yoruba people. By staying within the particular, he made Yoruba universal.

    He has greatly contributed to Yoruba language, social and visual culture, documentation, and history. He relentlessly campaigned for the Yoruba language to play a more visible role in our social life so that the culture, the history, and the beauty they harbor would not disappear. In this wise, he lived as he believed. In 2013, he gave an entire convocation address at Adekunle Ajasin University in Yoruba. Earlier, he had proposed to give his Inaugural Lecture in Yoruba at the Obafemi Awolowo University but the regulations did not allow this. If he had been a citizen of some other country, a professor of a language and literature giving an address in the language he was hired to teach and research would not have been strange. In Nigeria, it takes a lot of radicalism to follow this path. Such was the acute conviction of Isola that the Yoruba language should be given its pride of place in our society, a cause he advocated relentlessly in the many essays he wrote.

    Isola was an artful writer, yet one can argue that it was only one of the many roles he played in the definition of modern Yoruba culture. He was a playwright, language artist, essayist, screenplay writer, broadcaster, critic, satirist, producer, and an overall cultural icon. For a man who has made such a tremendous impact on the creative use of Yoruba, Isola started out with a European language – French. His first degree in French was from the University of Ibadan and he would go on to earn a Master of the Arts in Yoruba Literature from the University of Lagos in 1978, and finally a PhD in African literature from the University of Ibadan. He started his teaching career at the University of Lagos from where he moved to the Obafemi Awolowo University where he was appointed a professor and where he retired. He was awarded the National Merit Award, and he was also a Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Letters.

    Today, we celebrate his life because, while Isola has ascended to the pantheon of the elders, he is not dead. A man like Isola whose artistic mammary glands nurtured generations of Yoruba children and inaugurated his essence in the minds of millions cannot die.

    Fare thee well, Isola, the silver-haired curator of Yoruba beauty. We know that,

    Ká a tó rí erin, ó di igbó,

    Kí a tó rí efon oó di odàn;

    Kí a tó rí eni bí Baba wa,

    Àyàfi tí OÍorun bá fe.

    The Yoruba nation and its tumultuous people can never have another artist-cum-writer like you, dear Isola, unless Olodumare and the elders choose to send one our way, while you continue to rest in peace!

     

  • Artists Forum hosts Oshinowo March 4

    Artists Forum hosts Oshinowo March 4

    A group of old and upcoming artists, Artists Socia Forum, will hold an evening of discussions and interactions at the Resource Place, Ikeja, Lagos on March 4 at 4pm.

    The event is being organised in honour of Kolade Oshinowo who turned 70 on February 6. It will feature talks on topical issues on art and artists by writers, historians and curators.

    The bi-monthly show is sponsored by Chief Timothy Fasuyi and other elder artists while Dr Kunle Adeyemi and Bolaji Ogunwo are coordinators.

    Celebrated artists at the last editions were Prof Bruce Onobrakpeya, Dr Kunle Filani, Prof Yusuf Grillo and Prof Peju Layiwola.

  • Strelitzia, a theatre of emotions, set for LTF

    Strelitzia, a theatre of emotions, set for LTF

    Performance poet Donna Ogunnaike has begun the journey to help her audience remember emotions and recover memories that need to be repaired.

    Through her brand of therapeutic theatre, Donna, who is also a theatre practitioner, lawyer, oil and gas expert, brings to Nigerian theatre, Strelitzia An experiential journey to self, slated for the 2018 British Council’s Lagos Theatre Festival (LTF) from tomorrow to March 4.

    Emotions are every man’s unique weakness, and over the ages, men have learnt to master their emotions. But when men lock away memories that evoke emotion, those emotions might become real problems, and that is what Strelitzia seeks to unlock.This is all to ensure people do not just master those emotions, but become better versions of themselves.

    The production by Ogunnaike, which was the only Nigerian theatre chosen to represent the country at the World Cultures Festival, 2017 in Hong Kong on November 4 and 5, is simply put, a remembering of emotions from memories long forgotten.

    Strelitzia, which in the 2017 LTF was performed 10 times, has received impressive reviews locally and internationally.

    Speaking with Ogunnaike on the essence of the show and why it has been successful in spite of the unusual nature of the performance, she explained that Strelitzia…  is a therapeutic journey of remembrance that allows you heal even after dredging up memories, which lead to forgotten emotions and hurt. These past experiences she says are usually the things that dictate, who, where and what we are today.

    It is at the same time a captivating and liberating kind of theatre. It uses theatre in one of its ancient and intended forms – a means of achieving healing of self.

    In her words, “Strelitzia is not a theatre that can simply be explained, it has to be experienced, and each person’s experience is different. Imagine flipping through a diary where you experience the memory of the point in which that entry of the diary was written. In the last performance, we had people who saw it multiple times, while some became quite emotional.”

    Strelitzia, for which performance, a purpose built art installation was placed within Freedom Park, Lagos Island, walks you through experiences of a different time, allowing the audience to relate with the past. The performance comprises six sequences – each representing a different human memory and experience. All scenes are sown in a quilt of memory-evoking recollections of stories that will leave any audience in wonder and delight.

    It is an interactive kind of theatre that seeks to heal a troubled world. Strelitzia, according to a critic, has the ability to “help the audience free themselves from the pent-up inner tensions and trauma of the past, which may hinder their individual and group attainment of freedom. Its approach to freedom is to take the audience through a psychological journey facilitated by music, ûlm, poetry and images that could free the clustered human mind and ultimately lead to self-rediscovery.”

    While per show, the production cannot take more than 30 people so as not to lose some members of the audience, the performance shows multiple times.

    Ogunnaike had her debut theatre production, Love Like Slave, at the 2016 LTF.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Three win AfDB’s Farming is cool art contest

    Three win AfDB’s Farming is cool art contest

    Three young students, Ezra Anthony, Precious Nnenna Enyinwa and Vivien Okoro have won the African Development Bank’s (AfDB’s) Farming is cool art contest. The winners went home with cash prizes of N1 million, N500,000 and N250,000 for first, second and third places.

    AfDB President Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina presented the prizes to the winners while Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who represented President Muhammadu Buhari, opened the new office complex.

    Twenty contestants aged 10 to 16 years took part in the contest. It was part of AfDB’s goal to see a shift in agriculture on the continent, hoping to feed itself and eradicate malnutrition by 2025.

    At the inauguration of its complex at Abuja, AfDB inspired secondary school pupils with the Farming is cool contest to launch African economic outlook for 2018, as well as to share the high 5.

    According to Senior Director, Nigeria Country Department, AfDB, Ebrima Faal, the conest was conducted to sow a seed of awareness on the development of the nation’s economy.  He noted that the Farming is cool campaign strives to flip the script on farming as a last resort by emphasising and promoting it as a viable wealth-creation option.

    “Its target is the youth and children to encourage positive thought and action towards an agricultural revolution,” he added.

    Also, AfDB stepped up the pace by focusing on the five priorities that are crucial for accelerating Africa’s economic transformation. The high fives include – light up and power Africa, industrialise Africa, integrate Africa, improve the quality of life for  Africans.

    Seond position winner, Enyinwa, interpreted her painting as harnessing agriculture to alleviate poverty in Africa. Her paintings focused on the five priorities tagged as high five: light up and power Africa, feed Africa, industrialise Africa, integrate and improve the living condition of the people of Africa, which she represented with symbols, electric bulb, basket of food, silhouette of hand shake, education and, silhouette of industry.

    Eyinwa explained that feed Africa requires ‘’all of us to strengthen our efforts in agriculture, and to do this we need to get all hands on deck. We need to get more young people involved in farming. Young farmers are the future of Africa. Our rich Africa soil can produce all the food we need to put food on every table and sell the rest to make enough money to send everyone to school in order to achieve the high fives’’.

  • NICO to host children’s cultural extravaganza in Abuja, Lagos

    National Institute for Cultural Orientation (NICO), a parastatal of the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture will hold its National Children’s Cultural Extravaganza with the theme Culture: A strategic tool for peace, unity and national integration tomorrow at the Cyprian Ekwensi Centre for Arts & Culture, Area 10, Garki-Abuja by 9am.

    The event will feature pupils from 10 selected secondary schools in Federal Capital Territory (FCT) as participants.

     In a statement, NICO Acting Executive Secretary, Mr. Louis Eriomala, said the event is designed to stimulate the interest of secondary school pupils in Nigeria’s rich cultural heritage.

    The Federal Ministry of Information and Culture Permanent Secretary, Deaconess Grace Gerkpe is Special Guest of Honour, while former Dean, Faculty of Arts, University of Abuja, Prof Mabel Evwierhoma will deliver a lecture based on theme.

    “The students from the selected schools will be participating in non-competitive events such as rendition of National Anthem in indigenous language; traditional fashion parade; traditional music and dance; and a roundtable discussion on the theme.

    NICO Children’s Cultural Extravaganza aims at fostering a sense of cultural identity, pride and awareness in our children; promote cultural education and scholarship, among students; encourage the appreciation and use of Nigerian languages, dresses, cuisines and music at all levels of social integration; cooperation and healthy competitions amongst students; create a platform to discover young talents in culture and creative arts as well as promote the culture of peaceful co-existence and unity amongst students from diverse ethnic and religious backgrounds,” the statement added.

    While Abuja edition of the event holds tomorrow, the Lagos edition will hold on March 2 at Cinema Hall, National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos.

    Pioneer Executive Secretary of NICO, Mrs. Victoria Agodo will deliver a lecture on theme.

  • Varsity administrators honour Runsewe

    Varsity administrators honour Runsewe

    National Council for Arts and Culture Director-General Otunba Olusegun Runsewe has been honoured with a Distinguished Service Award in Administration by Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) chapter of Nigerian University Professional Administrators for his meritorious service to culture and tourism sector.

    The event also featured a lecture Reflections on Nigerian University and the quest for national development, problems and prospects delivered by Prof Michael Olufisayo Ologunde, who represented Prof Oladapo Afolabi.

    Runsewe praised the administrators for finding him worthy of the award, adding that it would inspire him to do more for the sector. “I am sincerely grateful and honoured to be a recipient of this prestigious award. For me, to whom much is given, much is expected,” he said.

    According to Ruwese’s citation read at the ceremony, Otunba Runsewe was born in Kaduna to the family of Pa Bankole Runsewe from Ogun State. He attended St. Michael Primary School, Kaduna, before proceeding to Vohoeven Technical College Minna, now Government Technical College. He holds an MBA in Marketing from Edo State University and HND in Management Studies from London School for Executives. He also has a Diploma in Public Relations from the London School of Management Studies and a Professional Certificate in Estate and Property Management from Kaduna Polytechnic.

    Otunba Runsewe has remained a consistent phenomen on in the media, culture and tourism sector in the last three decades. He worked as a Marketing Manager at the New Nigerian Newspaper and rose to the position of General Manager at the organisation. He also worked as Head/CEO, Sports Weekly and was Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of National Network Newspapers. He was also the Media Coordinator, Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) 2013, Abuja.

    Runsewe was appointed Executive Director at the National Orientation Agency in 2000, a position he held until his appointment as the Director-General of Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC) in August 2006. His tenure at NTDC was a watershed in the development of tourism sector in Nigeria. His aggressive marketing tourism campaign, anchored on the catch-phrase Tourism is Life gave the tourism industry national and international visibility.

    Otunba Runsewe is a fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), Chairman, Nigerian Sports Writers Association; Chairman, Nigerian Institute of Journalism; Fellow, Institute of Management (FIM); and Association of Business Executives (FABE), London.

     

  • Tola Adeniyi’s book for launch tomorrow

    Tola Adeniyi’s book for launch tomorrow

    FORMER Daily Times managing director Akogun Tola Adeniyi (Aba Saheed) will launch his new book In the belly of vultures tomorrow in Ikeja, Lagos.

    The book is a collection of some of his articles in the newspapers dating back to 1980s, including his years at The Tribune, Ibadan.

    The event will be attended by prominent Nigerians, including traditional rulers, governors and ex-governors.

    Nollywood actor Yemi Shodimu will perform some of the poems in the book while Prof Ademola Popoola will review it.

    A keynote address will be delivered by one of the governors.

    Adeniyi, who is executive chairman, Canada College of Business and Technology, said the book is a collection of his works spanning 50 years, including the popular Aba Saheed column.

    According to the author, the book  is about religion, politics, good governance, probity, restructuring and herdsmen terrorising and butchering Nigerians, among other issues.

    The 1,238-page book is published by Canada University Press and is in compartments. It is a hard cover package in the size of an encyclopedia.

    “The book is a compendium of some of my published articles pertinent to the decisive understanding of contemporary issues in Nigeria as well as others on trending significant global topics,” he added.

    Adeniyi, who has about 13 books and plays to his credit, described the presentation of the book as timely. “It is very timely. When we talk of vultures, we are actually talking of those who have turned Nigeria’s commonwealth into carcasses and they are feeding on carcasses. The vultures are also growing into vampires feeding on peoples’ blood.

    ‘’So, Nigeria is in the belly of vampires. It is very timely. My next book is in the belly of vampire, then Nigeria in the belly of military, which has been written long time ago. I shelved the publishing in 2009.”

    Continuing, he said: “I decided to publish the new book as a result of pressure from friends, seniors, colleagues and younger generation Nigerians who want the opportunity to have all my articles in one volume. That is why I called it a legacy project, which I want to bequeath to Nigerians. It contains 1238 pages without illustration or pictures. But, it has few of my poems.”

    The Araba of Remoland is also author of books, such as Teenagers must repent, Soul Fire, Aiye ode oni, The lunatic, Nigerian professionals, The jewels, Theatre on wheels, Death in the thighs, God’s salesmen, Lyrics on the lips of death, among others.

    Adeniyi was the first to adapt Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart for stage production in 1966, James Ngugi’s Weep not child in 1967, Cyprian Ekwensi’s Iska and Bronte’s Jane Eyre in 1968.

  • Self-discipline? Ask the ants! (4)

    Human nature is capable of some excesses if not controlled. We naturally desire pleasure and definitely abhor pain. There is nothing wrong with pleasure; only that it has its moments. We can make pleasure our priority or our reward. Priority comes first while reward comes later. Pleasure as a priority is fleeting but as a reward, it is enduring. Vacation is a reward for a season of work. Sleep is a reward for a day of active engagement. Salary is a reward for service provided. Promotion is a reward for progress made on a job. Money is a reward for value created.

    The quality of a reward is determined by the quality of the value provided, which is also determined by the quality of the effort invested. It is not easy to provide the kind of value that yields great reward. To achieve outstanding results, we must temporarily deny ourselves of pleasure and comfort. Problem arises when we seek reward before or without value delivery.

    Theodore Roosevelt said, “with self-discipline most anything is possible” whereas without self-discipline, little can ever be achieved. There is no greatness without self-discipline. Harry S Truman observed that “in reading the lives of great men, I found that the first victory they won was over themselves… self-discipline with all of them came first”.

    Daniel Goldstein also offered his thoughts on how we can develop it when he said, “I think self-discipline is something, it’s like a muscle. The more you exercise it, the stronger it gets”.This is how the ants do it:

    • Regular schedule: ant-life is regimented. They live to nurture, sustain and protect their colony. It takes a lot of discipline to remain committed to a schedule. Experts say it takes a strict schedule to develop winning habits.
    • Mass action: ants target their goals with excellent single-mindedness. The ability to obey inconvenient but required rules is a sign of discipline. Being submissive to another person’s leadership is discipline. George Washington said, “Discipline is the soul of an army. It makes small numbers formidable; procures success to the weak, and esteem to all”. Ants have no leaders, yet they coordinate efficiently because of discipline.
    • Early start: waking up early or staying up till late at night may not sound or feel pleasurable. However, excellence requires extraordinary engagement. According to Dr. David Oyedepo, “There is nothing extraordinary on its own; it is the extraordinary efforts of people that make it so”. If we fail to pay the required price for the future we desire, we will be forced to settle for an undesirable future. Jim Rohn said, “We must all suffer one of two things: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret or disappointment”.

    You will never know what you are truly capable of until you discipline yourself. Push yourself today, even beyond your perceived limits, and you will not be pushed around in future.

    I look forward to reading your comments and stories of great successes. Share your views with me by sending SMS to 07034737394, visiting www.olanreamodu.com and following me on twitter @lanreamodu.