For
about 2 minutes, the person was on the other side of the phone was asking
whether I was still there. I was there, indeed, but lost in thought – NO –
wonder. That succinctly captures it. I stared at the full moon that had
formed in the skies illuminating the earth with its bright light.
Scientists
say the moon was formed about some 4.5 billion years ago, from debris left
after a giant impact between Earth and a Mars-sized body called Theia.
But that sounds like gibberish to me, and I'm sure it does sound same to you
too. Believers know its origin, and it has nothing to do with what the proponents
of Charles Robert Darwin’s theories postulate.
I realized I was
not paying attention to what the other person was saying, and before I could
mutter a word to signify my presence, the call had already been ended. I hit
the ‘end’ button on the phone immediately I called back because something
struck me.
Initially, I saw
the moon producing light from its estimated 10,921 km circumference – bright
light. All the while, clouds were passing it by. Then some very dark thick
clouds passed and covered the moon, but the light to the earth wasn’t completely
cut-off. Let me hasten to add here that my vicinity had been ‘dumsored’, or the transformer had
generated a fault, as Gridco and ECG would have us believe. But the point I’m
making here is that [paid-for] lights were out. So no alternative lights. It
was at that moment that I realized the presence of the twinkling little stars
hanging up there in the skies. They would have been the ‘supporting casts’ if
it had been a movie.
The thick clouds
passed and the moon shone again. Then more clouds passed; some completely
covering the moon, others, the moon could pierce through to be seen. Then I
realized I had been taught two valuable lessons in life.
First, I
wondered what the moon was doing when the dark thick clouds completely covered
it. “Did it stop shining”? “Did it go on a break”? I asked myself. No, it
didn’t. It was still performing its function – providing light – even when an
obstacle prevented it from doing so. It bided its time, waiting for an
opportune moment to shine, and boy! it did immediately the clouds passed. And
when other obstacles came along, it wasn’t completely hidden – it was visible
albeit a bit hazy.
Isn’t it same
with life? We face obstacles in our everyday lives, don’t we? But most of us
give up in the process. We throw our hands in despair and lose hope. We say to
ourselves: “this is it, I am finished!” Admittedly, some of these challenges
make us want to knock on the doors of death so our struggles are alleviated.
But if only we would not lose hope, we would see that the clouds would soon
pass over, and we would shine again. But when the dark clouds cover us, let us
not stop shining – let’s turn it up a notch. Let us not stop learning. Rather,
let us stop crying after a while. Let us stop whining.
Secondly, during
the time the moon was completely covered, the stars provided back-up. They held
the fort until the moon came back to life. I asked myself whether there would
be others willing to hold the fort during my dark moments. Maybe a few, I
thought. Can you find such people in your life too?
How would there
be such people if we fail to help another in his time of need? How would they
exist when we watch them hit the self-destruct button? How would they be
present in our lives if rather than standing by them, we go to town with their
predicaments like the drunken town crier beating the gong? If you haven’t
realized it yet, there is the need to build genuine, edifying, long-lasting symbiotic
relationships wherever we find ourselves. These are the ones that would hold
the fort and prop us up when we fall.
My name is Paa
Kwesi Bentum ‘Biskit’ Williams, and I choose to be a moon and a star
henceforth!
More Vim…Let’s
Go…
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