Archive

Archive for the ‘kith and kin’ Category

Have Tawah, Rolling Pin & Coffee Pot: Will Travel

P3210008.JPG

It's goood! God bless roti!

Back in March, during a frightfully short trip to Trinidad, I accomplished one of my short term goals: acquire a tawah.

This tawah for me, is part of my enforced liberation from bad roti experiences when outside of Trinidad. This consists of course in learning how to make roti. I’ve gotten the curry part down… it’s the paratha that is the hardest of course.

I tried buying skins from the super markets here locally, but O.H. G.E.E.D.! NASTY! When they weren’t showing mould in the supermarket freezer and hence un-purchasable, they were not very pleasant when eating.

So I determined the solution was to get a tawah and just practise how to make them until I got it right. however, acquiring a tawah in Barbados is not an easy prospect… this is not really tawah country if you feel me. Read more…

Baby No More: She Blooms

My god-baby

My god-baby

My 15 year old God-daughter: I held her in my arms, fed her, changed her, bathed her and now she is flowering into a woman and it’s both wondrous and a little shocking to me. How fast the time flies… how quickly it all goes.

She has a Facebook page, and a boyfriend, and well ‘looks’ like the one she’s currently smouldering into the camera! I mean, she was just a little thing just yesterday!

She’ll be all grown soon, and I’ll be like a great-auntie before I know it and well… I’m becoming my mother and there’s no way to mitigate it. I love this little girl… loved her her entire existence, before she was even a serious bump. I love her, because her mother is my oldest, dearest friend and her children and my children you know?

Facebook | Angelface Williams’s Photos – Profile Pictures]

Coffee Shop Memories & Missing Keffi Even Now

Mechanical_Sunflower.jpg

I am sitting as I type this, in Bean & Bagel in Sunset Crest. I feel a little ‘dark’ since I happen to be the only person of colour sitting at the tables. The help is still not very clever… and still answer questions with a blank dazed look

I am in the approximate location, of the infamous in my memory “Coffee Friday” limes that Keffi and I made every effort to attend every Friday for roughly a year and half.

I am sitting here, like I sat so many times waiting for her to come and meet me so we could smoke, drink coffee and talk shit. We’d order two coffees in one cup, fight over who was paying for everything and burn through a pack of cigare

I am sitting here, and I can’t help myself from scanning the entrances, waiting for her to appear in her red bank uniform, red lipstick, cornrows and adorned with that fantastic smile of hers.

How do you define grief? How do you ever really get past that ‘missing’? I haven’t been able to do it. Not a day in nine years has gone by that I have failed to think of her and miss her. My memories of her, are always of her smile, her smile, her smile. Which is ironic, since she was in such constant pain that to remember her smiling means something to me… I wiped away so many of her tears, but those memories are blurry….

I miss my sister. I miss her. I still haven’t figured out how to get used to her not being here… I still catch myself wanting to call her and tell her stuff.

When I was leaving, I saw preciousc. Ironic huh? Pity about preciousc… but you can’t use the memory of someone’s dead best friend to inveigle your way into their good graces, slash and burn them, and then expect to be held in high esteem. I am not mad… it’s kind of interesting. I have so few reactions to seeing her, and now it’s the second or third time I’ve seen her in the same place. I see her and my heart doesn’t pulse with anger, I don’t see red, I don’t feel sadness, nothing… nothing. She is one of less than a handful of people I have completely excoriated from my emotional space… and I ain’t fucking sorry about it either.

I just think it’s funny I was there, thinking and missing Keffi, and preciousc appeared. Not sure what that means, but I’ll tell you, I don’t miss preciousc at all… and Keffi’s memory still burns flame bright in my heart, and it often pulses with an ache that doesn’t really ever go away..

Mansa Musa in Tribute To Ogun

Meh horse Ozy shared this on my FB page this afternoon.

At first, I was elated! Estatic to find Daddy on youTube, but I played the clip and my grief rushed over me and instead of hearing Mansa Musa, master drummer for the Orishas, professional rebel, original loudmouth, educator, musician, playwright, I heard my DADDY.

And I missed him, I miss him… I miss my Papi.

Video – Mansa Musa – Tribute To Ogun.

Mama Nen & Tante Marie

Mama Nen & Tante Marie

Originally uploaded by sungoddess?

This is one of the few photos we have of my great-great-grandmother and my great-aunt Marie.

Tante Marie is about two in this photo, so I am assuming Mama Nen is about 22 years old. So this is about 1897 or 1898.

I am struck continually by their beauty. How ravishing she is, but that she has a little sadness in her face as well. She certainly endured a lot of pain.

I try to imagine what it must have been like for her in the late 19th century, to have lost her parents and been taken in by my great-grandfather and his first wife. A young girl indeed. On her deathbed, my great-grandfather’s wife, who had never had children of her own, made Papa promise to marry my great-great-grandmother (the lady in this photograph) so she would have security and a family. She was nineteen at the time, he was almost fifty.

After he married Augustine, later known as Mama Nen, he produced five children, one who died in infancy around 1895 (and of whom no name or details of its passing remain in memory), Tante Marie (they say she was so beautiful you almost couldn’t look at her), my great-grandmother Audrey later known as Mama G, Uncle Lionel (who died of food poisoning at sixteen), and my dear, dear Auntie Olga.

I have other photographs of Augustine, as an older woman; however, she is always middle-aged going towards elderly. This, this is the only photo we have of her in her most glorious ripeness, a young matron, gorgeous but I think, still a little sad.

At any rate, in those days people never smiled in photos. This photo is also heavily restored from mere fragments, so it is PRECIOUS to me in every way.

When Your Friend Bleeds….

One of my sisters-of-the heart, someone I’ve been friends with for more about 20 years, lost her father very suddenly about three or four months ago.

On Thursday evening, her mother, who fought a long a bitter battle against breast cancer died.

This morning, when I finally got her on the phone… I could hear how not good she was, and my heart bled for her and with her.

Having to say goodbye to my own father this year, I know what its like to lose a parent (although he never parented me). To lose two so close together must be painful in a way you can only imagine if it hasn’t happened to you.

My heart is bleeding with and for my friend.

I have a knot of tension and worry in my stomach for her. And I am powerless.

I can do nothing but #160be her friend when she needs me to be.

Technorati Tags:
,

Categories: kith and kin Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Am I The Only Grown-up Here?

Yesterday afternoon, after taking one look at sky — slate grey and looking ominous — I went to ask my mother to go with me in the car to get Dayo from daycare.

I would have asked my brother, but the day before he was in a hurry. As I went inside to collect Dayo and get his bag, he leaned on the horn in an obnoxious way and one of the sisters there who takes care of the babies and toddlers, called out and told him not to do that. My brother snapped at her, out the car window and across the yard, “Don’t tell me what to do. I can do what I want.”

All those little children, the babies, the owner of the daycare centre, they were all there.

I of course was mortified.

So when I saw the state of the sky yesterday afternoon, I preferred to ask my mother to go with me.

When I knocked on her door, her face when she answered, resembled the sky. I asked her to run me down to the daycare, and she said in a very grim nasty tone that she was “…much too tired,” to take me.

Too tired = I can’t be assed because your brother pissed me off and I’ll be damned if I do you a favour bitch.

So as I walked through the door, my brother was teaching guitar in the living room. In our secret language I asked him what was up with Mummy, he shrugged and said, “That’s all me, nothing to do with you.”

Like no shit.

I walked out the door and went to get my boy. On the way there, it began to thunder as I quickened my pace.

I got there, and hustled off with my boy, almost running as the thunder increased in volume and frequency.

As I got to the second to last corner before home, I could feel the water coming, and my brother in the car appeared. He said Mummy had sent him out in the car to look for me and Dayo. I asked, “Why didn’t she just come with me when I asked her?”

“Well get the baby out of the rain,” that wanker says to me.

I pushed on, my brother drove off.

As I turned the last corner, the rain started. Big, fat raindrops burst out of the sky and drenched both me and Dayo, and I was in a flat out run trying to get into the house.

I pulled Dayo out of the stroller, and trembling with my exertion (and my fury) I struggled to get the key in the lock, while Dayo blinked.

After I got Dayo inside, I burst into tears. I kissed his cheek and apologised over and over, while I looked around for something, anything to wipe his face, head and arms free of the water dripping off of him. I had to run back outside through the rain, to open the flat door, since I ran in through the verandah door, and the flat, once locked on the verandah side, is only accessible through the outside door at the back of the house.

By the time I opened the door, threw down my keys in disgust, kicked off my slippers and walked through to where Dayo was sitting strapped into his high chair on the verandah, my brother had walked through the gate, and his student who was with him, helped me to pull his stroller inside out of the rain.

I unstrapped Dayo and took him into our room, put him in his playpen (despite his protests) and as I went back to close the flat door to the verandah, I heard my mother asking Jomo what happened.

At the tailend of his explanation, I yelled out “And he got SOAKED!!!” and slammed the door.

Two minutes later, there was a banging on the door.

I had to pick Dayo up because he was fussing, and I opened the door.

My mother began with, “Who the fuck do you think you are?”

I was very upset because Dayo had got wet, and she kept pushing me and pushing me and pushing me. She was cursing in the filthiest way and I repeatedly asked her not to do so in front of Dayo. I was not polite about it.

Suddenly, I was once again being accused of all manner of things, she was lobbing well worn and refilled emotional grenades and I lost my temper.

“You’re a hypocrite,” I ground out and I repeated it.

I asked her to leave the room, and she tells me she won’t be ordered in her own house. I told her I didn’t want her to expose Dayo to this craziness.

“You’re a hypocrite,” I said again.

She hauled back her arm and punched me in the head. When she pulled her hand back, she hit Dayo with the force of the blow.

He began to scream.

I put him down, and I began to push my mother our of the room. I felt like a lioness had possessed my body and my teeth bared. My mother was slapping and hitting me, and was pushing her out of the door. I lost control for a minute or two, instinct took over.

My brother came in, and pulled my mother off of me. She was fighting against him to get at me.

“You HIT him!” I screamed at her. I was so furious I could hardly contain it, but I turned away from her as soon as I saw Jomo was succeeding in getting her out of the room and I picked Dayo up and struggled to calm him and myself down. The electricity was off and the rain was pounding, Dayo and I were dripping with sweat and tears.

I was shaking. Shaking, shaking, shaking and loathing the situation I found myself in. I felt powerless to protect Dayo and was badly frightened by it.

I locked my doors; the one to verandah and the one to the yard. A few minutes passed, I was still trembling. I heard someone try to open the door, and then a key in the lock to the verandah.

My mother barreled into the room again. On and on and on it went. Except the patience I’ve been practising, the silence I have been maintaining, the habit of ignoring my mother’s barbs and refusing to rise to the occasion… all of it just burned away.

I locked the door and threw the deadbolt. She walked around outside the house and used a key and opened the door and came in to repeat the same tired bullshit again. It was so transparent and stupid.

I said things I wanted to say. When she tried to make it about things I did when I was child, I answered her that it had nothing to do with anything that happened before she hit Dayo. That right now this has to do with me and being able to provide a safe environment for my son.

She is going on about how I am going to ruin Dayo’s life, and make him suffer and about how I denied him a father.

She is telling me how I treated her badly since I was a little girl (like a four year old knows how to treat her mother bad) and how I am a burden to her (although she is providing a roof over my head and little else more since I buy my own food and contribute to the Internet access, and she absolutely does not contribute so much as diapers and she doesn’t change any either! She does nothing for Dayo that I don’t pay for in one way or another.) and how I am going to go a splash my version of events all over the Internet, and how she will always be the villain. On and on and on and on and on with her as the victim, and I am the one who is victimising her.

I called her on a lot of her shit yesterday afternoon. I have called her on her shit in a way I haven’t done since I was a teenager. It was savagely satisfying to look right through her and call her on all her games, but here’s the bottom line: I am leaving this house for the last time. Soon.

When I made the declaration, she goes off and tells me how she knows I was just using her. How she told my grandmother when I was pregnant that she had no intention of bonding with Dayo, because she knew I would take him away from her. One paranoid delusion after another, all designed to make her innocent and me the devil.

I told her that spiel wasn’t going to work anymore, and that there was nothing she could say to make me feel differently, that I was going. She couldn’t make me feel guilty for being a child anymore, she could make me into a child again so she could feel powerful, that she had no power over me anymore whatsoever. That this was a parting of the ways between me and her. I had had enough.

Eventually I began to ignore her, and noticed something else. The note of desperation in her accusations. She was pulling out statement after statement. Things she has been saying to me all my life, things I have come to realise she feels about herself and the new additions in the last year since I came from London. It was like she needed to say them. Like they were all holding her up.

I know I should have controlled my temper better, I have been doing it for most of the last eighteen months. But it just got the better of me when she hit Dayo. It didn’t even register that she punched me in the head until after, all I keep seeing is her elbow connecting with Dayo’s head. It may have been a mistake, but it was bad enough that she hit me, hitting Dayo set me off.

So in that I am wrong. I should have held my temper. I know, I know I should have held my tongue. I just couldn’t. I don’t know why I couldn’t, but I had had enough of being my mother’s whipping boy.

She had had an altercation with my brother prior to me going to ask her to take me to get Dayo. When she realised that thunder and lightening were coming down, and proper rain was on its way, she felt guilty and sent Jomo out to get me and Dayo, big fucking deal. Wouldn’t a person generous of spirit done that for her grandchild?

She needs reasons to feel like shit about herself. She needs to hold on so tight to being a victim, that the only way she can sustain it is to keep provoking situations with pure irrationality.

In fact, I am beginning to wonder if Mummy doesn’t have some kind of socio-emotional disorder. Or bi-polar disease or something.

By the end of the whole drama yesterday, she was apologising to Dayo and trying to make me feel guilty because I wanted to leave, but you know I have reached the end of my rope. I’ve given her a lot of rope and she is determined to hang herself.

It’s one thing to tolerate, its one thing to forgive. I just cannot do this anymore. This is just too unhealthy, too twisted for me.

It like a game she’s playing with herself, and sucking in anyone nearby into the vortex.

If she says someone is bullying her, she is the one bullying someone. If she says you are crazy, she’s the one doing crazy shit. If she says you are an asshole, she thinks she is an asshole and hates herself for it. If she says you hate her, she hates herself. If she says you’re using her, she is using you. If she says you’re selfish, she is being selfish.

It applies to not just my relationship with her, but with everyone. I just cannot raise Dayo here.

I just cannot bear the thought of this being something he sees on a regular basis. I don’t know how to be my own person and live here. I can’t be myself here. If I can’t be myself, and be supported and support people who are supporting me and love and be loved, what’s the fucking point?

Now I know the rules of her games so well, and know how the court and deck are stacked against me anyway, I am disinclined to play the game anymore.

Of course, much of this post is paraphrased. How could I go into minute detail the warped and twisted relationship my mother has forced upon me?

It’s enough that when I challenged her, her response was to punch me when I was holding Dayo. It is now more than 24 hours later, and my head still hurts where she hit me, and my heart still hurts where she hit Dayo, and my soul still hurts where she has just failed to be my mother by choice.

I woke up this morning to the sound of her picking a fight with Jomo. That fight went on for a significant amount of time as well.

All day today she’s been coming in here, acting like nothing has happened. Everything she does, has her guilt stamped all over it. I have chosen not to maintain rancor because I know ultimately it will not serve my greater purpose which is to get out of this house forever.

Not only that, that bitch is getting on a plane to Jamaica and will be gone for two weeks starting tomorrow morning (Sunday). So while I am stewing in my fury right now, I absolutely am keeping myself focussed on what I need to do.

Chief among them, and that which matters most is that I am going to create a safe environment for my son come hell or high water. And the water rose significantly yesterday afternoon.

Under my disgust in general, is the overarching disappointment I feel in my mother, because “no matter how I seem to think we grow, you [she] always seem to let me know, it ain’t working.”

In fact, I don’t think my mother has done much growing past a certain age. She is still a wounded child without any control over herself or her life, and I pity her. I am still so fucking furious, but I am resolute.

It’s So Hard To Say Goodbye To Yesterday

lj-mood: begreaved
lj-music: Battlestar Galactica 0301, “Occupation”

The thing about keeping journals is that –if you’re like me — you are faced with situations and you delve back into your memories. It’s a chance to peep into your past and swirl around in your memories and see how much you’ve changed. Also, how much you’re still the same.

A couple of weeks ago, maybe three, Mama K called me to tell my father was going down. I spoke to my youngest brother and he said my father had had a stroke. His speech was mostly gone, he was having trouble walking.

On Wednesday night, my oldest girlfriend called me to tell me that my father had died. I called my older brother, he said he had no idea what these people were talking about. He went and found my father in whatever little hole he was in, and my father was alive. Apparently, only just barely.

I got another call yesterday morning, and my father is in fact in the hospital. He’s on drips. He is calling for me.

I am not going.

Why am I not going?

I remember I wrote this article about my father when I was about 21 or 22. Printed it in the newspaper that was my employer at the time. I spoke both frankly and very personally about how I felt at the time.

DATE: Mon 12-Jun-1995
PUBLICATION: tg
CATEGORY: mal
LOCATION: c-f9

QUICK WORDS:

gender issues
men
women
parenting
family
Lord, N’Delamiko

FULL TEXT:

Better that he stayed away

By N#8217DELAMIKO LORD

MY father is a stranger to me. Oh, I know who he is, where he lives and the outline of his character. But I don#8217t truly know who he is.

I was four years old when my parents separated and I remember my father as being the centre of my world. He was the parent who seemingly spoiled me, my mother was the disciplinarian.

When they separated, my world fell apart. My mother, my brother and I left Trinidad in 1978. I was not to return for the next 12 years.

My mother did not explain clearly many things: Why we had to leave, why I couldn#8217t see my father anymore, why I had to leave all my friends. I did not understand. She was probably trying to protect me from the truth of what had happened, but at four, I couldn#8217t understand.

During the first few years after we left, I saw my father a few times, but after the last visit in 1982, I didn#8217t see him until I was 16. I remember my excitement.

I was finally going to see my father. The man I had been dreaming of for so long. A hero, my dad. When I saw him, I could hardly believe it. He was small and thin. At 51, he looked like 71. He looked sick. It just couldn#8216t really be him! My mind rebelled.

The visit was odd. I was glad to finally know him, but I couldn#8217t reconcile who he was with whom I remembered and whom I had hoped for.

When he came to see us in 1982, he was charming. He took us to the circus and bought us anything we wanted. He spent time with us, played with us. I thought he would be the same.

But the truth is, I spent very little time with him and when I did, I had to contend with his old-fashioned sexism and the occasional rearing up of his acute alcoholism.

I spent my childhood romanticising my father. Whenever my mother and I fought, I would dream of him coming for me and #8220rescuing me from the tyranny of my mother, and the horror of my life#8221.

He was this perfect person, he could do no wrong. I suppose I refused to notice that he hardly wrote, and that he forgot many birthdays, Christmases and momentous occasions.

It was so hard for me. I missed him or rather the idea of him so much. Not having my father around, left a gaping hole in my life.

My mother struggled to make up for it, but she didn#8217t know how to explain that it was a better decision that she made, to leave him, for the alternative would have been far more disastrous.

At that age, understanding what domestic violence and my father#8217s alcoholism had done to my mother, was not something I could do. I ended up blaming her for so much.

I was sure she was the reason why I never saw my father. I was sure she had done something to drive him away, and that she was keeping us apart.

There was nothing that she could have done that would have made a difference. She took the blame for my father. Mom never deserved that, but I was a child.

My father is a brilliant man. He can grasp philosophical concepts with the best of the world#8217s thinkers. He is a poet, a writer, a musician, an artist, and a waste.

It breaks my heart to see him, because everytime, I see him, I think what he could have been, if he had been given a fair chance.

But the world is linear, and my father is a non-linear person, (from him I inherited my non-linear personality, and my ears), so he has remained on the periphery of who he really is.

I have not been able to forgive him for missing my life, for wasting #160his genius. I haven#8217t forgiven him for not being my father, when I really needed him. But then I am not different from the millions of children now, and those who have gone before, who have remained angry with men, fathers, who abandoned them in their moment of need.

The few times I tried to speak to him about how I felt, he gave me an excuse. He stayed away because it would have hurt me more to have him around. Maybe he was right, but it didn#8217t soothe the pain.
We children of divorce share a common bond, this anger. For many of us, this is what motivates and fuels our ambitions. For me, I haven#8217t been able to let go of my fury, because it feels as though I would be letting my father off the hook.

It seems life and his own lack of faith in himself have done that for him. Let him exist without feeling regret for the mistakes he has made.

Intellectually, I know that my anger hurts me, not him. He has no concept of the magnitude of his mistakes, but I don#8217t know how to exorcise it. How do I let go? What happens if I do?
I cannot conceive of a relationship beyond what we have now, and that seems the saddest part. In my heart, I still harbour the dream that he will suddenly realise what he has done and become the father I have always wanted.

However, though pessimism is not a personality trait of mine, I know he#8217ll never be that, and I suppose I can#8217t forgive him for that either.

(Please forgive the gross punctuation abuse and style errors in this piece. Twelve years of distance, and you really do cringe when you look at what you committed to print.)

After that piece was published, my father for the first and only time in my life, walked past me in the road without speaking to me. He was furious that I had written what I had written, and published it in the newspaper.

When I left Trinidad a year later, we had hardly seen each other since, and I went to tell him I was leaving. He was not there, so I didn’t see him until a couple of years later when I went down to Trinidad to help my best friend bury her mother. He gave me a massive pictorial book on Africa that is one of the most beautiful books I have ever seen far less owned.

After that visit, things changed between us. He began to apologise to me for his abandonment, his failures as a father. His excuses remained mostly the same, but he talked to me a lot about his life, things that happened to him. Our relationship matured, or maybe it was just me. You get to a point where any relationship with you parents you have, is what it is and you accept it for that. So I accepted that he was never going to be my ‘parent’. I accepted his deeply ingrained and rutted flaws. I loved him, but decided not to tolerate too much of his bullshit.

I looked back into my writings, both of May and October 2005, and ask myself if I feel any different. I don’t.

I still went to great expense and difficulty to fly down to Trinidad to see my father last November. I went because he asked for me then, and I took Dayo to see him. I went to see my aunt, Sasun who pretty much raised my father. I spent time with him. I took photos with my brothers, nephew, son and father. Yet he was very flippant about his funeral and his requests. He was still walking around, although I could see he was greatly weakened.

For the first time in his life, he gave me money. Not a lot of money mind you, but money that helped me while I was in Trinidad and with which I bought a beautiful silver braclet to wear on my right hand to accompany the beautiful sliver ring he put on my finger almost three years ago and commanded me not to remove until a man put his own ring there. I wish it to be an heirloom. To pass on to my own children.

The trip was both good and sad. When I left my father turned his back and walked away after leaving me at the ticket counter with my popo in his carrier. He never looked back. I knew it was the last time I was going to see him. His back to me and walking away. It has ever been his way.

So now when he is calling for me. I’m afraid I cannot go. He always said he had a hard time saying goodbye to me as a little girl, and now I have already said my goodbyes, and need not do it twice. I do not want to see him, sick, old, frail in his bed, a product of the morass with which he has swallowed down and allowed to suck him down into itself.

Still, he is a stranger to me. He’s my father, and I love him, yet his true chracter is something he spared me most of his life and I am glad for it. What little I know of him, there are two personalities. The man who gave so much for his country, his community and his race and the man who was a commited failure in almost all his personal relationships.

What my grief will be like after he actually passes, is hard to say. I am mourning a man who impacted my life tremendously, and who I love and idolise, but also a man who is a stranger. He is someone I hardly know. Someone who has been peripheral in my life for so long, that I cannot say I am going to miss him in my life. He was barely in it.

He only wants me to come to Trinidad so I can give him some kind of absolution, and I cannot provide it because I realise it’s not mine to give. He has to make his own peace with his choices and his own peace with God.

In truth, I know my father died many, many years ago. I’ve been mourning the death of my child’s view of him for many years already. I’ve known for a year and a half he was going to die for sure of something. He’s been trying to kill himself without a bullet, rope or convenient tall construction for a long time too. It was his choice to begin to die a long time ago.

The body on drips in the hospital, cancer eating away at him, stroke afflicted etc., is merely the shell he occupied and which his tenacious spirit will not release yet. My father is already gone, long gone; I have let go in my heart and I am at peace with that.

I will honour him as an ancestor, and pray for his upliftment and enlightenment and that the severe emotional pain he lived with and inflicted all his life is now at it’s end. I will be glad when he is at rest and at peace and no longer suffering–and Mami ain’t talking about cancer or stroke.

Daddy, Dayo and Uncle Boysie November 2006

The 2007 Barbados Music Award Rock/Alternative Artiste Of The Year

lj-music: Silencio mostly

Jomo won the 2007 Rock/Alternative Artiste of The Year at the Barbados Music Awards last night for his first album, “Free”.

It’s been a long time coming, but I am very proud of him. He’s miserable and mean sometimes, but he’s still my brother and I love him no matter what. As a family, we’ve been through so many hard times, and no matter what, we’re proud of him as a family.

It took a lot of guitar strings, bummed ciggies and endless ‘plinking’ on the guitar to get to this point, and somehow I believe it’s only the beginning! It’s not that we thought Jomo wasn’t worthy… he’s one talented man, but politics being what they are, we didn’t think he was going to win last night. We were sure Massala or Kite would win the award, but it was Jomo.

My boy went and bought himself a beautiful green suit, and some serious shoes (that were very Rumplestiltskin), and off he went. Jomo said when they announced his name, people cheered, but when he took the stage the cheered again, cause he looked good. And he did, he was dressed to kill, and his hair looked terrific.

I’ve taken a few pictures, all of before and after (because Big Mami can’t afford to catch the bus, much lest the cost of admission to said awards, mate).

As a side note: Where are the photos? No one who took photos last night posted anything to the web. In fact, the official results, news and photos are slow to come. Mind you this is Barbados, and it is just past 8am as I write, but still!!! Where are the bloggers dude?

Ahhh…. I’m proud of him. He may drive me crazy, but I pushed his steel pan through Woodbrook thirteen years ago to go play in Panorama in Queens Park Savannah in Trinidad, when he played with Invaders. I danced on the sidelines, jumped and partied, then pushed that steelpan all over the place that night. I was proud of his musical talent then, and I am no less proud now.

Of course, the phone has been ringing off the hook, and we’re all floating… except Dayo, he has no idea and is sitting in his swing alternately watching “Tempo” and sleeping… heh.

All of us are floating here this morning. Jomo can’t sleep he’s so pleased with himself. He came out here a little while ago and picked up the award, he’s gone to sleep with it.

We need to celebrate though, do something… I can’t tell you in words the energy flowing through the house. It’s nice considering the amount of tension and stress we’ve all been through in recent months. It’s nice to be proud of him for getting recognition for so many years of hard work, and so much talent that until now has largely been ignored.

This was the first year they had a “Rock/Alternative” category, and I think it’s good that Jomo won the first one, because he’s like the Granddaddy of that scene here in Barbados. He was playing rock/blues/alternative on the scene for more than ten years… in fact, he is probably the first person to enter the Richard Stoute Teen Talent contest here in Barbados and play not only a rock song, but an original AND he played the guitar.

Most of the other nominees either worked with Jomo before or he trained them. In his acceptance speech he dedicated the award to the other nominees, and said that they were the mainstay of the music scene in Barbados, because there was only two soca bands, one reggae band and seven or eight rock/alternative bands… and you know, he’s right. If it wasn’t for the rockers in Bim, many a bar or pub would be playing canned music.

So here we are! He’s got a little recognition, a phone full of the numbers of people who want to talk to him about work, and business cards of some industry scouts in the US. Wouldn’t it be lovely if this was just a stepping stone to greater and more substantial success. I so want him to succeed. He deserves this recognition. He’s worked so hard for so many years, labouring in what is largely obscurity. He deserves a break now… a real break, and some financial returns.

He said to me a little while ago, “Now I need to turn that little piece of plastic into my next album…”

I’m just here going, “You go boy!!”

My Dancing Jazz Boy

I’m here on my computer, surfing the net and working and listening to “Kind Of Blue” by the one and only Mr. Davis.

My hand was on my belly, and the baby was thumping away in time to the music!

I just think that is the coolest thing….

Delve Deeper

Death To IE6!

“IE6 is the new Netscape 4. The hacks needed to support IE6 are increasingly viewed as excess freight. Like Netscape 4 in 2000, IE6 is perceived to be holding back the web.”

Jeff Zeldman, standards guru

15 Amazing Anti-IE Resource

Transforming the lives of street kids