Thursday, 27 November 2014

Worded Agora: A Proclamation

Shine with the stars
And talented brilliant Academia
Nectar made of everything Nigerian
And Africa cues into this agenda
Making sweet milk with words that calm
Originality trained like a commando

Done tough in unbreakable bond
Aloha in the worded Agora
Vigorous engagements in high rev
Instructed in industry like a Nazi
Dancing to the Alpha band

Lean on Grace as you stand tall
And leave no room for Acrophobia
Going higher all the distance long
With accurate speed mastered by few
And lovely ascendency like an acappela
Made in Heaven to beautify this realm
Pulling up surprises right to the top
A life tuned to Divine Agenda

© 2014, by Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi
For a younger brother, El Poetico.
Happy birthday Sanamo David Lagwampa.

Sunday, 23 November 2014

A Beautiful Tomorrow

Though the future looks dark
Through the aperture of this turbulent mark
And hope flies away like a lark
From the violent doggy bark
Soiling up our peaceful park
And ignorance swamps reasoned hark

I see a beautiful tomorrow
Where war we no longer borrow
Or walk streets marked with sorrow
Through the accursed backward narrow
And the imposed uninvited harrow
From men with agendas shallow
In poisoned anemic marrow

Let the good people arise
Take revered cowardice by surprise
Through united and courageous enterprise
In strengthened harmony that beggars reprise
On acceptable principles and not mere surmise
Our destiny from decay to prise

Ignorance will bow to reason
Corruption will be out of season
Righteousness will arise in person
Hatred will be thrown into prison
Sentenced for inhuman treason
By the people it sought to jettison


© By Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi

Monday, 17 November 2014

Biographical lessons of success: Gen. Collin Luther Powell (Rtd)


General Collin Luther Powell (Rtd) is considered one of the most successful African-Americans of all time. Born in 1937, he became the first black and the youngest man, at 52, ever to preside as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS); a post he held from 1989 until his retirement from the U.S. army in 1992. He joined politics and went ahead to become the first Blackman to serve as the U.S. Secretary of State during the first term of George W. Bush. Collin Luther Powell is regarded as both a skilled military commander and an astute politician. He outlined his recipe for success in the following words:
“Success is the result of perfection, hard work, learning from failure, loyalty, and persistence” – Collin Powell.
He stresses that these are the very qualities that helped to propel him to the pinnacle of his career, both as a military man and as a politician. These same qualities, if you cultivate them in your life, will help you also to rise to the top of your career, whatever it may be. Let’s look at them one-by-one:
1. Perfection. 
To be perfect means to meet all requirements or lacking no essential element or component. Another word for perfection which is more in common use is the word “excellence”. You see the quality of your life and work – at the level of output - is in direct correlation to your commitment to excellence. Tom Landry said as much:
“The quality of q life is in direct proportion to its commitment to excellence” – Tom Landry.
You will not be outstandingly successful if you are not fully committed to pursuing and ensuring excellence in everything you do. Life is full of the ordinary and the common and, therefore, the ordinary and common do not catch our attention and command our respect. Only uncommon and extra-ordinary things catch our attention and command our respect. That is why only people who reach out for and attain excellence in their lives and professions attain outstanding success and command universal respect.
I encourage you to reach out for and secure the highest and the best in your life and in all your pursuits, including all the small details and the seemingly unimportant. Great things are born out of small things. Attain smartly and dedicatedly to the small things of your life and work with excellence in all things and see how your life will turn out excellently. Excellence, in turn, will catch the attention of those who are responsible for your promotion, and they will act in your favor. That is how your life will keep moving forward and upward.
2. Hard work.
I have always said, and I say it again, nothing worthwhile happens in life except by work. The great inventor and entrepreneur, Thomas Alva Edison, bears witness to this truth. He said:
“I never did anything worth doing by accident, nor did any of my inventions come by accident; they came by work” – Thomas Edison.
To do anything great in life you must first plan and then work committedly and conscientiously to actualize your plans. There is just no other legitimate way around work. Any unplanned and un-worked success is either a fraud or a fluke, and both cannot stand the test of time. Only legitimate and committed work can secure genuine success that has God’s blessings on it and man’s approval. Such success will stand the scrutiny and test of time. Speaking about this King Solomon says, in Proverbs 28:20;
“A faithful man shall abound with blessings: but he that maketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent.”
He adds further in Proverbs 22:29;
“Seest thou a man diligent in his business? He shall stand before kings; he shall not stand before mean men.”
The key to meeting the men and women who can make the difference you seek is your diligence in your in all your pursuits. Not only that but also diligence - commitment to work – will eventually make you great!
3. Learning from failure.
He who cannot learn from his mistakes and failures - and take necessary action to rectify them - is bound to repeat such mistakes over and over again. Nobody takes such fellows seriously and they never go far in life.
As success is never ending, so also failure is never final. Just because you failed at a particular project or attempt does not mean that you are a failure. No! No!! No!!! Far from it! You can always do something to turn the tide in your favour and eventually succeed. You are a failure only when you accept it by remaining in it, doing nothing to turn things around. Australian businessman and author, Bill Newman, said as much:
“The greatest failure in life is to stop trying… No one can cheat you out of ultimate success but yourself” – Bill Newman.
You are not what people or circumstance say you are until you append your signature to it. Do not accept and thus perpetuate your failure. You can always fight back. Learn from your failures. Take all the necessary actions to remedy the situation. Get up one more time. Dust yourself up and try one more time as a wiser and more matured person. Learn all the positive lessons you can learn from all the negative events in your life. This kind of attitude will take you very far in life, and as you begin to come into the objects of your vision and dreams, you will soon see that even failure can be a great teacher.
4. Loyalty.
The world tends to underestimate the value and power of loyalty. Everyone appears to be in a hurry and many have reached the wrong conclusion that they must cut down those ahead of them to get ahead in life. But such a behavior is a trap; for he who sows rebellion and disloyalty digs a hole for himself, and he will eventually fall amidst numerous troubles and shame. He who sows loyalty will reap recognition and promotion plus peace and prosperity. Loyalty provides the underpinnings for a stable and influential life.
“You’ve got to give loyalty down, if you want loyalty up” – Donald T. Regan.
He who is loyal to those ahead of him today, will have faithful and loyal followers tomorrow. Loyalty wins the heart of your bosses, making them to trust you. That trust translates into tangible benefits such as direct mentorship, recognitions, recommendations, and promotions. A loyal follower today, makes a great leader tomorrow. Loyalty is not foolishness. It is a great virtue of the mind that shows your level of civility.
“Nothing is more noble, nothing more venerable than fidelity. Faithfulness and truth are the most sacred excellences and endowments of the human mind” – Marcus Tullius Cicero.
5. Persistence.
To make meaningful progress in life and successfully achieve or fulfill your dreams and visions, you must be willing and able to hold on to and carry on with your pursuits against all odds. You see, nothing good comes easy. To arrive at the objects of your pursuits successfully, you must persist unrelentingly, regardless the difficulties and problems you encounter along the way. Dr. Butler advices as much:
“When things get rough, do not move. People and pressures shift, but the soil remains the same no matter where you go.”
William Arthur Ward gives much the same advice:
“Success is sometimes a series of failure held together by strong hands of determination and persistence” – William A. Ward.
If what you are seeking is right and good, and if its successful accomplishment will bring increase to you and to others; then do not give it up no matter the odds against it. Persistence is one of the major keys to success in life. It works, and is applicable, in all areas of life. No matter what you do, if you are persistent, you will eventually succeed. Henry Ford said:
“Many successful people today were failures yesterday, who never gave up” – Henry Ford.
Hold on to your dreams and pursuits tenaciously. Do not give up. As you hold on and persist, things will begin to take shape. People will begin to come to your aid. Circumstances will begin to bow. The winds will begin to favour you. Great things will begin to happen. Mike Murdock said:
“Great things always happen to those who persist. Winners are people who are willing to try one more time” – Mike Murdock.
Keep trying and fighting for as long - and as many times - as it takes. You will eventually run the victory lap and sing the victory song. Like General Collin Luther Powell, your life will be lined with many significant first and you will end up great. 
Keep moving forward and upward.
See you at the top.
I love you.
Contact me on:
2348037254805
Email: arnobius67@gmail.com

Saturday, 15 November 2014

Geared for Greatness

I wrote this poem as an encouragement for and proclamations into the future of a talented, committed and hard working up-and-coming broadcaster and blogger, Ochekliye Ramatu Ada, who I have the pleasure to mentor from a distance. The future is as great as you are willing to make it. In these lines, you will find words that you can use. Love you all.

On-air personality
Coming with originality
Holding down the audience
Exuding confidence and brilliance
Knocking out gross ignorance
Looking to promote excellence
In the pursuit of Motherland essence
Yielding to nothing but greater good
Establishing probity in the neighborhood

Raising high the flag of Africa
All through Europe and America
Mixing royalty with Shades of Brown
And pure culture all grown
To harvest a unique people
Until we all become profitable

All geared for greatness
Doing broadcast with sweetness
And all things that make for uniqueness



©2014, by Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi

Thursday, 16 October 2014

THE SIZE OF THE FIGHT IN THE DOG


In Africa, we make a lot use of didactic stories, sayings, proverbs, idioms, and figurative expressions to teach moral lessons and to motivate people to actions that are productive and beneficial to both the individual and the society. These sayings and expressions are deliberately crafted to instruct as well as delight the listener.
The Bible, speaking about such words and expressions in Proverbs 25:11, says:
“A word fitly spoken is like gold in pictures of silver”
This scriptural proverb alludes to the fact that such expressions are beautiful and expensive all at the same time. There expensiveness stems from the fact that the lessons they teach and the motivation they bring can change a person’s life for good and eventually lead to success and fortune. Well articulated thoughts and ideas are a captivating fascination Worldwide chiefly because they facilitate human growth and development.
I want to use one such expression to bring out one or two lessons about life that I trust you will find very useful going forward. This particular expression is one of my favorite and ever since I came across it over two decades ago, I have used it to motivate myself and others with great results. It is a saying attributed to several people but the most likely author is Mark Twain. It says:
“It is not the size of the dog that is in the fight but the size of the fight that is in the dog”
This saying underlines the universal truth that the fastest does not automatically win races; the strongest does not automatically win fights; the wisest does not automatically win the best places; the most skillful does not automatically win favor; the most talented does not automatically win fortune; the most gifted does not automatically win wealth; the most connected does not automatically win the best positions. No! Other factors and forces come into play – factors such as how well you make use of your time, how smartly you take the opportunities that come your way from time to time, and how strongly determined and highly motivated you are in your pursuits – and these factors can and will tilt the equation to balance out in favor of the disadvantaged.
The Bible agrees with this position. King Solomon, the preacher, in Ecclesiastes 9:11, says:
“I returned and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to wise, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all”
This means that if you are highly motivated and strongly determined, and you use your time and chances productively and purposefully; you can beat the odds stacked against you and end up successful in this life.
German author and poet, Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe (1749 – 1832) agrees. He says:
“Motivation will almost always beat talent”
Mary Kay Ash (1918 – 2001), entrepreneur and cosmetologist, adds:
“Those who are blessed with the most talent don’t necessarily outperform everyone else. It’s the people with follow-through who excel”
Italian actress, Sophia Loren, also agrees. She says:
“Getting ahead in a difficult profession requires avid faith in yourself. That is why some people with mediocre talent, but with great inner drive, go much further than people with vastly superior talent”
Financial and investment counselor, Charles Schwab, also agrees. He says:
“A man will succeed in almost anything for which he has unlimited enthusiasm”
There you have it; confirmation coming from the mouth of people who know. You may be a small dog right now, do not give up or lose hope. Smallness is not a foregone conclusion that you will end small. Your case has not been foreclosed. You can end up as the top dog. Whatever you do, do not give up the fight. Stir yourself up. Stand tall and strong. Refuel your motivation and determination. Refire your enthusiasm. Go at your goals with an unflinching zeal. Pay the price, in time and labor, and the prize will be yours.
Professor Adebayo Williams started school at the age of 12, owing to his disadvantaged background. He studied and worked hard, and today he is one of the leading African scholars in the United States of America and the World at large.
Sir Olatunbosun Ige Olumide, a renowned educationist and theologian of international repute, also had a disadvantaged background. He pushed “amalanke” at the Lagos ports during holidays to make money to pay his way through school. By the time he died a few years ago, he had become one of the most educated and decorated human beings on the planet with six doctorate degrees that he studied for and earned in Business Management, Management Science, International Affairs, Hebrew Literature, Religious Education, and Theology, plus over 50 honorary doctorate degrees from leading universities and seminaries around the World.
Arch Bishop Benson Idahosa was born an ordinary man with an extra-ordinary inner drive and a forceful personality. He came from such a poor background that he wore his first shoes at the age of 18! But by the time he died 42 years later, he had become one of the richest and most influential clergymen, not only in Nigeria, but in the whole World.

Life is full of such inspiring stories where a combination of inner drive, determination, diligence, discipline, desire, etc, work together, overcome daunting challenges and serious disadvantage to rise to the top and accomplish great things.
Your story can not be different. Your disadvantaged background and unfavorable circumstances are not strong enough to hold you back as long as you are motivated enough to push forward against all odds. You will eventually breakthrough. You will come to the limelight. You will shine in this life. Nothing is impossible.

Monday, 13 October 2014

Coming In From the Cold


Are you an underdog, a rank outsider? Are you living under; underestimated, under-appreciated, undervalued, underpaid, and under everything negative? Have you been beaten down by life; defeated, dusted, bruised, and left on the ground? Are you left standing in the cold? Do not give up hope. Stir yourself up and give life a fight. You can beat the odds stacked against you. You can come in from the cold and be taken into the warmth of victory and success.
The legendary American poet and educator, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807 – 1882), made a very powerful statement that I want to draw your attention to. He said:
“Noble souls through dust and heat, rise from disaster and defeat the stronger”
Defeat is never the end. It is not meant to be. It can be a retreat to reconsider and refire for a relaunch. You can rise out of it stronger and better. You can rewrite your script and act out a noble and glorious life. The question is; are you ready and willing to act nobly? Let me tell you about a lady that acted nobly and turned her story around. She did not give up when the going got tough and the odds were stacked against her. She is Yeka Onka, winner of Idol Nigeria 2011.
Yeka Onka is a good example of how determination and doggedness, a never-say-never and never-say-die attitude, can cause one to triumph against all odds and do better than people more talented and more gifted than you. She first auditioned for the show in the regional auditions in Enugu and was rejected by her judge on the grounds that she was not good enough for the reality TV show. That rejection would have forced any ordinary soul to give up their dream of becoming an international singing star, but not Yeka! That did not discourage her. She quickly gathered her things and travelled to Calabar and auditioned for the same show and was rejected for the second time for the same reason by the same judge! Certainly this is the end of the road for Yeka Onka? No!
Yeka Onka gathered her things again and travelled to Lagos for the final audition. As circumstances would have it, she appeared before the same judge who rejected her twice before, in Enugu and Calabar! When she came in and saw the judge, she felt like the ground should open up and swallow her! But, instead of turning around and running away, she gathered her emotions, steadied herself and put her entire soul into her performance, giving it her best. This time around, the judge was impressed and gave her the nod to join the show!
During the show proper, Yeka Onka was taken to task by the judges on several occasions and was bitterly criticized, especially by Yinka Davis who allowed Yeka no breathing space. Yeka Onka kept her cool and went through the show with equanimity and grace, believing and confessing that she will win. She made it to the finals and contested against Naomie Mac, a girl without doubt more gifted than Yeka but not as determined and desirous for victory as Yeka Onka. Naomie must have concluded that her talent alone will push her to victory. Big mistake! Talent is a great thing, but without pushfulness stemming from a strong desire to win, it will always come short. Yeka Onka had both talent and a jumbo-sized drive. Her desire was apparent and infectious.
Against the expectations of experts and those knowledgeable in music, and against the expectations of the judges on the show (Yinka Davis, Audu Maikori, and international super star -  Jeffry Daniel), Yeka Onka was voted winner by the international TV viewers! Her determination and self-belief paid off handsomely. She walked home with a prize of 7 million Naira, an SUV, and a recording contract, among many other things. Today she is an international singing sensation. She came in from the cold into the warmth of victory and success, living out her dreams joyfully.
Yeka Onka’s tenacity and dogged determination takes my mind to a famous statement made by William Arthur Ward (1921 – 1994). In it, he shows the link between success and determination:
“Success is sometimes a series of failure held together by strong hands of determination.”
You are created and wired for success, but life will not give you that success on a platter of gold. Because you deserve success does not mean that success will come to you cheap. You will have to fight to get what you deserve. You will experience defeat and encounter setbacks along the way, but defeat and setbacks are not an excuse to give up. They are a spur to dig in deeper and bring forth the awesome resources in you. They are a call to stir yourself to greater mindfulness and resourcefulness. They are a training to build and strengthen your muscles so you can hold on and move up to better things. Do not give up. Keep holding on. Keep believing. Keep working. Keep pushing forward. Just like Yeka Onka, keep gathering your things and moving forward to confront the next challenge. The cold will not kill you, as long as you do not give up. You will come in from the cold into the warmth of victory and success.
“Great things always happen to those who persist. Winners are people who are willing to try one more time” – Mike Murdock.
Keep moving forwards and upwards.
See you at the top.
I love you.

Contact me on:
+2348037254805
Facebook: Agoso Bamaiyi
            Motivations with Dr. Arnobb
Twitter: @DrArnobb

            @Arnobius67

Monday, 29 September 2014

A Meeting with the General


I met the highly decorated and accomplished General Lawrence Ngubane today. Our meeting was not accidental. I had gone to Voti (the palace of the Hama Bachama) to pay my respects to the Hama, His Royal Majesty Homun Stephen Honest Irmiya, Kwire Mana, Kpafrato 2, and to specially invite him as a royal father to my book launch and public presentation. In his characteristic head-on approach to issues, he asked me where I intended using as venue. I mentioned the assembly hall of GSS Numan. He immediately replied that he knows a better place, a modern facility, we could use. He added that General Ngubane is putting finishing touches to an ultra-modern events center he is building and he is sure it will be ready before the proposed date. The Hama picked up his phone and called the good General, informing him about my event, telling him that I will come to see him right away. Off I went to see the General.

The General, dressed simply in Jeans trousers and a sweat shirt, received me and my Kinsman, Dijango – who guided me there – in the building site. I was highly impressed by what I saw; a spacious structure with a high seating capacity, state-of-the-art fittings, twin terraces, toilet facilities, outdoor landscaped space for outdoor functions, and an adjoining guest chalets and a diagnostics center a stone’s throw across the road. The General talked about the reasons behind this great investment here in Numan. He said he is driven by a desire to give back to the community and promote the welfare of the people and not financial gain. Let it be said that Numan also hosts world-class facilities. He added that if monetary gain was the reason for building such facilities, he would not have built in Numan. Lagos, or Abuja, or any of those big cities would make more economic sense. I conceded he had a point there.

He was happy about the two books (Numan My Numan and All For Love) I was planning to launch in Numan. I gave him autographed complementary copies and we exchanged contacts. Then we began to talk about the state of things in Bwara, especially the nonchalant and disrespectful attitude of our youth. He lamented how lazy and unambitious our youth have become. There are exceptions of course, but a majority of our youth are not willing to push for a profitable life and prosperous future by working hard for success, preferring rather to be spoon-fed by their well-to-do uncles and aunties who, ironically, worked their butts off to be where they are today! He then narrated how things were when he was growing up.

General Ngubane mentioned how, as a young man growing up in Kaduna, he will pound grain, carry it on his head from Police Barracks all the way to Katsina road to grind it and carry it back home. Then he will fetch water and fill all the pots in the house before taking bath and walking the distance from the Police Barracks to the Kaduna Stadium where he attended school. He did that week in and week out! That did not stop him from becoming a great person and a famous Nigerian Army General. As a matter of fact, work made him a better person and opened the doors to success in life.

Work does not kill. It never has and never will. It is laziness that kills; it kills potential and talent, imprisoning enterprise and initiative. No matter how talented and gifted or connected you are, you will die unaccomplished if you are lazy. Hard work and commitment promotes; it liberates potential and talent, conferring accomplishment and attainment. If you work committedly on your potential and talents, you will gradually rise to success and be celebrated. You need not be afraid of failure and obscurity if you are a smart and hard worker. You will make it big time in this life. The Good Book agrees:

“Seest thou a man diligent in his business? He shall stand before kings; he shall not stand before mean men” – Proverbs 22:29.


This is the way to go. Our youth must imbibe and cultivate the profitable habits of commitment and purposeful work. That is the only way they can secure a great and profitable future for themselves and our land.

Sunday, 28 September 2014

Preordained Ride



We shall survive
As our root revive
And luxuriantly thrive
Against those who contrive
Our heritage to deprive
Exulting greedily as we grieve
Planning more wickedness to give
Smarting to consume our hive

But in a turn of the tide
Following a preordained ride
Bringing full recovery our side
And a healthy bouncy stride
Jailing failure that we deride
Never again to backslide
But into oblivion to start to slide
As they scurry in the dark to hide

We stand victorious
In everything glorious
Producing things stupendous
Replacing things dangerous
Tackling things disastrous
Promoting things prosperous
By things industrious
It’s simply marvelous


© 2014, by Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi.

Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Finishing Big



“Though thy beginning was small, yet thy latter end should greatly increase” – Job 8:7.

Beginning small is not a disadvantage. Not at all! In many cases, it is indeed a blessing in disguise; a spur to work hard and plant seeds of greatness in the soil of visions and dreams; a motivation to launch one’s life on the pathway to relevance and success from the remote recesses of smallness and nothingness; a dark background to highlight the brilliance of success secured on the platform of grace, education, talent, and committed pursuit of self-improvement and self-actualization; a chance to pursue the natural progression of things - from smallness to greatness - employing the various principles of growth and increase; an opportunity to test your faith in God and see him create sublime greatness out of hollow nothingness; a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to write a testimony from the experience of tests-too-many.

Beginning small is a wrapped gift that unfolds beautifully – in progressive stages – as you commit yourself to visionary pursuit and purposeful work. It is not a curse; so do not waste time praying against it. It is not an end; so do not waste time worrying about it. It is not a judgment; so do not waste time trying to appeal against it. It is really not a disadvantage; so do not waste time feeling sorry for yourself. It is not a betrayal; so do not waste time feeling hurt. It is not an excuse; so do not waste time explaining it.

Beginning small is a chance - an opportunity - for an outstanding story and glorious ending; grab it with both hands and work it to validation and vindication. Do not be frightened or intimidated by it; if you could not handle it, it would not have come to you. Do not be fazed or crazed by it; if its prospects were above you, it would not have come to you. You are able to turn the table. That is why this task came to you in the first place. Your circumstances are tailor-made for your abilities to tailor them together into a fabric of rare quality. You can do the seemingly impossible and finish big from a position of smallness.

That is right! Out of nothing, God can do something. Out of a black pot, He can bring forth white nutritious porridge. Let me tell you – and I want you to hold assuredly to this truth – in this life, despite an abundance of people and circumstances around us saying the contrary;
-          A beggar today can become a giver tomorrow.
-          A borrower today can become a lender tomorrow.
-          A dependent today can become a supporter tomorrow.
-          A follower today can become a leader tomorrow.
-          A tenant today can become a landlord tomorrow.
-          An employee today can become an employer tomorrow.
-          A servant today can become a master tomorrow.
-          A poor man today can become a rich man tomorrow.
-          A subordinate today can become a superior tomorrow.
-          A student today can become a teacher tomorrow.
-          A barren woman today can become a mother tomorrow.
-          An orphan today can become a parent tomorrow.
-          A fugitive today can become refuge tomorrow.
-          A prisoner today can become a president tomorrow.
-          A weakling today can become a strong one tomorrow.
-          Someone who is merely and barely tolerated today can be celebrated tomorrow.
-          A small one today can be a big one tomorrow.

It is all possible. You see, tomorrow is not a mystery to be stumbled into blindly. Not at all! It is a product of our investments – not our circumstances – today. So, do not be deterred by your present circumstances. Invest in education, training and practice, polishing your talents and stretching your abilities, mentorship, visions and dreams, hard work, prayers and fasting, commitment, integrity, patience, faithfulness, wisdom, etc., today and walk in a glorious tomorrow. Open wide your sails and catch those drafts of smallness as you move forward and upward toward bigness. The drafts will grow into strong winds behind your sails, pushing you to great speeds towards the objects of your belief and pursuits.

Everything big today, started small yesterday; Coca Cola, Pepsi, Microsoft, Dell Inc, Facebook, Google, KFC, CNN, Toyota, Mercedes Benz, Honda, Boeing, Soccer, the Olympics, Tantalizers, Sweet Sensation, Mr. Biggs, etc. This is a fact of life.

Every big city today, started small yesterday; Ibadan, Lagos, Kano, Abuja, Harare, Johannesburg, Cairo, Jerusalem, Mecca, Beijing, Shanghai, Tokyo, Dubai, New York, Los Angeles, London, Mexico City, Rome, etc. This is a fact of life.

Everyone big today, started small yesterday; Aliko Dangote, Mike Adenuga, Jimoh Ibrahim, Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, Michael Dell, Enoch A. Adeboye, David Oyedepo, T. D. Jakes, Nelson Mandela, Barack Obama, Michael Jackson, Kanu Nwankwo, etc. This is a fact of life. You might have started small, you will end big. This also is a fact of life.

“All great things start from small beginnings” – Marcus Tullius Cicero.

Keep working on your awesome potential. Keep moving forward and upward. You will make it to greatness.
See you at the top.
I love you.

(C) 2014, by Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi

Friday, 19 September 2014

Innocence



My innocence sleeps
As fleshly evil creeps
Coming in disguised ships
The undesirable sips
With lustfully loaded lips
Turning into bitter drips
The making of monumental slips
But I counter the trips
With a hold on righteous grips
Standing on godly heaps

My innocence awakens
As the touch of evil slackens
To confront the deadly tokens
Of the temptations that smittens
Trusting in grace that whitens
And Agape love that sweetens
Not irrational fear that deadens
Or misleading doubt that shakens
But self-control that deepens
The committed pursuits that widens


© 2014, by Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi.

Wednesday, 17 September 2014

This poem is inspired by the moving testimony of Dr. Ada Igonoh, an EVD survivor. Her story made me to cry as I witnessed the titanic battle for survival, in a duel where faith and science united to defeat a deadly disease, through the eyes of one who went down but came up a winner. May we all be winners in all our battles.

The Survivor
(Dedicated to all who fell to EVD and those who survived it. In this piece, I merely speak for survivors, having not been a victim myself!)

It came through a diplomatic channel
There is no suspecting such personnel!
We offered willing services
As part of our routine offices
But what started as a routine work
Soon turned to a deadly york
EVD knocked on my door
And soon I was on the floor

When the test results came in
I was forced to dig deep within
Walking the blurry regions of unbelief
I embraced denial to secure relief
But with the onset of the disease
I quickly turned to God for release
My faith whirled and turned
As every cell in me burned

Where in all these contradiction is God,
As I struggled with this unbearable load?
He seemed all so remotely far
As I fight this intimidating war
Trying hard to remain sanely positive
Under a deluge of thoughts negative
Keeping my head above water
Like an old-time Spartan fighter

At first I did not know
That God has been in the show
Right before the very beginning
When everything was so confusing
So I searched for answers
Working to stir all my powers
To put up a worthwhile battle
Against this accursed demonic rattle

God was in that still small voice
That kept saying ‘life is your choice’
He reached down from above
In my friends’ and family’s love
In the committed medical team
Volunteers of a unique stream
In the governmental intervention
To treat all by prevention

God was in relevant science
The extension of His omniscience
In the iconic ‘HAZMAT’ suit
Dressed for a merciful pursuit
In the common Oral Rehydration Solution
Designed to neutralize any complication
And all supporting medications
And the outpour of supplications

God mercifully came through for me
Affording me another chance to be
In the efficacy of faith and medicine
A veritable and workable vaccine
Though I feel deeply for those who fell
I chose to humbly and thankfully tell
That He is my blessed savior
By His grace I am a survivor


© 2014, by Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi.

Monday, 15 September 2014

Rare Courage


(A tribute to The Black Scorpion, Gen. Benjamin Adesanya Maja Adekunle, 1936 – 2014)


Born in cosmopolitan Kaduna
Embraced by Ógbómóshó[i] and B́achámá[ii]
Nursed with the juices of Dangana[iii]
Jack plugged to the fiery nature of Mama[iv]
And Papa’s [v]lofty dreams and coded Magana[vi]
Mentored on the principles of Mazan Fama[vii]
Inspired by visions of a glorious Nigeriana
Noble fighter of the ignoble carcinoma

Adekunle joined the Nigerian Army
Doing greatly until he stood as a brigadier
Earning respect in the war economy
Sold to feisty courage like a true soldier
And serving a good model to all that volunteer
Never accepting the incapable Negro dummy
Yielding to labor like a dedicated mountaineer
And his efforts paid off in securing our synonymy

Man of strategic mobility
Attending to business with dispatch
Joining forces with reasoned adaptability
And inner abilities that make up the patch

And the world saluted your rare courage
Defined by the necessity to quell the rage
Earning laurels in the Congo and delta stage
Knocking down walls that fear arrange
Until unity and faith, peace and progress merge
Networking the nation till greatness emerge
Lending Nigeria spaces that we can enlarge
Escaping failure and unnecessary damage

(C) 2014, Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi





[i] A major town and the name of a famous Yoruba clan in South Western Nigeria, known for culture and enterprise.
[ii] A major tribe in North Eastern Nigeria, famous for their warlike nature and outstanding courage.
[iii] Hausa word for reliability and dependability.
[iv] The general use word for mother.
[v] The general use word for father.
[vi] Hausa word meaning talk or speech.
[vii] Hausa expression meaning men of endurance and courage, referring to performers against all odds.

Friday, 12 September 2014

The Days of Small Things

Let me start by saying that success is not a single huge event or a single giant leap into El Dorado or Paradise. No! You do not succeed in anything by chance or by accident nor does it come suddenly. It is not an out-of-the blues thing. Nobody sleeps a failure today and wakes up a success tomorrow. There is no ready-made, single-dose, cure-all, no-work, no-time, now-now, maza-maza, beat-all-odds formula to success. No! Success is an accumulation of small events or several single steps coalescing into an outstanding or noteworthy event or a glorious outcome or destiny. You know the saying – the journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step? Yes? When you arrive at the thousandth mile safely, you consider yourself to have had a successful journey; yet between mile one and mile thousand are hundreds of thousands of single steps painstakingly taken. The success of that journey is the total accumulation of those painstaking individual steps. You see my point?
Paying attention, therefore, to the small events or single steps in the entire process is the key to success. The process may be long but it has a definite end, which is the goal the process aims to accomplish. And if that goal must be accomplished successfully, careful attention must be given to each step in the process. Booker T. Washington (1856 – 1915), African-American educator, author, orator, and Presidential advisor, pointed that fact out when he said:
“Success in life is founded upon attention to the small things rather than to the large things; to the everyday things nearest to us rather than to the things that are remote and uncommon.” – Booker T. Washington.
All things are possible. You can do and achieve anything you set your mind to. Whatever you dream of becoming, you can become. Yes. But to do that successfully, you must pay attention to details, the small things and intervening small days. For example, if a student wants to be successful in his studies, he must pay attention to little details such as:
- Regular and prompt attendance in class.
- Attentiveness while lessons are going on.
- Note taking.
- Asking relevant questions to gain clarity and better understanding.
- Regular revision of notes.
- Doing all assignments as and when due.
- Doing all project works as and when due.
- General reading and studies.
- Preparatory reading.
- Taking all tests and exams.
Any student that does these things faithfully will meet the requirements and come out with flying colors. Attaining to details, especially during the days of small things, is the key to success in all pursuits. Vincent Van Gogh (1853 – 1890), Dutch post-impressionist painter, pointed out this truth when he said:
“Great things are done by a series of small things brought together” – Vincent Van Gogh.
Life is in the details and those who despise the details, the small things and the small days, will not amount to much. The security, prosperity, and greatness of your tomorrow are secured by attending to the details – the small things – of today. Tomorrow is a magnified reflection of today. Frederic Henri Amiel (1821 – 1881), Swiss philosopher, poet, and critic, captured this fact rather succinctly. He said:
“What we call little things are merely the causes of great things; they are the beginning, the embryo, and it is the point of departure which, generally speaking, decides the whole future of an existence” – Henri Frederic Amiel.
You see, when you attend to the small things and small days of life as and when due, the big things of life take care of themselves and attend to you, in turn, as and when due. When you secure and ensure the small things of life, the little details, you secure and ensure your life. Always bear in mind the fact that the pedestal of life is safely ascended by a flight of stairs that are scaled one step at a time. Always remember also that life is manifested in stages and successfully attaining one stage opens the door to the next stage. The main key to successfully moving upwards from one stage to the next, and finally up to the grand stage, is careful attendance to the details each stage presents. Failure or inability to carefully and diligently attend to the details any particular stage of life presents will result in stagnation or even possible retrogression. The key to ever-increasing progress in life lays in ever-increasing and ever-faithful attendance to the issues, no matter how small. Each stage of life presents.
The fact that you are presently small or are going through your days of small things is not a proof, in any way, that you will always be small or will end up small. No. the smallness and tightness of your present life and circumstance is a probe, a stir, an urge, to work committedly and push for bigger things and better days. The fact that you are presently small or you are going through the days of small things is not, in any way, the end of the matter. As a matter of actual fact, it is just the beginning of the matter. It means:
- You have time and room to grow.
- There is still more goodness and good things ahead for you.
- You have a golden opportunity to plan and work committedly towards bigger things and a better tomorrow.
- You have the chance to gain relevant experience and grow into maturity and glorious manifestation.
- You have the privilege and opportunity to observe those ahead of you, learning from them, avoiding their mistakes, and building on their strengths.
- You have time to train, practice, and exercise yourself in your field of pursuit, gaining necessary expertise which will result in specialization, eventually securing recognition and promotion for you.
And, if you do all these things, you secure for yourself a great future. It is a mistake and a weakness, one that you are bound to regret, to despise or look down on someone who is presently small or going through a season of small things just because you are in a better state. The one who is small today is bound to be big tomorrow, as long as they are faithfully attaining to the small things of life purposefully. So, I encourage you to fortify your pursuit with:
- Diligence – Proverb 22:29.
- Persistence – Luke 9:62.
- Purposefulness – Ecclesiastes 3:1.
- Excellence – Daniel 6:3.
- Prayerfulness – Psalm 32:6.
- Integrity – Proverb 11:3.
- Teachability – 2 Timothy 2:15.
The days of small things will pass, and you will remain standing in better days and greater things. You were born to shine in life, and you will shine. That is God’s promise to you:
“Though thy beginning was small, yet thy later end should greatly increase” – Job 8:7.
Keep moving forward with purpose and focus. You will get to your days of big things.
See you at the top.
I love you.

© Agoso Arnobius Huladeino Bamaiyi.