The Misery of Nigerian Cheerfulness
If a
Nigerian were to learn about the existence of a newfoundland called
Eudamonia in God knows where, where happiness, laughter and
festivities were the order of the day and night; before one could
manage to sneeze out Goodluck Jonathan, hordes and colonies of
Nigerians would have taken all over the landscape. Such is our love
of life that we will do anything, short of the suicidal, in the
pursuit and arrest of happiness. We, just like every other sane
earthling, relish the importance of sensual pleasures – the
pleasures of taste (edikaikong, pounded yam and big stout); sexual
pleasure (ikebe super, ijebu chewing stick, omoge); the pleasure of
hearing (highlife music, afro beat, fuji, owambe); the sweet emotions
caused by the sight of beautiful forms (physiological, architectural
and natural).
An
original son of the Nigerian soil, in the person of Femi Anikulapo
Kuti, once said during an interview on BBC Radio that he refused to
believe that the members of the Boko Haram sect were Nigerians. This
belief was anchored on the fact that Nigerians were people who loved
to lead a happy existence. Such an existence might perhaps be defined
as one which would be decidedly preferable to non-existence; implying
that we should cling to it for its own sake, and not merely from the
fear of death, and further, that we should never like it to come to
an end. Contrarily, there is a school of thought which holds that
coming into existence is always a serious harm, and that it would
have been better not to have been born. The Boko Haram, in their
metaphysical garb, could be seen as nearly approximating this
philosophical view but because of the absolute lack of method in
their madness, it is impossible to describe them as anything but
murderous misanthropes.
Eudaemonology
is the theory of the art of ordering our lives so as to obtain the
greatest amount of pleasure and success. It teaches us how to lead a
happy existence. The purpose of human life is the pursuit of
happiness. This pursuit is twofold: the maximization of pleasure; and
the minimization of pain. Apart from the congenital propensity of
Nigerians to happiness, there are other variables which when
resourcefully procured and harnessed, will lead to the maximization
of pleasure. But there are limits to how much individuals can boost
their own happiness, and that leaves a role for government.
In a
world wide investigation of socio-cultural and political change
conducted by an international network of social scientists in 2003,
it was found out that the happiest people in the world lived in
Nigeria (oropesije: the proposition swallows explanation). In 2014,
Nigeria's economy (GDP) became the largest in Africa, worth more than
500 billion dollars, and overtook South Africa to become the world's
21st largest economy.
At
this juncture, let us pause and reflect on the Nigerian spirit,
survivability and cheerfulness. How come that in the midst of so much
inequality, oppression, poverty, exploitation and corruption, the
average Nigerian experiences, at most optimism of strength. Having
being denied access to the most basic necessities of life, and having
suffered appreciably from a peculiar sense of dislocation, total
disassociation and non-participation, he is psychologically driven to
pursue happiness, and remains only happy at the thought of this
pursuit which is , at best, a tantalizing will-o-the-wisp. This
general predisposition of the people to cheerfulness could be traced
to sadness, inveterate pain, privation, deficiency and melancholy.
The Nigerian cheerfulness (suffering and smiling) is therefore an
expression of a state of endangered comfort.
Government,
they say, is a trust, and the officers of the government are
trustees. And both the trust and the trustees are created for the
benefit of the people. Therefore, ask not what you can do for your
country; ask what your country can do for you. The government has
been involved, of late in a series of narcissistic
self-congratulations; firstly, because of the aforementioned increase
in the GDP, and secondly because of its success in combating the
ebola scourge. But the question still remains: is it not a function
of the state to promote the happiness of its citizens? Should the
state not also see as the centrepiece of its domestic policy the need
to ensure a sustainable growth in the Gross Domestic Happiness?
Whosai! Instead the primus inter pares of the trustees has become
more catholic than the pope in his efforts to narcotize the
misfortunes of Nigerians. The downtrodden soul of the Nigerian man
needs to prostrate itself in veneration before some shrine, be it
okija, ogun or our Lady of the Apostles. Religion now provides the
greatest source of lasting happiness, and he who is lucky enough to
survive Goodluck's corruption is told on sunday that the Lord
chasteneth those He loves. If you have a facebook account, you will
see it printed in black and white at the beginning of every month
with a picture of bills of dollars that if you type amen, that will
be your month of financial prosperity. Some other times, it is the
picture of a car's key. You are again requested by the pastor to type
amen and you will gain possession of the car. Then you see Nigerians
in their thousands, some with multiple accounts, typing amen amen
amen amen. One would have thought that apart from being the happiest
people in the whole world, Nigerians were also the smartest. Whosai!
Epicurus,
the great professor of happiness, maintains that the aim of happiness
is not the positive pursuit of pleasure but rather the absence of
pain, a neutral state he calls “ataraxia,” which is freedom from
all worry, which can be achieved through philosophical contemplation
rather than through pursuit of crass physical pleasures or the
primitive accumulation of wealth.
While
in the vortex of this rat race which is further worsened by the
government insensitivity to sensitive situations and the pastor's
abracadabra, the victims will sooner or later be overcome by either a
physical illness or an intense psychological/emotional pain. The
greatest remedy proferred by one of the greatest philosophical minds
that ever graced our planet, in the person of Friedrich Nietzsche is
what he called “Russian fatalism”. This is but a variant of
Nigerian survivability popularly referred to as “siddon look”.
Who utilizes such a remedy ceases the attempt to cure himself and
simply lies down and accepts his sickness and pain and inhibits any
physical or emotional reaction whatsoever. In doing so, he conserves
precious energy and hastens his recovery.
Nigerians
still remain the happiest people in the world, no thanks to the
state. Our siddon look attitude should not be mistaken for apathy or
lethargy. Even though our pursuit of eudamonia takes us to Utopia and
Canaan, the land flowing with milk and honey, God, in His infinite
wisdom, will never allow us to get to the promised land until we are
able to guarantee ourselves and posterity that the land of our birth
is the land of the greatest happiness of the greatest number.
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