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Essays, Writers

An Undeserved Gift by Humble Ogbonna.

  Mama’s visits are usually nerve breaking especially for Jane, my wife. Those visits had become increasingly frequent and disturbingly so. I could decipher the anxiety written all over her face like that of an employee waiting for a sack letter, as she went to open the door. Despite being anxious when she learned that Mama was coming, she had started to prepare for her arrival. She had been as busy as a beaver building a dam, making sure that at least asides the topic on ground, mama wouldn’t find another reason to attack her. “Welcome Mama,” she said as she opened the door for my mother to come in. ”mmm…” Mama coldly replied while partially ignoring her. ”Welcome Mama,” I said. ”Dubem my son, thank you. How are you doing?” Mama asked. ”We are doing just fine. But mama, you just love visiting us out of the blues only informing us when you would have already left home,” I replied. ”Ehen! So I need to write a letter asking for permission before I come to visit my son, is that so?” Mama retorted. ”No nah, at least informing us earlier would help us prepare well’ I teased. ‘Ehen Mama, I hope you brought something from the village for us?” I asked. ”Yes, I did. I brought all the village goodness for you,” she said. ”Thank you so much Mama,” Jane who had returned after carrying Mama’s bags into the visitors’ room added. “Yes, I even planned on buying chocolates too but then I remembered that there are no children in house,” Mama replied with a scorn. That was a sly dig at my wife because she had not been able to conceive since we got married seven years ago, this often makes her weep profusely at night due to the emotional pain it caused her. Jane had been the most beautiful person I had ever known. We met in our first years in the university during an English class, the lecturer had asked us to volunteer right there in class to talk about the advantages of offline learning over online learning. It was actually a debate. As an outspoken soul, I quickly sprang up and walked to the front of the class. With poise, charisma and eloquence, I spoke in favour of offline learning and was applauded. The lecturer commended me and then asked for someone else to speak in favour of online education but no one was ready. Just then, a lady signified to speak. I was actually seeing her for the first time, her light skin illuminated the room like the golden rays of the morning sun upon hibiscus flowers as she made her way to the front. Her slim figure perfectly complemented her ravishing beauty. I was awed into silence while she spoke and the class became silent that you could hear a pin drop. Her beauty and intelligence were inextricably intertwined and for the first time ever, I could honestly admit that I had been bested in a public speech. There was a standing ovation at the end of her delivery and after the class I quickly rushed to commend her. We became friends, then lovers and finally marriage mates.   There was silence in the room after Mama’s comment. It hurt me to see her being attacked by my mother over child bearing issues, I was getting fed up too of not having kids but there was nothing I could do. “Don’t worry Mama, very soon you’ll be the one telling us to stop having kids that the one we have us enough,” I said while trying to calm the already tensed atmosphere. “Kindly go and have your bath, you’ve had such a stressful journey, ” I added. It was dinner time as Jane came to the sitting room to invite us to the dinning table. She had made Yellow Garri and Oha soup garnished with enough mushroom and beef. “Honey, please come over to the table. Mama, dinner is ready, please come over to the dinning table,” she said. As I rose to my feet, I noticed that Mama’s countenance had changed , like a ferocious lion about to pounce on a helpless prey. “Food! Food! Food! That is all you know how to make, make babies and not food!” Mama thundered. An ocean of tears was already gushing down Jane’s face. “Mama please stop it, you’re hurting my wife, ” I shouted. It was the first time I’d ever raise my voice towards my mother. “Oh ho! Dubem, now she has finally turned you against me, isn’t it? I give her just one year” Mama replied. Now turning to her, Mama continued, “If after one year nothing positive happens, you will leave this house and a real woman who can have babies will come in, who knows whether you had already damaged your womb in the course of numerous abortions due to your promiscuous life. Just one year and you will see.” The heart wrenching barrage of insults from Mama were too hard to bear as Jane bolted to the room to cry. I immediately went after her to pacify her with soothing words, yet deep down I was bleeding too. We were not getting any younger and Mama doesn’t support adopting a child. Although the doctors had told us that we had no problems, yet the kids were not forthcoming. It seemed there was no hope in the offing. Three years passed by rather swiftly without any positive news. As I laid awake in bed, with eyes wide open like a hungry owl, heart beating loud and fast that it seemed it was going to pop out of my chest, I gently tapped on Jane to wake up for an important conversation. “For the sake of our love Jane, I want to apologize,” I started shamefully. “Apologize over what?” She cut in. “You had been and will always be the best thing that ever happened to me,” I continued.  “Your

Essays, Writers

Sports Betting: A Greek Gift To Unemployed Youths by Oluka Emmanuel.

    Introduction From the streets of Lagos, to the creeks of the Niger-Delta; from the savannas of the middle belt, to the hinterlands of the north, you cannot but agree that sports betting have permeated these spaces and have found sweeping acceptance. With each day, comes the proliferation of sports betting houses and the emergence of new dimension(s) to its voyage and acceptance, leaving in its trail, a blend of bitter and sweet experiences in the lives of the youths.   One may wonder what “sports betting” is all about; it involves the activity of predicting sports results and placing a wager (bet) on the outcome.  It is regarded a booming business for betting companies. According to an earlier report by Nairametrics, roughly 60 million Nigerians between the ages of 18 and 40 are actively involved in sports betting. Interestingly, this is the age bracket where the youths belong. It is therefore a huge business enterprise that continues to thrive, not just because there is a population for it, but because, Nigerians love sports a lot. Safe it is, based on this premise to say that these businesses should have no reason to worry or lose any sleep.   While there have been concerns on whether sports betting is truly a sustainable business model or a ploy by investors to exploit the income and vulnerability of most young Nigerians, this essay takes a visible approach; it presents sports betting as a potential Greek gift, that has propensity to wreck far reaching menacing consequences on the unemployed youths if care is not taken to handle and channel it properly. Meanwhile, a “Greek gift” as defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary is a gift given, or a favour done with a treacherous purpose. This means that such a gift presents hidden or unpredictable dangers and has the likelihood to trick and cause harm to the recipient(s). This definition sets the tone for this essay; it establishes a nexus between the various arguments for, and against sports betting and tries to find a common, non-detrimental ground for the youths in the long run.   The gains… There is no gainsaying that if properly harnessed, sports betting have the capacity to increase the revenues of a state through taxes and levies paid to the government. Many see it as a gift of financial independence, providing a means of livelihood for the betting operators who are mostly young adults. In a chat with The Guardian, managing director of ZenithBet, a licensed betting company in the country, Tope Fagbuaro noted that “irrespective of what people think about sports betting, the (betting) companies are really empowering Nigeria, especially the youths, and in doing so, help to curb crime among them”. Quoting him further, he said, “The issue of unemployment cannot be over emphasized. Lots of youths are jobless and few of us decided that we want to be independent and create employment, which is key in the country”. In a related development, Jukwuese, a graduate of Estate Management in a chat with Saturday PUNCH said, “It is true that Sports betting is not really a job but, it has been my sole source of income for a while now; I don’t win all the time but on the average, I do win quite often. Somehow it happens that I am making a living from it; so, for me, in the absence of a full-time employment, betting could as well be my job at the moment”. Jukwuese thus represents a demographic of numerous unemployed Nigerian youths who have embraced sports betting as a means of livelihood. And to be honest, it is better than resorting to crime in other to make ends meet. Meanwhile, the classification of Nigeria as the poverty capital of the world according to a report by the Brookings Institution, when juxtaposed with the unemployment rate, suggests that sports betting could be a means of escaping the endemic economic situation in the country.   The pains… On the one hand, many may see sports betting as empowerment and a way to reduce crime, while on the other hand, others view it to be both problematic and addictive with serious negative effects on young adults. A man who battled sports betting addiction once said, “When I won games, the urge to want more from the betting platform couldn’t be resisted; I would be forced to wager one more and one more rolled into two more and so, my personal savings many times, ended in oblivion. Yet, the jackpot rarely came. At some points, when I lost bets, it births the urge to keep playing, rather than prompt me to walk away. At that level, I had indeed become an addict, and the level of addiction had assumed frightening dimensions. Such dimensions involved me running up huge debts and even stealing money to wager a bet. I would borrow money to stake a bet with hopes of paying back when I won; but in most cases, that doesn’t happen”. Unfortunately this remains the tale of most sports bettors as reports show that there are more pains than gains. With sports betting, comes other problems such as borrowing, indebtedness, anxiety, and emotional worries in the event of loss of money placed on wagers. Other ugly incidences related to sports betting include bankruptcy, job loss, use and abuse of substances, depression and stealing. Some are even lured into ritualism, which involve the use of “good luck charms” to improve their chances of winning. Our youths have therefore become addicted to search for easy success; no one preaches the virtue of self-contentment or hard to them. Their religious leaders help their daydreaming by telling them prosperity tales that do not feature hard work. The nose-diving economy wouldn’t help matters either. Much as sports betting presents itself a gift in the form of employment, empowerment and a seemingly lure away from crime, the truth remains that there is every probability that once the youths get too much involved in it, and

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