Posts Tagged Botswana

My last days in Botswana


I have always looked forward to the day I would talk about my last days in Botswana. I have always dreamed of it. And my heart races with excitement as I write about it now. Stanley Anyabolu with Henry and Remi

My last days there brought out some feelings that I never knew existed. For instance I never knew I would feel bad leaving Botswana for any reason. But when the time came, I realized that I had made some good friends that it hurts to have to leave them. Yet again, that is the beauty of life: Nothing lasts forever and change is the only constant thing. The people we meet today could be gone tomorrow (be it through death or just a separation) and we may never have gotten round to be the best we could have been to them.

Friends?! Who are friends? Are they the people you chat with from time to time? or the people you barely see and hardly share with? or are they the people you share with, be it sadness, pain or success? I love the following description of the different types of friends:

There are friends for a season

There are friends for a reason

There are friends for a lifetime

Definitely, having lived in a new country for about 2 years, I came across people that could be classed in the various categories of friends above. The ones I thought were classed in the last category, ended up somewhere else. Nkolika Anyabolu with HenryTime I believe is the only factor that determines the friends that stay with us for a lifetime.

As a child I grew up knowing that my mum had a friend in Glasgow whom she met about 30 years before I was born when my parents lived in Glasgow. And on my mum’s return to Nigeria they kept in touch exchanging Christmas cards. That old woman never failed to send a card to my mum every year. As the years went by one could see from the handwriting that the card was from a very old person.

At over 90 years she still keeps sending and my mum always smiles anytime she talks about her. That is what lifetime friends is all about. You share your journeys when the going is tough and when you are frail and weak you still smile whenever you are called upon to talk about your friend.

That leaves me to wonder where I would be with the good people I met in Botswana in 10 years time or 30 years time.  Now that we are leaving in a world that is so globalized and communication is so easy (be it very impersonal sometimes), there should not be any excuse for not keeping in touch.  All the same, I met some really wonderful people there and not so wonderful personalities. There were those whom I shared with, those I laughed with, those who always tried to ask ‘how are you’ and there were those who could not care less.

My last days in Botswana were filled with packing, preparations and dinners. I loved the dinners so much because the food was something else.

Food at Maun lodgeWe had dinner with Pastor Jerry and Jana Lackey at their beautiful home in Okavango International School. It was wonderful and I enjoyed every moment of it. The dinner with Henry, Remi and Mrs Eigbe at Maun Lodge was very touching.  My husband worked with late Dr John Eigbe before he died around July last year. After his death he took over the running of the clinic. Over the period of 3 years he worked closely and tirelessly with Henry (above) and  Mrs Eigbe. That is one thing I admire my husband for a lot. It is a rare gift to be able to manage someone else’s thing as though it was yours. And he surely has that gift.

There is nothing like being good at what you do and giving your best no matter the situation you find yourself in. Even if the humans you are doing it for do not appreciate it; you can rest assured that God will reward you immensely for your efforts. And remember that you never know where you would meet again tomorrow.

When the time came to say goodbye, we all had tears in our eyes. I never knew saying goodbye in Botswana would be difficult. I always thought that when the time came, that I would bolt up and leave without even looking back. But I was wrong.

To the Lackeys, Mulombas, Obohs, Ernihes, Mrs Eigbe of Covenant Medical Centre Maun and the wonderful people who made our lives and stay in Maun Botswana a memorable one, I say THANK YOU.

We pray the good Lord will continue to be with you and give you the grace to excel in all you do. We will definitely meet again.

Thank you by Nkolika Anyabolu

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Acrylic ACEO painting of Tsodilo hill

Acrylic ACEO painting of Tsodilo Hill

Tsodilo Hill

2.5″ x 3.5″

Acrylic on paper

Click here to buy

Tsodilo is a UNESCO World Heritage Site located in northwestern Botswana.It was inscribed in 2001 due to its unique religious and spiritual significance to local peoples, as well as its unique record of human settlement over many millennia. Tsodilo is a site that has witnessed visits and settlement by successive human communities for many millennia.

It contains over 4,500 rock paintings in an area of approximately 10 km² within the Kalahari Desert. A recent discovery of 70,000-year-old artifacts and a python’s head carved of stone appears to represent the first known human rituals.

There are four chief hills. The highest is 1400 metres.  The four hills are commonly described as the “Male”, this is the highest, the “Female”, “Child” and an un-named knoll.These hills are of great cultural and spiritual significance to the San peoples of the Kalahari.

It is believed that the caves and caverns of the “Female” hill are the resting places of the deceased and various gods who rule the world from here. The most sacred place is near the top of the “Male” hill, where it is said that the First Spirit knelt and prayed after creating the world. The San believe that you may still see the impression of the First Spirits’ knees in the rock.

This is definitely one the places to visit  in Africa or while holidaying in Botswana. It encompasses a spiritual richness that is unmistakable.

Sources:

Unesco World Heritage
Wikipedia

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Acrylic painting: Surreal and Still

Acrylic ACEO Seascape painting by Nkolika Anyabolu (MD)

Shakawe

2.5″ x 3.5″

copyright Nkolika Anyabolu (MD)

Click here to buy

This is from one of the several pictures I took while on a trip to Shakawe, a town near the border between Botswana and Namibia. There were children fishing in the small pond but I left them out in this painting. Will put them in the bigger one I intend to do someday.

What caught my attention was the reflections the vegetation at the side of the pool made in the still water. I dunno why I am always fascinated by reflections seen in water. They almost always look very surreal and still. Qualities I long to imbibe.

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Charcoal Drawing of Kalahari San (Bushman) dancer

Charcoal drawing of a Kalahari San (Bushman) dancer

Kalahari (San) child dancer

8.25″ x 11.75″ (A4)

Charcoal on 160g Canson Mi-Teintes paper

copyright Nkolika Anyabolu (MD)

This is another drawing of a Kalahari (San) dancer……………this time a child dancer. I have always been fascinated with the sight of these people. Watching them perform is always a breathtaking experience even though majority of the dance comprises stamping of the feet hard on the ground. And they always dress in simple yet natural way. Oft wearing beads made from Ostrich eggs and clothes from animal hides. To read more about these people see my earlier post on Kalahari (San) bushmen of Botswana.

I did this drawing with charcoal and ink. It has been sprayed/covered with a protective layer of fixative to prevent smudging and is ready for framing.

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Acrylic on paper painting of Giraffes

Acrylic painting of giraffe silhouettes by Nkolika Anyabolu (MD)

Giraffe Silhouettes

20cm x 28cm

copyright Nkolika Anyabolu (MD)

For some time now I’ve been having a lot of fun and deriving a lot of joy from painting wildlife. It definitely is influenced by where I have found myself………………….Botswana.  Botswana hasn’t been good to me in a lot of ways, but I have simply chosen to see the good sides of the place.  I keep saying I’m way too young to burden myself with thoughts that will not in anyway make me a better person or make me happy. The bottom line’s that I am too young to send myself to an early grave. Needless to say it is always very important to try and see the beautiful side of any where you find yourself.

Coming here opened a totally new chapter in my life. A chapter I was not in anyway ready for (can we ever be completely ready for what life throws at us?). But like a popular saying in my culture that says “a na awachi uwa ogodo”…………which means adorning life with beautiful ornaments no matter the circumstances, I decided a long time ago to keep my shoulders straight and walk with my head high at all times. Yeah, like the giraffes in the painting above. If I could get my neck to be that long I would definitely be making a statement to the world around me that I have simply chosen not to be deterred.

What is it that you’re going through now? Have things happened that have made your shoulders slouch and made you constantly afraid of looking the world in the eye? Brace up and know you’re not (never alone). Like giraffes who never walk with their heads low, may we all learn to stare down adversities and disappointments.

Everyone reaches a point in their life where they must either change or cease

Brett Whiteley

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