Home Opinions The Way We Live: When She Comes Back but Life Does Not Fully Return
Opinions

The Way We Live: When She Comes Back but Life Does Not Fully Return

Share
4a026b23 8b1e 4aba b502 888d7c1ffb1e
Share

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu

The Way We Live: When She Comes Back but Life Does Not Fully Return

In Rigasa, a railway community in Kaduna State, evenings are never quiet. Trains pass like routine. Hawkers move between lanes calling out prices.

Children run until someone from a doorway shouts their name and they pause, half-obedient, half-reluctant.

That was the kind of evening Zainab Musa left her tailoring apprenticeship shop. She was walking home with a small bag tucked under her arm. Someone across the road greeted her. She lifted her hand without stopping.

Near the railway line, she slowed down to take a phone call. She never finished it as a car pulled up beside her and stopped as if by accident. Then it did not move again.

Within moments, she was inside it. The road continued as if nothing had happened.

At her home, nobody shouted at first. Her mother stood up, sat down, then stood again. Each time the door opened, she looked up too quickly, then looked away when it was not who she wanted.

Her father sat outside longer than usual, answering calls without saying much, then ending them without explanation.

By night, neighbours had gathered outside the compound. Not inside. Just close enough to feel involved. Some said they should go to the police immediately. Others said rushing would only complicate things.

No one agreed. But no one left. The first call came the next day. It rang while her mother was in the kitchen stirring something she would later forget cooking.

She looked at the screen before answering, as if the name might prepare her for the voice.But there was no greeting on the other end. Only instructions.

She sat down slowly on the floor without noticing the chair behind her. From the sitting room, her husband watched her face shift, not suddenly, but gradually, like something heavy had settled inside her chest.

When the call ended, she only said: “They want money.” And the house changed immediately, without anyone announcing it.

After that, conversations stopped moving freely. They became careful. Measured. Broken into pieces that did not connect fully.

A piece of land that had been kept untouched for years was mentioned. Then mentioned again, this time more seriously. A small shop in another part of town was brought into the discussion.

Even disagreement became quiet. It was not arguments that filled the house. It was calculation.

After that night, some questions remained untouched. Not because nobody wanted answers. But because everyone suspected the answers would carry more weight than the house could hold.

Then one evening, she returned. A car stopped near the edge of the street and she stepped out alone. No escort. No explanation. No clear transition from absence to presence.

She walked into the compound slowly, as if checking whether it still accepted her. Her mother made a sound before reaching her. Then stopped speaking entirely.

Her father stood still for a moment too long before stepping forward, like he needed time to confirm what he was seeing was real.

No one asked her anything that night. Not because there were no questions. But because everyone already understood something difficult:

She had returned physically, but not everything that left with her had come back. In the days that followed, Zainab did not return to who she was before.

She sat differently now. Always where she could see doors. Always where exits were visible. Loud sounds made her pause mid-action. Motorcycles passing too fast outside the gate made her go silent for a moment before she remembered where she was.

At night, she stayed awake longer than others. Sleep came late, and when it came, it did not stay.

After a while, people around her began to think in quieter ways about what might help.

Her younger brother stopped asking what happened after she failed to answer him twice. The third time, he did not ask at all.

An aunt once suggested that Zainab speak to someone. A counsellor, a pastor, a trusted family friend.

Zainab lowered her eyes and shook her head. Nobody raised it again. In that house, silence became another way of handling pain.

In that quiet, the house began to understand something without ever saying it aloud.

Survival had happened. But restoration had not followed at the same speed. And sometimes, people mistake presence for return.

Across the world, many families know this version of survival. In northern Mexico, rural Colombia, Haiti, and fragile communities across the Sahel, release is often treated as the end of a crisis.

But for those who return, it is sometimes only the end of one chapter that opens into another that cannot be easily explained. The public sees an ending, but the family lives the continuation.

Margaret Atwood once wrote: “A word after a word after a word is power.”

But in some lives, words arrive slowly. Or not at all. Some experiences do not translate cleanly into speech. They remain in gestures, pauses, sleep that does not hold, and eyes that stay alert even in safety.

One evening, Zainab’s mother sat beside her and said nothing for a long time. Then quietly, without looking at anyone in the room, she said:

“We brought her back… but she didn’t come back fully.” Zainab did not respond. Not because she did not hear. But because she was still somewhere between returning and remaining.

Moral:
Survival is visible. Healing is not always immediate. And return is not always complete.

In Rigasa, Kaduna, a girl returned after weeks in captivity. The street moved on. Her life did not return in the same shape.

Comment Hook:
When someone is physically present but emotionally altered by what they survived, what are we really calling “return”?

 

 

Share
Written by
Chioma Madonna Ndukwu

Chioma Madonna Ndukwu is a seasoned journalist, writer, educator, and communication professional with a strong passion for language, literature, media, and public engagement. She is an alumna of Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Anambra State, where she acquired a solid academic foundation that shaped her career in journalism and education. With a distinguished career spanning both academia and the media industry, Chioma Madonna Ndukwu has made significant contributions to the development of communication, literacy, and critical thinking among students and audiences alike. Her expertise in language and effective communication earned her a position as a Lecturer in English at Abia State University, where she taught and mentored students, helping them develop strong analytical, writing, and communication skills.

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

TRENDING

FootballInternational Sports

Video: FIFA selects Colorado farm to grow indoor World Cup turf

FIFA Taps Colorado Farm to Grow World Cup Grass Indoors Without Sunlight Video: FIFA selects Colorado farm to grow indoor World Cup turf...

IMG 0861
International News

Meth Labs Linked to Mexican Cartels Found on South African Farms

Meth Labs Linked to Mexican Cartels Found on South African Farms Raids on remote farms in South Africa have uncovered illegal methamphetamine production...

IMG 0860
International News

Strong 7.8 Quake in Philippines Leaves Multiple Dead, Triggers Pacific Tsunami Alerts

Strong 7.8 Quake in Philippines Leaves Multiple Dead, Triggers Pacific Tsunami Alerts A powerful 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck southern Philippines on Monday morning, leaving...

IMG 0854
Crime

Several Injured as Knife Attack Sparks Panic at New York’s Penn Station

Several Injured as Knife Attack Sparks Panic at New York’s Penn Station Several people were injured after a man launched a knife attack...

ads image
570e1e54 7ab5 4c17 bd49 ceb97eefd2d8
African News

Peter Obi EU Parliament Video Ignites Talk on Africa’s Global Power (VIDEO )

Peter Obi EU Parliament Video Ignites Talk on Africa’s Global Power (VIDEO) A video of Peter Obi addressing members of the European Union...

IMG 0844
International News

US Eyes Chagos Islands Deal in Move to Secure Strategic Military Base

US Eyes Chagos Islands Deal in Move to Secure Strategic Military Base The United States is reportedly considering a plan to acquire the...

IMG 0842
Football

Denmark vs Ukraine Friendly Halted After Christian Eriksen Collapses on Pitch

Denmark vs Ukraine Friendly Halted After Christian Eriksen Collapses on Pitch Danish midfielder Christian Eriksen collapsed during Denmark’s international friendly match against Ukraine...

IMG 0840 1
African News

A Thief Is a Thief — Peter Obi Fires Ethnic Profiling Warning

A Thief Is a Thief — Peter Obi Fires Ethnic Profiling Warning Former presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), Peter Obi,...

Related Articles
IMG 0834
Opinions

The Way We Live: The Day We Started Parenting Our Parents

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu The Way We Live: The Day We Started...

IMG 0827
Opinions

The Way We Live: What If the Answer to Your Prayer Came Wearing a White Coat?

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu The Way We Live: What If the Answer...

IMG 0817
MaritimeOpinions

Why Are Ships Paying Millions to Pass Through Hormuz? The Strait at the Centre of a Global Controversy (VIDEO)

Why Are Ships Paying Millions to Pass Through Hormuz? The Strait at...

IMG 0780
Opinions

The Way We Live: The Bicycle By The Fence

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu The Way We Live: The Bicycle By The...

8c8082da 4711 49f7 b082 4fad85023e4b
Opinions

The Way We Live: A School That Ended Before The Bell Understood It

The Way We Live: A School That Ended Before The Bell Understood...

IMG 0736
Opinions

The Way We Live: A Radio That Knows More Than The Market Can Afford

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu The Way We  Live: A Radio That Knows...

IMG 0700
Opinions

The Way We live: When Bread Costs More Than Silence

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu The Way We live: When Bread Costs More...

IMG 0687
FootballOpinions

When Football Pain Becomes A Final Whistle : Lives Lost Too Soon

By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu In Umudieleke Umuoru Village, Uga, Anambra State, grief...