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  • How Is It, Growing Up With Anxiety?

    How Is It, Growing Up With Anxiety?
    Illustration by Celia Jacobs

    To get a better understanding of Nigerian life, we started a series called ‘Compatriots’, detailing the everyday life of the average Nigerian. As a weekly column, a new installment will drop every Tuesday, exploring some other aspect of the Nigerian landscape.

    This week, we got in touch with a woman who has struggled with mental health almost all of her life. She narrates her ordeal with anxiety and the steps she’s taking to overcome her illness.

    I have this fun memory. It’s from 2013, when I was in my second year in university. 

    It was past 1 am. I had just ended a call and was standing directly outside my hostel – a 4 man room aberration, which instead housed an additional 12 limbs. I was on perhaps my second plot at making a return to my room.

    At my first go, knowing most of my roommates were awake, I practised engaging the nicest in conversation as soon as I made my re-entry. Perhaps I would inquire as to why she remained awake and what time her first class of the day was to hold as I made my way to my bed.

    On the second try, I toyed with the idea of a stoic re-entry —  making a solemn climb to my top-bunk, leaving them to wonder what manner of news I had just received.

    At the third iteration, I would simply walk back in, say a jolly goodnight and make my way to bed. 

    Rehearsing the third plot a second time for good measure, I turned the door handle and made my way into a room filled with girls, almost immorally huddled together. They were too lost in conversation to notice the fidgety roommate who threw a practiced “goodnight” their way, before sauntering off to bed.

    You see in 2013, my anxiety had gotten so complex, I couldn’t for the life of me, pick a telephone call or make a casual re-entry into a room without first, second and third guessing myself. 

    And this was only my reaction to telephone calls.

    When I was younger. I was a professional worrywart. I had an inexhaustible list of fears: masquerades, dogs without leashes, naked flames and all costumed cast members of “Tales by Moonlight” to name a few. As I got older these fears went from strictly concrete worries to increasingly versatile sources of consternation.

    By secondary school, I had become one of those children whose descriptors usually circled around ‘strange’. I had bad luck making friends and routinely broke out in a sweat when asked questions in class. One time, I infamously froze when directed to address an assembly of my peers, and while this may sound dramatic, I’m sure I saw the face of death at the turn of every examination.

    At the time, beyond a popular hymn, I had no notion of the concept of anxiety. I would never have thought to class my bewilderment in the face of public addresses or the daily foreboding I experienced making the drive up to the school gates, as anything other than a typical teenage aversion to education. Had my school counselling unit served as anything but a glorified sorting hat, it’s still highly unlikely I would have ventured in to seek guidance for what was so clearly, the beginning stages of anxiety.

    When I made the leap to university, my anxiety had grown, seemingly overnight from an almost understanding juvenile nuisance, to an ugly, three-headed and gnarled thing lurking in the shadows, waiting on any moment, opportune or otherwise to make an appearance.

    To have a sense of my situation, imagine having to question just about every social interaction you possibly engage in: getting into a bus convinced the passengers hate you, having to rehearse a speech before making purchases at the market, dissolving into steam at the thought of giving a presentation, etc., then you might have a faint idea of how my time in university went and how the world currently plays out for me.

    Following my hostel re-entry incident,  I began to wonder if there wasn’t more to my years of incessant worry. When I came across Social Anxiety Disorder  (SAD) —  a result produced from an internet search of my symptoms — I approached the diagnosis with the trepidation of a cold-sufferer, Google-diagnosed with cancer. Could I really have a mental health issue?

    “Social anxiety disorder or social anxiety is an excessive emotional discomfort, fear, or worry about social situations.” It went on to list its symptoms, from which I had my pick.

    Yes, I had an excessive fear of embarrassment. Therein lay the real reason I woke at 4 am to clean up in the hostel bathroom, and not the supposed state of cleanliness of the bathroom as I liked to claim. 

    And correct, I avoided situations where I could be the centre of attention, if my illogical avoidance of the Engineering faculty walkway was anything to go by. But it seemed all too generic, indicative of mere timidity and not what could potentially be a mental health condition.

    It just seemed ironic that this disorder could easily be conflated with a heightened sense of importance. After all, it angles on an individual believing themselves the center of attention, a position I would have given away tax free.

    But even my doubt couldn’t explain away my sweaty palms when carrying out trivial things like ordering food at a crowded restaurant, or my most extreme reaction till date — a one-week anxiety fueled bender, where I lost almost 2 kg in weight, complete with panic attacks and spontaneous tears, brought on by the fear of failing a final year exam for which I was prepared.

    Or somehow never being able to hold on to relationships and maintaining solitary, indoor weekends, public holidays and sick days with the fervency of the devout.

    It’s been years since I accepted my SAD diagnosis, triple confirmed through a series of tests and a consultation. While self-help in the form of assertiveness, breathing exercises and step-by-step planning have been my key tools in managing the disorder; a little divine help has come in from time to time, to manage its management in the giant of Africa, Nigeria. 

    Here, I’ve had to forego sick days on account of anxiety attacks for fear of being labelled the office-crazy, a tag I’ve tried my hardest to avoid in a still mentally closeted country. Or having to every couple of months, remind your family that you cannot ⁠— no matter what apostle says ⁠— pray away the disorder.

    I wish I could say my anxiety was in the past, that I’m now cured and do not consider retreating to a hermit life every fortnight, but I’m learning that it’s okay sometimes to admit that there’s something wrong or to reach out and ask for help. It’s a step-by-step process and I’m okay with that.

  • These Are The 4 Countries Facing A Terrible Water Crisis #WorldWaterDay

    Every 22 March, the world celebrates World Water Day, but things are not as they seem

    Right now, the United Nations says it’s facing the worst humanitarian crisis since it was created in 1945, and 4 major countries will be affected by drought, famine and ultimately starvation

    1. Those countries include: Nigeria

    Northern Nigeria as well as the Lake Chad region is at serious risk. After suffering from terror attacks, extreme conditions may cause millions to die, including children. In some communities, all the toddlers have died, and adults are too weak to even walk.

    2. Somalia

    Somalia has suffered from terror-related conflict just like Northern Nigeria and in 2011, it suffered severe famine. Now, more than one million children under the age of 5 may die due to malnutrition this year.

    3. South Sudan

    The World’s youngest country, South Sudan’s famine is described as ‘handmade’, because of the 3-year-long civil war the country is currently facing. 7.4 million people need aid and 270,000 children face imminent death if they don’t get assistance.

    4. Yemen

    Yemen is the poorest Arab nation, but Saudi Arabia and Iraq are supporting two opposing factions that want to control the Yemeni government. The conflict has affected more than 12 million Yemenis who currently need both water and food.

    Want to help?

    UNHCR, Mercy Corps, Save The Children, UNICEF are some of the aid organisations helping to fight the crisis. Visit their websites for more information on how to donate.
  • 13 Painful Things You’ll Relate To If You’ve Ever Fallen For Someone You Can’t Have

    13 Painful Things You’ll Relate To If You’ve Ever Fallen For Someone You Can’t Have

    1. So you’ve been single and searching all this while.

    Single pringle.

    2. Praying to God for your own customized bae.

    Baba God, do it for your girl.

    3. Tall, dark, handsome and rich!

    Is that too much to ask?

    4. You’ve toured all the owambes looking for your Prince Charming.

    You’ll sha find him one day.

    5. Until God finally answered your prayers and sent one beautiful guy your way.

    I serve a living God!

    6. The moment he walked up to you, you started dreaming of the fine babies you’ll make together.

    As a sharp girl!

    7. Until you asked for his name and he said ‘Chukwudi’.

    Hold up first…

    8. You already know your Yoruba mummy will slap you if you bring ‘Omo Nna’ home.

    “ko possible!”

    9. But you’re still trying to console yourself that you’ll have religion in common at least.

    You cannot kuku kill yourself.

    10. When you now ask for his church, and he says he’s an atheist.

    Say what?

    11. A-kini?

    If you take him home, your mother will beat both of you together.

    12. After meeting your dream man, he’s still out of your reach!

    But is it even fair like this?

    13. Is this how we will continue to let religious and tribal barriers spoil love for us?

    Nawa o!
  • Have You Ever Been Tired Of Everything?

    Have You Ever Been Tired Of Everything?

    1. When you wake up already tired of life.

    2. When you want breakfast and it’s bread again.

    3. When you enter your car and see deadly traffic, again!

    4. When your boss starts looking for your trouble and it’s not even 11 am.

    5. When your co-worker brings out their smelly lunch and you almost pass out.

    6. When you get another query at work.

    7. When you get a message from your girlfriend and apparently you’ve done something wrong again.

    8. When you get home and apparently the transformer has blown again so no light.

    9. When your friend gets promoted and you are still there at your job just looking.

    10. When you realise it’s all a dream and you just woke up and have to actually experience everything for real.

  • 15 Tweets That Show Life Is Really Hard Everywhere

    15 Tweets That Show Life Is Really Hard Everywhere
    Zimbabweans on Twitter are using #Howtheyrobbedus to tell sad stories of how the government of President Robert Mugabe has failed the people.

    1. When world class hospitals become dumping grounds.

    2. Hospitals that are under-staffed and ill-equipped.

    3. When we are forced to flee our homes.

    4. And we don’t see our loved ones for years.

    https://twitter.com/NzouSuwani/status/788068096800067589

    5. We are forced to go to places where we are not welcome.

    https://twitter.com/NzouSuwani/status/788168438674055168

    6. We go to places where they hate us.

    7. Places where our loved ones die alone.

    8. We come home with foreign degrees, still, there are no jobs.

    https://twitter.com/TinoNyandoro/status/788140768171069440

    9. A government that steals our dreams.

    https://twitter.com/missyemu/status/788284202009686016

    10. A government that silences us.

    11. And steals our hard-earned money.

    https://twitter.com/cslicc/status/787956123492028416

    12. A government that makes us lose our sense of self.

    https://twitter.com/Only_OneHeather/status/788055695740510208

    13. A rotten system where nothing works.

    https://twitter.com/Cde_Huruva/status/788298034086117376

    14. Even being a graduate means nothing.

    15. Yet, government officials continue to enrich their pockets.

    https://twitter.com/NorthPrinc3/status/788283504115257344
  • This Graduate Can’t Land A Job, And He’s Very Mad About It

    This Graduate Can’t Land A Job, And He’s Very Mad About It
    It’s no secret that Nigeria is currently  in a terrible condition. The economy is suffering, and leaders  are proving more and more incompetent by the day. In a country where  too many graduates already walk the streets in search of a viable source of income, the current economic recession is not helping matters. According to Samson Olaleye, a lot of Lagosians, most of them graduates like himself,  sleep in the streets.
    https://twitter.com/d_problemsolver/status/784654764306989056

    According to @d_problemsolver on Twitter, some employers are already looking to employ the young man, and they want anyone with information on his whereabouts to come forward.