Artwork by Lorna Simpson; source: more.com |
(Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie)--I first knew there was such a thing as blue mascara
because of Aunty Chinwe. She came to visit my mother one Saturday, her braids
held sleekly at her neck, her caftan’s silver embroidery gleaming and her
lashes the bright color of a crayon. Against her dark skin, they were striking.
“Aunty, your lashes are blue!” I said.
I was 11.
“Yes, my dear. It’s blue mascara,” she told me with a
smile. She was always smiling, eyes crinkled, teeth very white.
I liked most of my mother’s friends—funny women, kind
women, brilliant women, and there was the one soft-spoken man—but only to Aunty
Chinwe would I say something like that. Aunty, your lashes are blue!
She had an air of endless tolerance, of magnanimous
grace; she turned every room she entered into a soft space free of the thorny
possibility of consequences. With children, her manner was that of an adult
just about to hand out lavishly wrapped gifts, not for a birthday or Christmas
but simply because children deserved gifts.
I sneaked into the parlor whenever she visited, and sat
in a corner, and eavesdropped on her conversations with my mother. Because she
drank Fanta elegantly from a glass, I eschewed bottles and began to drink my
Coke from a glass. I loved simply to look at her: petite, graciously fleshy,
with a dark-dark complexion that made people think she was from Ghana or Gambia
or somewhere not Nigeria where beautiful women had indigo skin. At her clinic
she gave injections with the gentlest touch.
Whenever I was sick with malaria, my parents would make the hour-long drive to Enugu, where she lived, because they knew that only Aunty Chinwe holding the needle would keep me still enough to get my medicine.
Whenever I was sick with malaria, my parents would make the hour-long drive to Enugu, where she lived, because they knew that only Aunty Chinwe holding the needle would keep me still enough to get my medicine.
* * *
When I was 13, my parents briefly considered
transferring me to another school, one that was even more rigorous than my
already rigorous school. The entrance exam could only be taken in Enugu—the
university town where we lived, Nsukka, being too small to be a regional
examination center—and so my mother took me to stay with Aunty Chinwe, in her
large house with the grand staircase and spacious rooms.
Her three children, younger than I, ran around playing
with toys that moved and buzzed at the touch of buttons. Her -mother-in-law was
a fixture on the veranda, where she issued orders to Aunty Chinwe and the
househelps. Her husband, Uncle Emeka, a handsome, gregarious man who liked to
tell jokes, played loud funk on his stereo. They might have been any ordinary
family, but because of Aunty Chinwe, they seemed to me somehow charmed. My
mother’s friend Aunty Ngozi once said, “Chinwe is the only woman I know who
truly gets along with her in-laws. And her mother-in-law is a witch.”
They always had guests. Uncle Emeka would crack joke
after joke, poking fun at everyone and at himself. There was a story about how
he went to America and did not know how to use a vending machine. Another about
somebody farting loudly on a plane and pretending not to know. “Let’s have more
drinks!” Uncle Emeka said often. He struck me as a man who liked the gratitude
of other people.
I spent hours with Aunty Chinwe. I went along when she
visited a patient of hers, a diabetic man with a stubborn cut on his foot. As
we left his home, I told Aunty Chinwe, “I don’t really want to study medicine
in university.” My teachers and parents expected that I would become a doctor
because I did so well in school. I had never told anyone how bored I was by
biology, how all I wanted to do was read and write.
Aunty Chinwe was thoughtful and kind. “You don’t have to
decide now. Wait until you are at least in Class Five. It doesn’t have to be
medicine, but it must be something that you can feed yourself with.”
Her words made me feel lighter. I showed her a short
story I was writing, in a lined notebook that was also my study book.
“Make sure you keep all the stories you write,” she told
me. “One day you will be something.”
The evening before I left, one of their guests talked
about a man who had lied about his date of birth at a job interview, because
the company wanted younger workers, and was now scrambling to get a forged
birth certificate as proof.
Uncle Emeka burst out: “Just as Chinwe lied to me and
said she was a virgin when we first met!”
He roared with laughter. It was an odd, irrelevant joke.
From the visitor came an uncomfortable chuckle. Aunty Chinwe smiled and changed
the subject but not before I saw a fleeting clenching of her jaw. She would say
nothing, not because she did not want to but because she felt she should not.
The visitor looked relieved, grateful to her for saving him further discomfort.
I noticed then how Aunty Chinwe had no sharp angles in
her personality. She had blurred them all. She was an ocean of endless nice.
* * *
I was 15 and asking many questions of the world. Aunty
Chinwe was visiting my mother to tell her about a surprise birthday party for
Uncle Emeka. From a bucket-shaped leather bag she withdrew sketches of cakes,
sheets of handwritten lists, a small pile of photographs. She gave those to my
mother and asked which image of Uncle Emeka would look best on the party
souvenirs; she was making ceramic mugs and bottle openers. My mother studied
one of the photographs for a while, and I went closer to see. It looked recent,
taken at a wedding filled with festive balloons, Aunty Chinwe in a red blouse
and wrapper and Uncle Emeka in a red tie and dark suit so tailored it seemed
sharp edged.
“He looks very nice here,” mymother said. “They should
cut you out and use this one.”
Aunty Chinwe looked at the photo. “He did not shave that
day,” she said.
I’m not sure why I so clearly remember that now, years
later. He did not shave that day. The way she said it, with intimacy,
with pride, as though the photo brought a memory she treasured but would not
share. A tone that was about what was hers and hers alone.
“Three hundred guests. This is not a small thing!” my
mother said. Her words were layered, dense with unspoken compliments: how
dedicated a wife Aunty Chinwe was, how impressive spending her own money on
this party, how grand that she had the money in the first place.
Aunty Chinwe deflected my mother’s admiration with the
ease of a person used to compliments. “Who will I invite and who will I leave
out?” she said in Igbo, and in English added, “I have to include everybody.”
My parents were senior university workers wrapped in the
familiar comforts of the middle class. They had two cars and a house and
relatives whose school fees they paid, but neither could plan a party for 300
guests without the other knowing, because they would have to pool resources. I
remember my brother asking my parents for a Pac-Man video game when video games
were still exotic things, and he tried to make it normal by telling them his
classmate owned one. “That’s because those people have extra money,” my mother
said. She meant academics who dabbled in business, like the professor who
invented a yam-pounding machine, and another who made wine from cashews. We did
not have extra money. Aunty Chinwe had extra money. Her father came from old
Igbo wealth, his family had traded in palm oil with the British 100 years ago,
and they owned property all over eastern Nigeria. In Enugu, where Aunty Chinwe
had grown up, a street was named after her father. Even if she did not work as
a general practitioner in her own clinic, she would still have extra money. And
in my eyes, it cast a patina of glamour over her life. Her money meant choice,
that she could plan a surprise party if and when she wanted to.
* * *
My mother and I went to Aunty Chinwe’s house the day
before the party to help with preparations. Caterers were doing the real
cooking, so we just sat around in the kitchen making chin-chin, me
rolling the dough flat, my mother cutting it into careful small squares, Aunty
Chinwe frying until the air tasted delicious. She had told Uncle Emeka that the
food was for a relative’s baby shower the next day.
I was astride a low kitchen stool, the thick flour mix
in front of me, when Aunty Chinwe said, “Sit like a woman, my dear.”
We always spoke a mix of Igbo and English. This she said
in Igbo. Nwanyi means both “girl” and “woman.”
Her soft voice suggested that I was doing something
shameful but that nobody else needed to know of it. When I was little, my
mother taught me how to sit properly. “Close your legs” was how my mother said
it. Thighs pressed together. Once I asked why and my mother said, “Because you are
a girl and girls wear dresses and have to sit with their legs closed so that
nothing shows.” Maybe my mother could tell that I thought this a lightweight
reason, because she added that an ant had once crawled in and stung a girl down
there because she sat with her legs apart.
I was wearing trousers, and the most comfortable way to
sit on that stool was not with my legs pressed together.
“Aunty, I’m wearing trousers,” I said.
Aunty Chinwe looked astonished. “Just sit properly, my
dear. Always sit properly like a woman.”
I realized that it was a ritual that had to be
performed, this sitting properly. A ritual about female virtue and female
shame. One of the many rituals for which you received mainstream approval if
you just performed them and asked no questions. Sit like a woman was a
small example of bigger rituals. Be quiet and gentle like a woman. Don’t be
loud, don’t be angry, don’t be tough, don’t be too ambitious.
Near and Dear: Front row, the author at age eight in Nigeria,
1985, with her immediate family: two sisters, three brothers and, bookending
the group, her father and mother. (Photo source: More Magazine)
I did not want to perform them. I wanted to be able to
sit in a way I considered most comfortable. Later, it would occur to me that
Aunty Chinwe’s entire life was about performing the rituals of femaleness. She
had the world’s approval, and she wore it like a favorite tasteful dress.
* * *
Delicate rosettes had been made from white tissue paper
and strung through a bough that framed the doorway. Tables were covered in white
cloth. White roses stood in tall vases. The atmosphere was of seamlessness, of
sophistication that was not too much.
“Chinwe di egwu,” my mother said.
The Igbo expression di egwu is difficult to
translate because of its nuanced, shifting meanings. To be remarkable, unusual,
wonderful. My mother used it both for people she admired and for people she
found odd.
Aunty Chinwe looked beautiful in a peach dress. “I think
Emeka knew about it all along!” she said, smiling. A coral necklace was coiled
around her neck. She had the energy of a stage actor on opening night, excited,
anxious, eager to convince her audience about the version of herself she would
be showing them.
I gave Uncle Emeka the oversize birthday card we had
brought, and he hugged me. “You are growing very quickly! Very soon the suitors
will start to come. But they must all ask my permission first!”
Before he cut his cake, he made a speech. He called
Aunty Chinwe his queen. He said she was perfect and she made many sacrifices
for him and she knew exactly what he wanted to eat every day and she gave him
business advice and she shopped for all his clothes and she knew where
everything he owned was and she had given him three beautiful children and she
decided what happened in their house and he was lucky to have it so.
The guests cheered and clapped. From every corner of the
room, praise flew. Aunty Chinwe was coated in praise, sunk in praise. She was
smiling and glowing.
“Perfect wife,” a friend of my mother’s said.
It troubled me that Aunty Chinwe’s perfection was
couched only in terms of what she did for her husband, and not what she was.
Not about her intelligence, her humor or how well she gave injections. Later, I
would learn that Aunty Chinwe, born Anglican, had converted to Catholicism when
she married Uncle Emeka. She transformed herself, became the person he wanted
her to be.
Something happened the night of that party. A woman,
drunk from many bottles of Guinness stout, began to say things to Aunty Chinwe.
About Uncle Emeka. About the two-year-old son he had with a girl from Imo
State. Aunty Chinwe was crying softly in the guest room, my mother cradling
her. She looked vague, lost. She spoke in very low tones. “I did not shout at
him,” she told my mother.
Later, I overheard my mother and Aunty Ngozi talking
about Aunty Chinwe. She had handled it well, they agreed. It was the best thing
to do. Why fight about it and raise more dust?
Aunty Chinwe was an ideal, an idea. My mother and other
women I knew might not have been like her, but they idealized her. They not
only accepted what she represented, they aspired to it. Aunty Chinwe’s
experience did not cause me to ask the questions I was asking. But it shaped
them. Her life brought my musings to life.
Why did her response have to be tidy to be admired? Why
had she not raged at the world in her humiliation, and if she had, why would
that not be admirable? It seemed to me more human, more honest. She asked
nothing of the man she loved, and this was seen as praiseworthy. To love was to
give, but surely to love was also to take. Why did she not take? Why dared she not
take? Why did her perfection depend on her not taking?
Shortly after the party, Aunty Chinwe changed her name.
From Dr. (Mrs.) Chinwe Nwoye to Dr. (Mrs.) Chinwe Emeka-Nwoye. It was the
vogue, in the 1990s, for newly married middle- and upper-class Nigerian women
to take a clunky hyphenation of their husband’s first and last names. But it
was a strange choice for Aunty Chinwe. She was not newly married, and her
generation hadn’t done that. It was as though her response to her humiliation
was to further erase herself, further sink indistinguishably into Uncle Emeka.
Or to tell the world that he may have a child with another woman but she was
still his wife, and being his wife was what mattered.
My feelings toward Aunty Chinwe then began to curdle.
The attributes I had once so admired now irked me. What I thought her ethereal
niceness became merely an addiction to the shallow rewards that the world
reserved for females who hid certain parts of themselves. Most of all, her
experience frightened me, confused me, because she was not easy to explain.
I was 15 and naive, full of the uncompromising
certainties of youth. I would come later to admire her again and seek her
wisdom at different times in my life. I would come to realize that Aunty Chinwe
was not the problem; our society was. It was not about individual women but
about the forces in the world that made those women shrink themselves. Aunty
Chinwe taught me that wealth did not shield a woman from those forces. Nor did
education or beauty. She helped shape my resolve to live my femaleness as the
glorious and complex thing that it is. To reject “because you are a woman” as a
valid reason for anything. To strive to be my truest, most humane self, but
never twist myself into shapes to court the approval of the world.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is a novelist and short story
writer whose work has been translated into 30 languages. Her most recent novel,
Americanah,
won the 2013 National Book Critics' Circle Award for Fiction. She divides her
time between Nigeria and the United States.
Chimamanda,in your Mum's voice: idi egwu.Chaii!You are greatly blessed with super intelligence.Since I read your "Americanah",I have never come across any of your work and don't read it to the end.How do you manage to keep your readers glued to your work until they read the last sentence,without even noticing how long?You have a great gift,thumbs up.As for feminism in Africa,we have continued to be 'Mistaken '.
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