By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu
The Way We Live: Where Life is Loud, but Living is Quiet.
A boy in Lagos leans against a concrete wall that never cools down. The night air is warm, almost stubborn. Power is gone again, like it never intended to stay.
A neighbour’s generator coughs into the dark, sounding like a tired animal refusing silence.
He scrolls through job alerts with the patience of someone feeding a broken machine hope.
City life is no longer shining glass and moving lights. It is now waiting dressed as progress. A place where ambition learns to sit down before it learns to run.
Lagos knows it. So does Nairobi.
So does Dhaka, Manila, and parts of São Paulo where mornings begin with uncertainty wearing familiar clothes.
Different continents. Same quiet ache. As Toni Morrison once hinted, “You wanna fly, you got to give up the things that weigh you down.”
But here, weight is not something people drop.
It is something they learn to carry without dropping themselves.
In Asia, degrees hang on walls like proud memories that no longer translate into rent.
In Europe and America, workers stretch salaries the way bread is stretched when hunger has company.
In Africa, the day is often negotiated in fragments, light here, fuel there, luck somewhere in between.
A line often traced to Rumi says, “Try not to resist the changes that come your way.”
But change here does not knock politely. It enters like dust through a cracked window; slow, constant, unavoidable.
And yet people continue.
Not loudly. Not heroically.
Just… steadily, like rivers that forgot they were supposed to stop.
Because life, even when it feels like a long queue with no clear counter, still insists on moving forward.
Maybe modern cities are not broken. Maybe they are simply honest mirrors that refuse to beautify struggle.
COMMENT HOOK:
If survival became a daily currency in your city, what would people be richest in, and what would they be bankrupt of?
Leave a comment