• Wed. Mar 12th, 2025

Diaspora Heartdrops

Bychrisdahi

Nov 28, 2023

The life of one in Diaspora

Is a life rife with woes

He walks in fear along the street

With feet all set to flee

Should any in a uniform

pay him untoward heed

He sleeps at night with one eye closed

and the other wide awake.

He lives in abject dread

of his phone ringing,

a knock on his door 

or the receipt of a mail.

Is it a debtor or the State?

Both he envisages as mortal foes 

To his existence in Diaspora.

For his presence is deemed “illegal”

The word that come readily in mind

In description of one in Diaspora

May rhyme in sync with such as 

Dispiriting, discouraging, disheartening and debasing

Disenchanting, despairing, disparaging and discontentment

Disappointing, disconnected,

desperate and disharmony

And I must add dehumanising.

The total rhythm of his life 

Could be summed up in these three basic words

Expression, impression and reflection.

These sometimes could be positive 

But alas for the Diaspora,

it is more often than not negative

One could say I am a wet sod

Uninspiring and a harbinger of bad news

However the tale I bear is true

For in the knowledge of the Participant Observer

I speak now as a victim

The Diaspora’s is a state of life filled with humiliations

As in a bid to fend for self

He has to accept and anxiously too

Lowly labours he would not touch

With a long stick, in his land of origin. 

This is a tale though sad but true, I care not who dispute it

For it gives a sharp and unsavoury taste to the truth

of what the Diaspora lives day by day in his existentialism

As a stranger in a strange land

Young Marcos was sitting on the floor of a down town cafe 

where he works in shifts, and weeping his heart out

What ails you my man, queries the cafe boss

So in sniffs and sobs, Marcos tells a tale

As told by those in Diaspopra

Back at home, Marcos had a luxury flat

a good car and a thriving enterprise

To booth and give his life a glowing shine

Fate had given him a pretty fiancé.

But he had sold his car and trade

And like a fool he was had given up his flat

To afford him passage in his venture

Into the unknown of the Diaspora.

All this is in response to his greed and covetousness

To the supposed display of wealth by the returnees from abroad;

As he runs around like a headless chicken

Gathering every conceivable documents for his travel

Lo, Marcos, says his girl, why leave the known you have here

for the unknown you have not. 

The wise they say that a bird at hand 

is worth the uncountable in the bush.

Bet you are going abroad to become a dish washer

in some crummy down town cafe. 

Instead of doing that he swore I would turn round 

and come right back home.

Alas; this is his third year in Diaspora,

And today is his turn to wash dishes

in this crummy down town cafe,

but he has missed his bus

and another more desperate than he 

has already taken over his shift.

Oh, Marcos, he threw an awful tantrum

He raved and he ranted, and cursed and threatened.

In his rage and storm, he suddenly remembered his oath, 

or rather boast in another healthier dispensation 

Three years and thousands of miles ago to his loved one.

Instead of I Marcos washing plates in a cafe abroad

I will come right back home.

Here I am now not only washing dishes but have to fight for it.

And his heart broke.

His tale may sound like a fable to the reader of these lines

Or a discouraging fib

for the gullible and the impressionable out there

striving to stride out into the unknown jungle of the Diaspora.

But I advise you my brother or my sister

To chew well before you swallow

Look, they say, before you leap is a sound advice to the

adventurous and the untutored in the rigours of these times.

For though you may yet know it, I will tell you just the same 

That all which glitter is not gold.

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