Download Chereads APP
Chereads App StoreGoogle Play
Chereads

Secretariat

IS A MAD MAN

IS A MAD MAN The Pharmacy Council of Nigeria, Lagos Chapter showed up one terrible afternoon and packed all the medications worth millions of naira from my ex pharmacy store and locked up the shop...all because the store was opened closed to another wholesalers pharmacy store owned by a non-pharmacy person. We opened the pharmacy store two years after we got married simply because three days after the wedding I lost my job with the foremost business university in Africa as a consultant and lecturer and three months after the wedding she lost her job too. So we pulled our savings together to start the store and just like that it was gone. She was taken to Ikeja old secretariat and I followed them, then to Alausa where she was charged to the court; I was there too...but luckily for us, the judge looked at me and said, what is your offense...? And I said not me sir, but us. Who are the us he said, and I said myself and my wife. Are you a pharmacist? No sir, my wife is. Where is your wife? I pointed at her. Then he looked at her and said...is this your husband? She smiled and said yes he is sir. Then, I am going to let you go free of charge because of this man. I heard people saying that he had been with you since yesterday that they lock up the shop...not so many men can stand by their wife in such a moment like this. He is a good man. He loves you. Whatever case that was filed against her was null but there was a document she was to submit at the Lagos State Pharmacy Council office at Old Secretariat Ikeja, but she was too emotionally down to do that so I volunteered to do that for her. The following morning, I set out to go, took a bus to Ikeja, the bus dropped me off at Under the Bridge closed to the General Hospital and I took a Bike to the Old Secretariat Ikeja. On getting there, I gave the Bike man N200 and he said that he doesn't have N100 change. I wanted to leave the money for me but I refused. Then a mad man came, gave the Bike man N100 and told me to go to where I am going. How about your money I asked and he said when you come back. I immediately left to the office, dropped the documents and dashed out because I have a 10:00am business appointment on the Island. I walked straight to the mad man, gave him N200 and he said I should not worry I should go...the N100 he gave the Bike man was a dash. Gbam, I refused. I should be giving you money I said not you giving me. After talking back and forth he collected the money from me and immediately he started praying for me right on the road...I went on my knees and this man kept praying powerful prayers for almost 45 minutes. After the prayers, he said to me, young man, leave your wife...I love you love her and you will not leave her...death is hanging over your head and it is coming from her. Fast for 21 days and break the fast by 9:00pm at night. Cook the food yourself. Before I could say a word, he walked away. This was 2013; I did the fasting as instructed and nothing happened until November 4, 2016 when the trailer climbed up my car in Ikorodu on my way to buy a plot of land for her for the wedding anniversary and when the accident will not kill me, on December 16, 2016 she poisoned my food, I ate the food and passed out...died...how I came back to life I still cannot explain but I thank God I am alive. My grandmother used to say that little prayers are much more effective than long prayers...a simple act of foolishness to obey a simple instruction that looks stupid and unrealistic can save you from a lasting awaiting disaster. God can use anyone to save you...the question is, how simple and humble are you to be saved...? ©®™ Sam Adeoye
Sam_Adeoye_II · 2.9K Views

Muhammad Ali, Brian Clough, Diego Maradona and more

We’re not the first to observe that the thing about sport is that it comes with a built-in narrative arc. There will be heroes and there will be villains. There will be triumphs and there will be disappointments. There will be winners and there will be losers (unless it’s a sport like football which, to Ted Lasso’s continuing befuddlement, allows for a “tie”). But what happens off the pitch, or outside the field, or court-side, can often be as dramatic – if not more so – than what happens on, as it takes a certain type of person to excel at sport: gifted, driven, and sometimes, yes, a little psychotic Documentary-makers have found a rich seam to exploit in retelling sports narratives recently, and looking at some of the more exceptional characters who’ve risen to the fore (The Last Dance being the most high-profile example, although there has been a raft of other good ones), but nothing can delve into the intricacies of a great athlete’s mind like a book, especially in the hands of a great writer. Here we’ve recommended some of our favourites of this century and the last, that will keep you gripped to the final whistle Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan (2015) Finnegan’s Pulitzer-Prize-winning memoir about his lifelong obsession with surfing – starting in California as kid, then Hawaii as a teen, taking him right though to New York in the present (a lesser-known surf spot, certainly) – is a searing and startling paean to the sport. Yes it can seem pointless, and yes it can be punishing, but Finnegan is able to encapsulate the feeling of freedom and euphoria like few others, while also describing his own meandering personal history, which somehow transformed him from a twentysomething stoner surf-bum into a renowned political journalist for the New Yorker, particularly for his reporting from Apartheid-era South Africa. Blood Horses: Notes of a Sportswriter’s Son by John Jeremiah Sullivan (2004) Like so many of the titles on this list, John Jeremiah Sullivan’s first book – printed in the UK for the first time in 2013 after the success of his brilliant 2012 essay collection, Pulphead – is a sports book but also something more. It began as a consideration of the life of his late father, Mike Sullivan, who had been a sportswriter for a Kentucky newspaper, and whose fascination with sport in general, and with horse racing in particular, his son had never quite managed to understand. In telling the story of the legendary racehorse Secretariat, one of whose Kentucky derby wins his father attended, he unpicks a sport that is both fascinating and mystifying in equal measure. Land of Second Chances: The Impossible Rise of Rwanda’s Cycling Team (2013) If sport can be accused of providing neat story arcs (see intro!), or clear-cut heroes and villains, Lewis’s British Sports Book Award-winning exploration of the attempt – by a group of American former professional cyclists – to set up a cycling team in Rwanda a decade after the genocide there in which 1 million people were slaughtered, is as nuanced and fascinating as they come. Lewis, a contributing editor to Esquire, spent time in Rwanda with the would-be riders, including the talented Adrien Niyonshuti, who lost six brothers in the 1994 genocide, and also the professionals who helicopter in to set up the country’s first team, but who, in the case of coach Jock Boyer, turns out to have a dark past of his own. Football Against The Enemy by Simon Kuper (1994) Financial Times columnist Simon Kuper wrote this accomplished and quirky footballing travelogue when he was still only in his early 20s. And it's remarkably good; arguably the first and even best in the now-not-so-new wave of 'literary' football tomes that have followed in ever-greater numbers. Kuper travels to 22 countries to find out how football has shaped individual national politics and culture – and vice versa – meeting players, politicians and picking up anecdotes and observations along the way.we all
Ahmed_Shafique · 2.2K Views
Related Topics
More