I Travel Home

I travel home to remember the sound of morning

I choose the evening to pray I remember this as it is

For when the city returns

When the sound of the green-line trolley cars and skyscrapers

Surround my senses diminishing this version of my imagination

I will remember this

The silence and the night time

I will remember red sand on bare feet

My skin sticky glistening in the sun

My hair like untamed wool

I will remember the air thick of Africa

I will remember my mother in the night

And the children she cares for

I will see them once more as they play

Peeking at me from the crack in the doorway

I will remember my aunti-- her famous Jeloff rice

Asking me in flawless Ishan native tongue

"Ofure... Onegbe?"... How is everything... you're too skinny"

And I, struggling to keep up, clumsily responding

"Butayay aunti?" That means, I don't know what you just said

I will remember the market place

The women selling smoked corn and plantain

The taste of moy-moy and egusi

The sound of Doris pounding yam

Fresh oranges from the Arrimogiga farm

When Boston city lights mask the majesty of my favorite constellations

I will remember the moon...

Pregnant and smiling

Because I am a poet

As if she knows that I am

Invested enough to write about it

Perhaps because I am a poet

I will remember the unseen

The homeless and the beggars, the roadside wanderers,

People just trying to survive

Children roadside selling cell phones and unwanted trinkets

I will remember the local roads

Beaten and eroded by rain and time

Huts built beside a 15 story hotel skyrise

So many having so much

Neighbors with others living with nothing

But the hand-me-downs on their backs

And the realities of poverty crushing their

Promises of tomorrow

I leave behind my rose colored glasses

In my grandfather's village

Because when my plane finally lands back in Boston

I want to believe that Nigeria changes me every time

These moments teach me how to recognize what we take for granted

Constant electricity and clean water

Hospitals on every corner

The opportunity to rise beyond our native borders

These are the details that risk a fate of becoming lost or forgotten

Like sounds of the morning

For when the city returns

When the sound of the green-line trolley cars and skyscrapers

Surrounds my senses diminishing this version of my imagination

I will remember this

I need to remember this