Life Update

I write this blog the same way I lead conversations: I always forget to introduce myself.

Or give an update on how I’m doing. I talk in circles about random topics, ask loads of questions about how everyone else is doing then at the very end someone, or a few someones really, always come up to me and say,

You know I didn’t actually get your name. 

Then they mention how they have no clue who I am or what I do. It’s kind of my thing. I’m reluctant to small talking about myself but good for relaying all the heavy stuff if you ever make the mistake of asking me how I’m doing on one of my low days.

So in keeping with that tradition, this blog is full of traumas, sad days, confusing periods, rants and the likes, but there’s little about me. If I’m being honest it’ll probably remain that way but I figure for now it wouldn’t be too out of character to let you in on the small happenings of my life.

First things first, I’ve moved. I left Germany and now live in London.

Quite a shift I know, and honestly I didn’t see it coming. I imagined myself staying in Germany for at least a few years, but hey, that’s life for you.

To be frank, I left because of the increasing hostility towards minorities in Germany. There’s only so many times you can be spit on and called a nigger before you decide to call it quits.

So I did. I ended my relationship, quit my job, packed my bags and took a 13€ flight to London (yes you read that correctly). The relationship had soured for me long before it ended, I was growing tired of the 9-5, and as I said, Germany just wasn’t the place for me anymore. 

Why I chose London brings me to my next update: I’m pursuing modeling, acting, writing, and creative direction full time. 

Yes all at once. 

I’m more so hoping that one opportunity leads to the next. Though as I’ve seen in London, it’s not uncommon for the local hit DJ to be simultaneously modeling for Vogue while preparing for a photography project of theirs to be showcased at Art Basel after having just released a music video they directed for Blood Orange. 

That’s quite literally the life of one of the friends I’ve made here.

Needless to say, if there’s anywhere to pursue becoming a rocket scientist and a horse surgeon at the same time, London is the place to do it. But really I wouldn’t have come had it not been for a series of opportunities that miraculously lined up for me. I’ll say more about what those are once they’ve come to completion, just know good things are on the horizon.

But even as good things are within my reach I won’t sugar coat the toll this sudden shift in location and occupation (or lack thereof) has had on me. 

I’m afraid. I worry. I doubt. I look back even though that’s not the direction I’m going in. I’m trying to turn all my hobbies into a career while having no formal training on how to go about that and that scares the shit out of me, as in I frequently take shits because of how anxious I get thinking about the logistics of it all. I’m still battling depression, making amends with my past and how dramatically my life has changed. I still question and over think every set before I even take them. Travelling doesn’t change your circumstances, just your scenery.

Top it all off I’m the new girl all over again. 

In a bigger city where the hustle and bustle easily turns into stabbing your best mate in the neck to stay ahead of the curve. London is a beast, don’t let anyone tell you different.

Despite this, despite the dark days, I’m happy here. I love it here. I’m stationed in the south in a high rise that over looks what seems like the entire world. I’m writing everyday, meeting someone new every other day and trying to stay on top of my budget in between. I’m afraid yes, but hopeful. Very hopeful…at least I try to be.

That’s all for now, as they say, but if you could just do me one favor

Love Yourself

AFS

Birthday Boys and Birthday Girls

Its 5am and I’m walking home with a stranger whom I’ll soon call a friend.

I’m told to talk and mingle with different types of people but I don’t have much to say, other than,

Hi, I’m Jai.

I’ve kissed so many cheeks tonight.

Flirted with so many uninterested women tonight.

Rode in so many UBERS I didn’t pay for tonight.

Went along with every next move made for the night while pretending to be interested in plans made for tomorrow.

I took a walk on my own to a park around the corner and fell asleep on a bench. Made my way back about half an hour later to a crowd that seemed unphased by my arrival so probably hadn’t noticed that I had left.

It is better to be a fly on the wall than a wallflower because at least the fly can fly away.

But I am on my way to the next venue without the person I came with to the first. No one seems to know whose house this is but I manage to find the bathroom on my own.

There’s a comfortable chair here so I sit and decide to enjoy the show. A few conversations I might remember later and a few one liners I might turn into a poem.

Thank you to the ones who made sure the new girl didn’t get left behind, next time the UBER will be on me.

It won’t be. I never know where we’re going.

I never know who I’m talking to but he’s just said his birthday is tomorrow and she’s just blown out 21 or 24 candles.

Happy Birthday. I guess this whole night is for them.

London nights come in a drunken haze and my exes jacket keeps me warm as night turns into day.

You’ve got a lovely voice and lovely eyes too. You know where I live better than I do, you walk me home even though I tell you you don’t have to. My buildings just there, I don’t have your number but maybe I’ll text you.

I lay down in bed, I close my eyes too.

I know tomorrow is coming, even though I don’t want it too.

AFS

Starbuck’s at St. Pancras

Strawberry donut is a terrible flavor for a frappuccino.

And Starbucks is a lovely place to be when you’re being stood up. Probably should have seen it coming with all the dodginess about time.

Time zones are funny when you’re unemployed. The friends in my zone are at work so I can’t call them when I’m bored, and the friends back home are asleep so I can’t call them when I’m lonely.

Why am I surprised? Time travel has always been a solo mission. 

No one comes in holding hands with a companion and no one goes out kissing lips with a lover.

The cue is getting longer and the coffee caller (I assume that’s the name of that position) is showing signs of acute anxiety. Mixing up names and hot beverages. Was it a grande latte macchiato low fat milk no sugar for James or was it for Kiera?

Better question, who thought it a grand idea to name all drink sizes with a word synonymous to big in the first place?  The only person they’ve fooled is me as I don’t frequent this place often enough to know that my tall tea meant small tea.

Took everything in me not to tell Susan they spelled small wrong. But no one else seemed bothered which has always been a clear sign that I’m currently in a ‘It’s just you’ scenario.

And it is just me. Just me and my three pound tea I would trade for a meal deal at Sainsbury’s right about now. But mint is soothing. So soothing I tell myself that it could be worse.

I could be the guy that ordered the Strawberry Donut frappuccino. 

All written in good spirit guys,

Love Yourself,

AFS

‘Hair’itage

My last name is Stephenson.

It’s probably a slave name. Or the name my ancestors adopted in order to adapt to their surroundings. I don’t hate my last name, I question it. Who is it? Who am I, really?

I remember back in Uni a black girl sitting next to me in class and becoming excited. Attending a predominantly white institution, women like us were far and few in between. So in an attempt to establish comradery, I complimented the name I saw printed on her student ID tag. 

“Ngozi, that’s a beautiful name.” 

She looked at me, her eyes exasperated, her lips curled only to a half smile but still patiently replied, “Not Nuh-gozi but Nnn-gozi, nnn, from Nigeria.” 

That ‘Nnnn’ being unfamiliar to me began the introspective dissection of my past and present. 

After that encounter, I coudln’t shake the slight notion of shame that shrouded me. I, being raised in America, could recite the English, the French, the Italian and even the German alphabet, but I had not the slightest clue of how to phonetically pronounce and recite the Igbo alphabet, or any alphabet belonging to an African country for that matter. And there were people, black people all around me who knew their names. Their real names. They knew where they’d come from. Yet I had this name, this name I knew was not my own. A name that fooled most white employers into thinking I was white until I walked in for the interview. A White washed privilege.

And I had something else.

This hair. My hair.
My hair that my mother kept relaxed up until I was eighteen and moved out on my own. Before then it was long and reached well past my shoulders. People, especially black people, rarely complimented my dark complexion, truthfully they taunted me for it. And they rarely said much about my facial features except for “You look like a man.” But my hair, oh my hair to them was my saving grace. It was my glory.

“You’ve got pretty hair,” they’d say.

Never that my hair was ‘good’ because despite its length, it was coarse and dense unlike the silky strands that flowed from the scalps of women who claimed to have Indian in them. Nevertheless, my hair was pretty and I learned early on that is was one of my better traits.

Still, I was curious. Every month just before I was due a fresh relaxer, I wondered about the kinky new growth sprouting from the root like weeds in a manicured garden. I wondered what would happen if less effort was made to them but instead they were permitted to thrive in their natural habitat?

My counterparts were less enthused by this concept. Whenever this tiny fro made a guest appearance I was met with, “Oh yea, you need to keep that mess permed, you got that real nigga naps grade of hair.” 

No one  was calling it 4c back then.

Even so, in spite of my mother’s disapproval and right in swing with the wave of black hair naturalism that swept across black America, I cut my hair. I remember that first rendezvous between myself and my new reflection. How long I lingered in the mirror, gazing at the foreign woman who had what seemed only to be half a millimeter of curls jutting from her scalp. I remember thinking,

Oh. How ugly.

Quickly I tried anything to alter my current state of ‘hairs’. Dr. Miracle’s Gro Oil, Wonder Gro, Doo Gro, hell if they sold something called Please Gro I would’ve bought it. But of course, in due time I learned. In due time I loved.

So let me take you back to the beginning.

My last name is Stephenson. It’s a patronymic form of the name Stephen derived from the Ancient Greek word ‘stephanus’ meaning, crown. I don’t know specifically who they were, my ancestors, but I like to believe there was intention in the choosing of that name. Royalty.

They passed down to me this melanin, this nose, these hands, this face, all of these like precious relics reassuring me that yes, my body is indeed a temple. And they gave me something else. 

This hair. Their hair. My hair.

Like a signature, a beautiful marking that adorns my head saying,

“We were here. We are here. 
So anoint your head with oils of castor, coconut and jojoba. And do this in remembrance of us. When you comb your coils be gentle, always be tender with your hands because life was not always so tender with ours. Wash, rinse, moisturize. Baptize yourself in all that is required to maintain your Garden of Eden. Honor it. Offer it, like a sacrifice of praise upon the altar. An outward expression of gratitude. This is true and proper worship. 

And as you reach back… we will reach forward”.

As always, do me this one favor today.

Love Yourself.

AFS