The Lessons I Learned from My Dad
I am not the man my father is.
I am trying. Some days closer. Some days farther.
He never sat me down and explained these lessons. He lived them. I’m still learning them.
Show up.
The kitchen table. The hospital room. The funeral. The picket line. The call from the son who won’t answer.
Show up.
Most days that’s the whole job.
My whole life I watched him do it. Not for cameras. Not for headlines. Not because there was something in it for him. He showed up because someone needed him.
I learned that grief doesn’t make you special.
My father buried a wife and daughter. He buried a son. Yet he never treated grief as a claim on other people’s sympathy. Instead, it made him notice theirs.
A mother who lost a child. A father sitting beside a hospital bed. A kid scared about what comes next. A son who lost his mother, his sister, his brother.
He always noticed.
I learned that power is not the point.
The people who chase power eventually confuse the office with themselves.
My father never did.
Whether he was a county councilman, a senator, vice president, or president, he was the same man.
The title changed.
He didn’t.
I learned that family comes first.
The train from Wilmington wasn’t symbolism.
It was every night.
He read to us. Showed up to games. Sat through hospital rooms. Waited up for children who were lost.
And when the day came that the country and the family could not both have him at full strength, he chose family. He relinquished the last chapter of how he wanted to be remembered. And he never complained about it.
Most of all, I learned that love is not soft.
Love is discipline.
Love is showing up at one in the morning when nobody is watching.
Love is answering the phone.
Love is staying.
Love is getting back up after life knocks you down and doing it all again tomorrow.
That love saved my life.
I’ve failed at many of these lessons, sometimes in very public ways.
He loved me anyway.
That’s the last lesson.
I am not trying to become my father.
I am trying to carry what he gave me.
And if I can do that, even imperfectly, that will be enough.
Happy Father’s Day, Dad. I love you.
China educated ALL rural children before it started building the massive infrastructure
Nigeria was ahead and richer than China in terms of GDP per capita from 1960 to the late 1970s; this was not because of oil, it's because Nigeria educated everyone for free
No economy on Earth has grown without an increase in education spending. There is a positive correlation between educational achievement and GDP per capita
You can argue, or you can do your own research
Some reports suggested that nigerian oil marketers are importing Dangote petrol through the offshore ship-to-ship trading hub in Lome, Togo 🇹🇬, because structural pricing dynamics made it cheaper for marketers to source Dangote-refined products from Lome than to buy directly from the Lekki-based refinery.
Nigeria madddd! 🇳🇬🤣
When my mom died, it was obscene to me, that the centre of my world was gone and everyone else acted normally, and moved on like it was normal.
I wondered how everyone and everything around me had the will to function when my world had stopped.
I thought they'd stop for me.
Understanding the difference between what is fraudulent and what's unethical will make you know how the rich think.
Not every rich person is fraudulent but every rich person is unethical in one area or the other.
Prof Ken Agu General surgeon UNTH on a discussion with medical students after Appendectomy surgery :
“ I don’t even remember the complications of Appendectomy, because I don’t cause them”
Aura Dey cry
This is what partying and clubbing were supposed to facilitate and accelerate. Not people sitting in one corner, ignoring others, or trying to prove that they have more money than others by ordering overpriced drinks.