Day 1:
Our aeroplane was forced to stay in the holding pattern,
circling just offshore of Lagos, whilst, the captain informed us, operations were being performed at the
airport. We were eventually able to land and taxied for what seemed an age
until we ended up at the Echo Wing of the airport. A further fifteen minutes on-board the aeroplane saw the less patient among us becoming rather agitated.
Due to renovations currently underway here we had to get ourselves
across to the Delta Wing to tackle passport control as well as to collect our
hopefully arrivéd baggage. The airport was churning with activity and I was
given an overall impression similar to the Department of Home Affairs back in
South Africa, just poured out into a rather airport-ish shape.
There was much in the way of red tape and construction
signage around and the occasional collapsed wall could be seen every now and
then, as if trying to break the monotony of duty-free shops which one finds in
these sorts of places. Lost at best, I fell into line, and followed some of the
familiar faces from the flight which brought us here to Lagos After a
brief escalator ride, I joined one of the longest, most confusing queues I had
ever seen. This was passport control at the Muhammed Murtala Airport.
There were people everywhere and a distinct lack of signs
has everyone rather on-edge with each other. Anything in the way of airport
staff were nowhere to be seen and it was largely by word-of-mouth that people
queuing find the right line to resign themselves to. Frustrations abound and,
coupled with the heat, create quite a tense atmosphere here. In a rather ironic
fashion standing in one queue was merely a precursor to having to stand in
another. This next queue branches off into three smaller queues, each as
confusing as the next. Eventually your passport is taken from you and you are
ushered off into yet another queue where you wait, attentively, for one of the
soldier-uniforméd staff to call your name in his syrupy accent. At this point
you can breathe a sigh of relief because you have cleared passport control at
MM Airport.
The next hurdle was one that I was dreading. That of having
arrived in Nigeria without my baggage being there to greet me. It's one thing to visit Nigeria but another thing to visit Nigeria without clothing. I was quick to
find myself a position near the conveyor belt, watching as it belched out bag
after bag after bag. Mine, however, was standing in a cordoned off area,
looking slightly aloof. It wasn’t much longer after this, being able to prove
that I was, by virtue of my passport, Dane Bowman, that my baggage and I were reunited once more.
It was at this point that I began the search for my name in text. My travel
details had specified that a sign-holder would be waiting at the airport to collect
me and I had to keep my eyes peeled. I meandered hopefully towards the exit all
the while scanning the crowds for my own name.
When you are seeking somebody in a crowd you tend to catch
their eye, however this only really works when you are searching for somebody
you know. As is the case here in Nigeria, when you make eye contact with
somebody, it is largely accepted as a sign to conduct business and, as such, I
was quickly swarmed by quite a few individuals wanting to haul me off and into a taxi.
I eventually caught sight of my name printed on plain white paper and made a
beeline for my new-found friend. He introduces himself quickly and takes my
suitcase from me and begins leading the way to his car. I am quick to apologise
for my delay but he points out that the airport is always like this. I’m fairly
certain he says something like ‘this is Lagos’.
Now that I can relax for the first time I can really take in
my surroundings. Lagos is hot – incredibly so, regardless of day transitioning into night. This was in part due to the
weather itself but also counting the fact that there seem to be hundreds of
individuals waiting outside the airport, whether it be for reasons of sale,
taxi service, or just to have a good gawk; every bit adds to the heating. The word ‘sweltering’ sticks firmly
in mind.
I follow my driver in a hypnotizéd state as we walk through countless poorly-lit pathways towards his parked car. Along the way
were scattered those people trying to turn a profit off various goods. The
black market here isn’t black in the slightest. It sits under street lamps and
offers stolen credit cards and currency exchange for a fee. Each individual
holds a wad of cash the likes of which I have never seen before, a veritable
rainbow of currency colours contained therein. There rates are current, I assume, as I watch them frantically assessing live-streaming information on their cellular phones.
I was eventually shepherded to the car and I remember being
quite taken aback by the fact that the driver’s seat is on the left-hand side
of the vehicle. It is a small thing when I think back to it now, but it was
rather jarring at the time.
It takes us just over about forty-five minutes to leave
the airport parking lot as we get caught up in the stop-start nature of the
Nigerian traffic. Driving here is aggressive and must be, I think, second
nature to everyone who uses these roads. It is a very dog-eat-dog endeavour. I
recall our hooters from back home and the amount of force one typically has to
employ to make use of them, a firm press in the centre of the steering wheel, whereas the cars here in Nigeria have a hooter button to
circumvent this. Here it is something which the driver can thumb whenever the
need arises. And arise it does as drivers often seem to use their hooters almost
as much as they do their accelerators or indicators.
The road back to the Protea Hotel Ikeja is fraught with
hair-raising driving as well as monstrous potholes and crevasses. The street
which leads to the hotel, an Isaac John Street, is strewn with litter, more
potholes, and poorly-dressed prostitutes. We make the turn into the hotel and,
after having our car carefully checked for bombs, we are cleared for entry. The
car comes to a halt and I exit, thanking my driver profusely for both putting up
with the traffic as well as fetching me.
I wheel both myself and my luggage into the Protea Hotel –
I’ll call it my safe place for now – and check into my room. I check in with my
family and friends back home and it is not too much longer after this that I
take off my shoes and, exhausted, collapse into sleep.
Day 2:
I don’t sleep too well that night. It may be a case of the
hotel treating me too well, perhaps. The rooms here are always air-conditioned,
kept to the best standards, and it may be a tad too rich for my tastes. This
place is incredibly sheltered, I feel. You wouldn’t think you were in the heart
of Lagos and, if you didn’t venture outside during your stay, the illusion
would be complete. You would be wholly secluded from the squalor outside
which makes up Nigeria. I think it is like this for the majority of the air
crews forced to stay here after arriving in Lagos.
It is realisation enough to simply gaze out from a crack in
my bedroom curtains to see the world outside. That jars me, grounds me, and
above all reminds me that I’m staying in a place which is more farce than
anything else. As soon as you venture outside the illusion shatters.
I meet with my Nigerian contacts for this trip. My moderator
and mouthpiece for the work I have to do here is a woman by the name of Tolu
and with her: my new best friend Patrick, a Ghanaian man who speaks with a
French twang to his accent. We run through the MO for the work ahead of us and,
with business well out of the way, I ask Patrick if he can show me around Lagos
quickly. He accepts without hesitation and five minutes later the two of us are
in the backseat of his driver’s car, leaving the safety of the hotel grounds.
The streets are not well taken care of here. They are fraught
with potholes and cracks and one has to go cautiously when using them. The
driving too is something incredible. It is both aggressive and cut-throat
with near-collisions being par for the course. For the majority of the journey
I am within a hand’s length to any other vehicle on the road. And, somehow, it
works, somehow it flows. There must be some kind of collective driving unconscious out on the
streets of Lagos, I think. Everybody seems to know how traffic should flow and,
though it takes time, everyone eventually gets to their desired destination. The
sound of hooters though is still something I am trying to accustom myself to. They
are constantly blaring above the sounds of traffic. In Lagos it seems as if the
cars are trying their hardest to have some kind of secretive conversation with each other.
The other readily noticeable aspect of life in Lagos is the
advertising. It is everywhere. Traditional print
adverts can be frequently seen
covering lampposts and walls, many of them advertising products that the
majority of people here will never make use of. Another type of advert that one
catches sight of whilst here are those hand-written offerings which appear to
manifest anywhere a person can get a piece of chalk to. These are typically job
requests whether it be for painting work, tutoring, catering, or any other
available work under the Lagosian sun. Other written requests take the form of
pleas to the populous in general: please don’t dump refuse here, please don’t
urinate here, and one that still confuses me ‘this house not for sale, beware
of 419’.
The people of Lagos live a hard life. The heat seems
consistent all throughout the day and that, coupled with the constant power
cuts, means that it is incredibly hard to ‘chill out’ here.
It seems as if everyone here is trying to sell something and
Patrick keeps quipping ‘it isn’t about making millions here, it’s about
millions trying to make it’. He has a fair point. The variety of goods on sale
here is absolutely incredible. Prepared food is readily available, a smiling
‘chef’ typically dishing these out happily all throughout the day. There are
those individuals who sell goods along the lines of clothing, pharmaceuticals,
toys, and other such things. On occasion one notes an odd-looking shop amongst the
banal-looking ones. One expects to see a roadside hairdresser or somebody
selling freshly-cooked goods, but when your eye catches a lean-to hawking shack
stocked amply with boxed electronic goods, it certainly calls for a
double-take. There may not be stable electricity in Lagos but at least one can
have access to the latest Panasonic flat-screen TV or a top-of-the-range
Samsung HD desktop monitor. There is a rather daunting question mark hanging
over these goods with regards to their legality. Whilst some might make the assumption that these
goods are stolen, there is, however, another kind of theft occurring in
Lagos, and it seems to be ingrained into their lives so much so as to be a part of it. Piracy is big here in Lagos. Everything seems to be a copy of a copy
of a copy. Street vendors are selling the latest DVDs with poorly-printed
leaflets detailing a discs overloaded content. Clothing brands are unsafe as
well. The Nike tick is readily seen on shirts hanging from the wooden frames
which comprise these lean-to setups. Even soccer paraphernalia can be
purchased. Copies of the latest kits from UEFA’s biggest teams are a big seller
here. Medicine is also pirated here. Formulas leaked before their initial
release means that every second or third vendor can be a pseudo-pharmacist or
‘chemist’ as they are referred to here. One can even purchase medicine from the
public transport, if needs be. Of course there are risks attached to these
types of purchases but when your pocket cannot stretch far enough to visit the
doctor or at least a legal pharmacy, then these ‘chemists’ will have to do.
Bearing this in mind, that is the power outages and the
demand for generators, the price of diesel here is almost double that of
petrol. A person has to effectively power their house instead of their car. Petrol
per litre here is just under a single American dollar, 97 cents to be exact. Diesel
comes in at a $1.50c. Also widely on sale at these stations is kerosene. This form of fuel is easily accessible, very cheap, and is obviously used around the house for
lighting lamps and cooking food.
The day rounds out with Patrick meeting an old friend of his with whom he grew up. We catch up with him at a local restaurant by the name of
Tantalisers and we eventually end up back at his flat. His accommodation is
fully paid for by his company – a new software venture trying to take root in
Nigeria. Effectively, the entire block of flats here is filled with staff
belonging to this company and I guess this works both ways. The company has all
its staff in a single place and also knows that they are living well in
Nigeria, whilst the staff have a modicum of decency as well as safety here. I
welcome the air-conditioning in the flat, trying to greedily grab as much as
possible before settling down into the sofa. Patrick and his friend launch into
their home tongue of French and I am only able to offer a few bits and bobs in
terms of conversation as I am quite rusty in this respect. Their accent is heavy
and they speak fast but these are largely stories from their other times
together or about business in Nigeria. Patrick’s friend is eager to celebrate
seeing his comrade again and urges his fiancé to produce four wine glasses and
a bottle of Moët champagne which Patrick is quick to open. He pours out four
glasses and I am quick to offer ‘salut’ to demonstrate my steadfast grip on the
French language. We drink our champagne whilst discussing life in Nigeria and
trying to compare it with our respective homes of Cameroon, Ghana, and my own South
Africa.
Eventually it is time to go. The champagne has its cork
replaced and Patrick bids his friend farewell. Regardless of our goodbyes, the
couple walks with us to our vehicle to see us off in a manner that fits their
customs. It is still incredibly hot outside. Even though night is eagerly trying to usurp the day's place, there
is still a clammy dryness to the air. Our driver returns me to the Protea Hotel
and, to avoid the routine bomb-checking, I volunteer to hop out at the curb and
walk in. The guard at the gate simply laughs when he sees me, asks me how my day
has been, and with a smile on my face I reply ‘very good’.
I patronize the hotel’s restaurant. I have American dollars
in my wallet and am able to exchange them at reception for the Nigerian Naira
at a rate of 150 Naira to a single American dollar. I can’t recall whether I
was more in the mood for soup or something which wouldn’t swallow my wallet whole.
Either way, I ended up ordering the lobster bisque. This was the cheapest item
on the menu – a starter – clocking in at N2300 which is about 16 dollars. The
soup was good and I savoured it, obviously. My dinner-time entertainment was a
British trio beside me who were busily comparing where they believed one could
have the very best diving holiday. ‘Antibes’ sticks in my ear, for some reason.
I pay for my meal with my best poker face and retire to my room for the night.
Whilst walking back to my suite all I can think about is how oblivious one
could be to the world outside.
Day 3:
My morning starts early as Patrick tells me that we will
have to deal with traffic en route to our first appointment which begins at 10.
We meet outside the hotel at around 8, Tolu runs a little due to congestion,
but we are eventually able to get onto the roads around 8.30.
The first appointment for the day is termed an ‘immersion’. In
terms of research an immersion is an interview conducted in the respondent’s
home and it helps the researcher to paint a more complete picture of how life
is for that particular person. Not only are you getting information from the
horse’s mouth, so to speak, but you are also able to see the stable. The people
are always grateful when it comes to seeing us and it seems that they really do
want to share with us exactly how they live. They are both hospitable and
humble. Our interviews flow according to an immersion guide which has been created
in South Africa for this specific project. It usually concludes after about two
hours, though this can vary depending on how rich the respondent is in terms of
information. These individuals do not have much in terms of money. They largely
live from hand-to-mouth and the conditions here are dire, but, regardless of
how much they have for themselves, they will still make offerings of food and
drink as this is customary when a visitor comes into the house.
We leave the immersion house and then travel to the research
venue, a small set of rooms within a larger building called Motorways Centre.
This is where the rest of the day will play out. Once here, I have to make sure
two focus groups run their course and, whilst running, do so correctly. My time
here is largely spent behind a one-way viewing window where I spend my time
typing away frantically what is being said whilst trying to gather my thoughts
and form hypotheses about the work we’re doing and the data we’re mining for. Again,
a guide is followed, again, it is something which has been designed in South
Africa and is typically altered on-the-fly as the researcher notices things
which either don’t work in a particular country or determines that a new kind
of question has to be asked so as to probe for further or more specific information. There are
many new questions which I have had to ask about Nigeria. Tolu is my mouthpiece
for these group discussions and she effectively plays the role of my hostess here. It
is her job to ask the questions we need asked as well as in a way that these
Nigerian respondents can understand. All of our respondents are
English-speaking, mind you, but their accents make them incredibly hard to
understand. They manifest an accent somewhere between French and Jamaican at
times. The ‘h’ is silent here, making ‘heart’ sound like ‘art’ and the ‘u’
becomes an ‘o’, making ‘cut’ into ‘cot’. There are other nuances but I can’t
remember them right now. They are also unable to fully understand me and my meaning
typically comes across as piecemeal to them simply because my accent doesn’t
work for their ears. I usually talk slowly and at times try to mimic
their accent and this usually brings a smile to their faces.
We conclude our work for the day and leave to find our
driver outside the building. The streets are still humming with activity be it
from the traffic congesting the streets or those pedestrians who are still
trying to find their way around. I load my laptop bag into the car as well as
my person, tired after a long day’s work. And then, instead of our driver
taking me back to the hotel as per usual, the car fails to start. I am not too
rattled what with the sheer amount of public transport which is involved in the
Brownian motion of Lagos traffic. Our driver fiddles madly with the car,
attempting to disarm the security system which has immobilized us. He spends
time buried under the hood, twisting and turning various bits and bobs, and at
one stage I swear he even tries to hot-wire the car, but to no avail. I seize
upon this opportunity to make an attempt to draw money from an ATM which I
glimpsed earlier on when our trio first arrived at the Motorways centre. I am
second in the queue behind a young guy who seems quite baffled as to why I'm standing behind him. I motion to the fact that the ATMs on
either side of his one are both out of order and he laughs in reply. Once he
has completed his transaction I swoop in and watch as the machine swallows my
card hungrily. Thankfully, everything proceeds as per usual and I am able to
draw 10 000 Naira from my account (about R600). It is an odd feeling to
watch an ATM spit out foreign currency, especially notes that I am not at all
familiar with. Such a transaction, that is, one made from the heart of Lagos,
probably raises a little red flag at my bank back home in South Africa and one
of the staff members there may be having an odd feeling too. I shove the money
into my wallet in an elated fashion and make my way back to our non-starter of
a vehicle. Our driver is starting to show signs of frustration and Patrick
mirrors these. He wanders down to a line of ready-and-waiting taxi drivers and
organises us a ride back to the Protea Hotel. The driver plays it cool but I’m
fairly certain I’m the first white person he’s ever had in the backseat of his
car.
To be perfectly honest I haven’t seen a single white person
outside of the hotel and it’s not for lack of trying. I tend to stick out like
a sore thumb here. People do notice
me. They are also always polite to me and often shout greetings at me as I pass
them by. The guards at the hotel gate too are always polite and they crack
jokes quietly amongst themselves as I hop out of a local taxi and onto their
doorstep. I ask one of them if he’d like to pat me down for bombs but he just
chuckles at me and ushers me into the grounds. I ask the other guard what the
big joke was and he points out that most of the people who stay at the hotel
tend to stay in the hotel during the
day, read: hide, whereas I leave early in the morning and return late at night.
One of them mentions that ‘I am not scared. I am Nigeria’. I head into the
hotel with a wider smile on my face.
Day 4:
Today starts early as well and it feels as if I am only
properly waking up when our driver stops outside the building which will be the
location for our second immersion whilst in Nigeria. Said building has seen
better days, much better days, and both myself and Tolu can appreciate this
fact as we make our way down a pitch-black corridor. At the end of the corridor
is what appears to be a furnace of sorts, perhaps heating water for the entire
building. I can only see the embers from this distance and it reminds of the
donkey at the farm for some reason. A
set of stairs on the left takes us up to the floor above but it is incredibly
claustrophobic going and I have to spend my time stooped so as to not bump my
head on the ceiling above. The stairs were obviously not made with foot traffic
in mind as they can barely accommodate even a single person taking them. One
does not take them a spritely two-at-a-time or at any speed above an amble.
Our immersion runs for just under an hour which is shorter than
usual but, with that being said, I believe that we have painted enough of a
picture. We leave the venue and, with my camera out, I take to playing tourist,
snapping photos hungrily of life in this little section of Lagos.
On our way to the Motorways centre we make a brief stop at a
local shop so that I can see what these stores have to offer. Patrick tells me
that these sorts of shops are typically only frequented by the middle- to
upper-class individuals who reside in the area. Those without the pockets to
cater for these types of shop usually do all their buying from their local open
markets. Proximity is a big factor when it comes to buying and selling in
Nigeria. Most of the goods in this store seem to be available in but a single
option, that is, in bulk. Their product line-up mimics our own and I can
readily notice many duplicates to what we have back home as well as a slurry of
European products which are almost luxurious in our neck of the woods. These
items are relatively expensive and, to the majority of Nigerians here, are
positively bank-breaking.
The day’s groups go as planned with only one or two hiccups
along the way. These sorts of things are to be expected when it comes to this
type of work. The groups do have quite a draining effect on me. I’m constantly
typing all throughout them whilst also trying to take in both what the group I'm currently viewing is saying as well as the titbits of information my translator is providing
me with in terms of the culture and the way of life here. I have to take it all
in and make it into something legible which can be an almost starter-ish meal
to my colleagues back in South Africa. The working day ends and I make way
slowly down the two stories of stairs to the building’s exit. The Motorways
Centre overlooks an incredibly busy freeway which lies close enough to almost
be at its doorstep and, even now, the traffic upon it looks menacing.
The guards back at the
hotel are welcoming, as per usual, and I wonder whether it is simply in their
job description to be amicable or whether they are actually genuinely happy to
see me. Not phased by this, I strike up a little conversation with them about
their day and it isn’t long before we are talking about the only topic we seem
to have in common, that of the Africa Cup of Nations which, to be completely
honest, I am horribly out of touch with. We talk about this for a few minutes
and my moderate knowledge of good soccer-playing African countries as well as
my ability to name two or three star players is enough to help me stand my
ground in this exchange. All throughout this encounter I make offerings of my
bottled macadamia nuts which I purchased earlier on in the day. I eventually
take notice of the fairly battered-looking assault rifle that the one hotel
security guard is carrying. I offer him macadamia nuts too and then take my
leave, heading into the hotel for the night.
Day 5:
Today began with a bad start and it took the shape of my
belt buckle breaking whilst I was trying to affix it to my waist. I wondered if
this was going to be some kind of precursor as to how the rest of the day was
going to go for me.
The third immersion for the trip occurs today and this
one was by far the most enlightening as well as casual one so far. Our
respondent, a Lagosian gentleman, was both incredibly accommodating
as well as willing to show us how life was for a person living in Nigeria. His
explanations were both in-depth as well as candid and were able to shed some
light on quite a few of the questions I’d been keeping to myself thus far. That
is not to say that he didn’t have wrenching stories to share with us but these,
coupled with the more hopeful narratives, are indicative of how life is here.
The past is both ashes and diamonds.
Our interview with him ends and, as we are heading out of
the premises he snatches at a selection of leaves from a solitary tree in the
yard and begins chewing them. I am quick to question his actions and he offers
me a handful of the leaves and points out that although they may be peppery to
the taste they are widely regarded around here as a general cure-all. He says
‘herbal medicine’ in his Nigerian accent and the ‘h’ disappears completely,
taking me a short while to catch onto what he is actually talking about. I
don’t hesitate much before placing the leaves in my mouth and chewing them and,
yes, although quite peppery they are edible and the taste reminds me of boiled
cabbage. Once chewed and swallowed, a slight aftertaste does remain, nothing
horrible, mind you, but a distinct bitterness is left behind. I ask him what
I’ve just eaten and his failure to recall the exact name is a tad worrying but
he remedies this by whipping out his BlackBerry and phoning a friend of his. There
is a brief exchange in his native tongue and once he’s pocketed his phone he tells me ‘Moringa. It is called Moringa’. He goes on to explain the
plant’s medicinal values, telling me that it’s good for curing headaches,
catarrh (which is ‘flu’ here), malaria, typhoid, and even cancer. For these
reasons, the plant has become incredibly scarce these days and it often fetches
quite a high price when it comes to sales at the open market.
He gives me another branch of the tree to take with me and I
cannot refuse the offer for reason of offending him. I thank him graciously and
climb into the backseat of the car, Tolu trailing behind me. With the taste of
the Moringa leaf still lurking about in my mouth it comes as a relief when
Patrick suggest we stop for lunch quickly before going to the Motorways centre.
I’m a bit less adventurous today in terms of eating and opt to have a chicken
pie to fill the gap. There isn’t much I can say about it, really, as it
presents itself as a normal food without any sort of Nigerian twist to it. The
immersion has been a little draining so I grab a Lucozade to give me energy for
the groups which comprise the afternoon ahead.
The Motorways centre is bustling as usual and the parking
lot is packed with cars. So much so, that it becomes a little difficult for us
to stop and safely exit the vehicle. Other drivers are impatient, often to such
an extent that a split second’s hesitation is often rewarded with vicious amounts of
hooting. The groups are good today but one can start to feel a certain
saturation in terms of the information they are giving us. An air of déjà-vu
hangs over both groups as they mirror answers of previous respondents. Saturation
is both a good and a bad thing when it comes to research, good for the reason that
it shows the researcher that they are usually getting the right or most correct
answer, and bad on the other hand because the repetition can sometimes be a bit
boring for them. As such, at the end of the groups I am rather tired. The
energy-giving effects of the Lucozade from lunch have worn off and, some would
say, maybe taken their toll upon me. I am yawning behind my hand, at this
stage. Regardless of my tiredness I am quick to answer ‘yes’ to going out for
drinks with Patrick and some of his friends and we end up at a country
club-esque bar on what appears to be an under-construction golf-course. The
place is packed to the brim with both cars and people and a flat-screen TV
displays the live AFCON game for the evening. Patrick’s friends are all
incredibly welcoming individuals though this isn’t something unexpected as it
seems to be par for the course here to treat visitors with a modicum of respect.
Guests are family here, it seems.
I reflect on how the day’s gone whilst being driven back to
the Protea Hotel. I remember Patrick pointing out whilst all of us were at
table that, although life can be bad in Nigeria, it’s good that there are still
times when people can get together like this and have a good time. I watch the
guttering light from the streetlamps which show the way home and it’s
incredible just how persistent as well as thick the air is with pollution here.
Day 6:
It is a public holiday here today, the birthday celebration
of an important Muslim figure and although the majority of Lagos’ population are Christian, it would be hard to find somebody who would say ‘no’ to a day off. Patrick and the driver are a bit late in fetching me
this morning due to traffic in the streets but I greet them with a smile
nonetheless. Today’s a bit different to our previous days because we are doing
the group discussions first with our immersion taking place in the evening.
This is to cater for that fact that at 4PM the electricity will be turned off
because of the public holiday.
So we arrive at Motorways to start with the first group at
10 and the power is already on and off. The equipment I’m making use of here is
running off generators and uninterruptible power supplies but sadly these things
do have life spans and if the power outages persist there could be problems. I
will always be able to take notes simply because I have my trusty exam pad and
pen with me at all times but, in fairness, I should be typing away happily on
my laptop as long as the battery can handle it. Above and beyond this we have
both audio and visual equipment capturing the group in progress as well as
various computers and sound equipment running in the room with me. What with
the power dipping off and on as much as it is, when watching the footage back
we may endanger individuals with epilepsy. The inconsistent electricity takes
its toll and leaves me quite frustrated by the end of the groups but I am quick
to remind myself that things could be much, much worse, and that the people here
have to deal with this on a daily basis.
After grabbing a quick bite to eat, again tame on my part as
I stick with the chicken pie/Lucozade combo, we eventually head towards our final immersion
which takes us quite deep into the local area. The roads are crammed here, filled
to the brim the people on foot, people trying to sell things out of lean-to
stalls, cars parked on the sides of the streets, and barely enough space for a single line of traffic to squeeze
through. Thing is, traffic here has to get through in both directions, coming
and going, and the movement of one precludes the other. This has to be the most
tense I’ve seen things here in Nigeria. Cars here are almost on side-by-side,
again a hand’s length away from each other, and this, coupled with the
cacophony of business going on in the area, has everyone pretty much on edge.
With tempers fraying fast there is much in the way of shouting and traffic
conducting going on by people on foot. Cars are forced to reverse in unison as,
one by one, certain vehicles are allowed to pass. It’s a bit like watching an
incredibly precise game of community Tetris being played. There is much hooting
and noise-making throughout the entire process but a couple of minutes pass and
eventually we are through onto the next section of road. We dodge a couple of
stray dogs and come to a halt outside our final immersion venue.
The immersion takes just over an hour and, again, this feels
shorter than the usual but we have got what we came for in terms of data. I
snap a few photos as we make our way towards the car and the local children are
quick to shout at me and make various poses before my lens. We locate Patrick
and, with the day complete, I am dropped off at the hotel once more.
Today concludes the field research work in Nigeria and all
that’s left are groups 9 and 10. I wake up in the morning feeling relieved as I
think this. I have a bit of a late start today as the groups are scheduled for
the afternoon and, as such, Patrick only arrives to collect me around 12.15.
We make our way towards the Motorways centre one last time
and along the way encounter the usual Lagos traffic which I have gotten too
accustomed to. It will be odd to see a road not rammed with cars when I get
home again. My senses are shaken back to the present moment when the blaring of
sirens comes into focus around me and it is at that point that one begins to
wonder where exactly the noise is coming from. There is a sense of dread as I
realise that the siren is somewhere behind but this soon turns into relief as I
notice that said siren belongs to an ambulance. The noise isn’t unbearable but
it is continuous and is broken every now and then by the driver shouting ‘give
way’ over the loudspeaker. However the traffic here has nowhere to go and the
ambulance driver is just as stuck as we are. There is no curb to mount and no
room for other cars in nearby lanes to move into. Mr. Ambulance Driver is as much at the mercy of
the poorly-designed and overcrowded streets as we are. Somewhere up ahead a
robot gives off that green light which everyone here has been waiting for and
the traffic begins to slowly ease forward. The ambulance driver is able to
jostle his way through the crowd and soon disappears from sight. Patrick
remarks that in Lagos your chances of dying in an ambulance are pretty high.
I get back to the hotel and spend the rest of my night
packing my bags in preparation for my flight home tomorrow.
Day 8:
Patrick fetches me up at around 12.30 and we head out for
lunch together one last time. A restaurant by the name of Mama Cass is our
haunt for today. I stick to something simple-looking, a pasta dish but, at
Patrick’s insistence, I have two huge snails shovelled onto my plate. I’m
fairly certain that he’s testing my mettle and, with him footing yet another
bill, I really don’t mind.
We take our seat at a nearby table and I’m quick to handle
the snail with my fingers and, on chewing, find that is has quite a rubbery
texture and is largely flavourless except for the slight spiciness which seems
to be a mandatory feature of every food item in Nigeria. Patrick seems slightly
impressed as I deal with both snails without breaking any sort of sweat. The
meal passes with conversation mainly about my trip here as well as my thoughts
and ideas about the place. We speak about the future of Nigeria. It isn’t a
topic we stick to for too long. With lunch sorted I am once again dropped off
at the Protea Hotel where I now have about 5 hours to burn before being
collected to once again brave the Murtala Muhammed Airport.
My 5 hours are filled up by conversation with both friends
and family and eventually I settle into some gaming which helps pass the time
as well as serves to relax me. In hindsight, there was no amount of relaxation
which could’ve prepared me for the trial ahead.
I am collected promptly at 7PM sharp and the driver, who has been
ever-weather all throughout our time together, still brandishes an incredible
smile upon his face. The traffic to the airport is nothing untoward for Lagos
and, as before, we spend the majority of our time in the car
shoulder-to-shoulder in a slow bustle towards our destination. Eventually I am
dropped off at the departure wing of the Murtala Muhammed airport.
The airport serves to perfectly book-end my time spent in
Nigeria. It is a culmination of everything that is life in Lagos, just crammed
into a single way-too-small space. It is incredibly hot. There is no
electricity. There are individuals here brim-filled with attitude. There are
way too many people squeezed into this sardine tin of an airport. There are
inefficient staff members who are lackadaisical in going about their job. Money
greases the odd palm. Strict times become mirage-like guidelines. Carelessness
becomes common place. And beyond that? Well, it ain’t worth wasting words on.
I’m sitting in the plane with my seat in the upright
position, my laptop seated on my tray table, and some semblance of a smile on
my face.
I am heading home.