It is obviously not a Friday and you are probably surprised
by the fact that you got the link to this article on the day. You did not make
a mistake clicking this link so keep reading.
On a Saturday like this one in the year 1993, a baby boy was
born to my parents. That would be me. My birthday happens to come on one busy
Saturday this week and I am wondering if I will have the opportunity to
celebrate it well. I will try, though.
I have been struggling with the question of how old I am.
Let me explain. If you do simple mathematics, the fact that I was born on
Saturday, May 1 in 1993 places my age at exactly 28 years. I know that, just
like 99 percent of the people reading this. What I do not know is how old a
28-year-old Malawian boy is. And yes, I said boy because I do not like the
whole idea of referring to a person under the age of 35 as a man.
One may wonder as to why I am not satisfied by the knowledge
of my numerical age. My reasoning has been shaped by one Dave Chappelle who in
the time of the R Kelly scandals wondered how old a 15-year old was. This
question was asked on the background of the allegations that R Kelly had
emptied his bladder onto a 15-year old girl who hardly moved a muscle to avoid
the shower. Dave Chappelle’s conclusion? A person cannot be as smart as they
can get at the age of 15 but at 15 one needs to be able to make basic decisions
on whether someone can pee on them or not. If you can tolerate a few swear words,
you can watch the whole story in Chappelle’s standup comedy special titled For
What Its Worth.
The comedy from which I borrowed this weird line of
reasoning was done about 20 years ago and I got to watch it years back.
Nonetheless, I have always wondered as to what Mr Chappelle would have said
about the age 28. He did not say anything, though, so I thought I could cut the
laziness and do it myself. Just thinking about it would now have been difficult
so I have taken the liberty to open the vent and let you peep through what is
going on in my mind as a reflect on this birthday. And yes, I said reflect
because I am not celebrating this one.
When it comes to the question of how old someone is, we turn
to the numbers as a measure. The first thing that comes to somebody’s mind when
they are asked as to how old they are is the numerical age since that is what
the teachers have been telling way before we could understand the concept of
age enough to start hiding or lying about our age. Numerical age sense but ever
since I got called for a job interview for a job I had applied with no birth
date on my CV and no age in my application letter, I have been wondering as to
whether the numbers are more important when compared to what one has achieved.
Here is the other side of it. Others have measured age by
one’s ability and achievements. This is where the concept of maturity comes
into place. There are some people who have grown through the easiest situations
and those tend to “grow slowly. One the opposite end is the group of those who
get to have difficult responsibilities from early on. This bunch tends to grow
and mature faster and their decision making tends to be very different from
those who grew up with a silver spoon. This might be a divisive opinion that
some may not agree with but given the dichotomy of whether to agree or disagree
with it, I would lean towards agreeing. I am not saying that growing up
privileged is the wrong thing or undesirable. After all, when it comes to
things of having it easy and having it tough, I strongly believe that it goes
beyond money.
In one twitter thread I saw, people were mentioning their
numerical ages and talking about their life situations. Some were single
parents to more than one child and struggling to make ends meet at 26. Others
were college graduates of 5 years who were struggling to find employment at 25.
Interestingly enough, one person posted about how he was a successful business
man and struggling to find love at the age of 35. Each of those struggles has a
way of bringing a certain level of growth when handled appropriately. In a
sense, however, the maturity scale fails to cover some unusual being whose
decision making and execution abilities may be hard to fit on a conventional
scale.
In medical circles, we have what we call developmental
milestones. The concept of milestones is popular among pediatricians who assess
whether a child is on the right track depending on whether they are able to
perform certain tasks by a certain age. These may range from speech to motor
functionality i.e. sitting, crawling, standing or walking. If a child is not
able to do one of those particular things by a certain age, they are labelled
as having developmental delay. This then, puts the numerical age in context and
in as much as it may not have the same usefulness it has in babies, I would
like to borrow the concept and use it to check how old I am. That, of course
comes with its own challenges. I will explain.
The first problem is that it is difficult to define what an
adult should do by a particular age. People who go on setting benchmarks on by
what age one should have achieved a certain milestone are one of the causes of
the surging mental health issues we have on God’s green earth. Think of it. We
have set expected ages at which people should finish the different levels of
education. Then in the tricky job market we have in this country, we have gone
on to set an age at which graduates should find jobs and another one by which
they should have moved out of their guardians’. You know the next one.
Marriage. At 28, I am way past my marriage age according to some and I am just
about to get there according to some. I feel for the girl children who were
born before and in the same year as me because the situation is even tougher
for them.
The second problem with this system is that people have this
tendency of hinging their success to comparisons with what others have
achieved. I fell prey to this despite being given the antidote to the same by
my secondary school Additional Mathematics teacher back in 2009 (story for
another day). Having graduated from secondary school, egos led me to picking
medicine over other programmes of study.
That meant that I had to be in the oven of college for 6 years while the
less intelligent Nyembezi went on to study agribusiness management at Bunda. By
the time I was in my 5th year in college, he dropped by driving a
Toyota Corolla Axio from his workplace. He bought us meals and airtime and gave
me a bit of pocket money. I wanted to be like him at that time. I just wanted
to be done with school, because being about the same age as him, I thought I
was in some sort of developmental delay by being in college. Stretch your
imagination and think about how life feels for the 30-year-old girl who has
been in 5 bridal parties and still do not have a loved one. Add the social
media to this and you get a confused generation. The picture-perfect lives that
people are living out there can depress you from thinking that your age mates
are doing way better than you are. In the case of choosing whether to be
inspired or intimidated, many choose the latter and subsequently add depression
to it.
We are at a point where the numerical age is not helping and
maturity isn’t doing much. Creating a composite method from the two is also
kind of difficult so I am no closer to finding out what being 28 years old
should mean to me. For the answer, I might have to turn to Henry Kachaje.
Back in 2013, I happened to attend one of those motivational
seminars that Mr Kachaje had organized. This seminar was held at Mount Soche
Hotel and had about 15 participants. As a part of the seminar, each participant
was given a 22-page planner to write about how they envisioned their life 10
years from the say of the seminar. Now 22 pages was a long shot and one can
imagine the details one had to fill as responses to the leading questions.
There were questions on bank account whose responses I
cannot remember, but I am pretty sure that my bank balance is far from what I
wrote in there. On career, I wrote that by 2023 I will be a licensed oncologist
and if you know what I do now, you know how that is going. Church? I wrote that
I would be an active member of the church possibly having an active post within
my small church community. I am very active, but it will take a miracle for me
to get where I thought I will be at age 30. My favorite? There was a bit about
family in which I wrote that by the age 30 I will be married with two children.
I am 28 now and plans of getting married are as far from me as they can be for
a guy my age. The career and family goals were written from a point of naivety
and I have learnt to forgive myself for painting such a picture.
There we are then. Even when you tie your age assessment to
personal expectations, you may end up missing it. I am probably one of the few
weirdos who has this problem, but here I am knowing that I am 28 without really
knowing how old 28 is. There is one thing that I know for sure, though. Mine
has been a life well lived. For a person my age, I think I have done it all and
that is something to be celebrated. I have been a church leader and I have
blacked out after taking too much whiskey. I have been heartbroken and I have
broken hearts. I have been involved in charities and I have chopped money I was
not supposed to chop. I have clapped hands at idiots and sworn at people I
shouldn’t have. I have written articles on this blog, the 248th of
which you are now finishing. I have done weed. I have sung in a church choir. I
have had an impact on lives on both extreme ends. I may not be proud of half
the things I have done but I feel like mine is a life well lived. And here is
to 28. Moving on, it will be time to do more good and less of the bad.
There we are, then. There is the good and there is the bad
but then there is my life. Going back to the issue of age, writing this has led
me to one conclusion. Using milestones may not be the best way to check how old
one is. Perhaps knowing how old a person is should be about what they have been
through and what they have learnt from it. I hope I have learnt enough from my
28 years. With all these thoughts, I doubt I will be doing any celebrating
today. One part of me feels like I have learnt enough from my highs and lows and the other feels like I have not. When I look at both sides of that coin, I am finding it hard to get the energy for celebrating this birthday.
Summary of the article? Your age is a product of how much
you have learnt from the life you have lived.
Have a good day.
Happy birthday bro, and keep writing. Enjoy it
ReplyDeleteHappy birthday Richie of Richie online
ReplyDeleteI dont think Nuembezi should be labeled less intelligent, we cant all be doctors or work in the medical field
ReplyDeleteWe need some in other different fields and that doesn't define how intelligent someone is.. Nice article and happy Birthday Richard, the 28 year old kkkk
Kindly note that it was meant to be sarcasm. Nyembezi is one of the most intelligent people I know.
DeleteHappy birthday ankolo. I hope you had a good one
ReplyDelete