Paduas on Lake Bosumtwe |
I’ve always been sensitive to how people relate to each
other. I think it spawned from being the youngest child in my family: watch
your older siblings blunder and made a mental note to not do that. In work places I can notice when coworkers are
reaching their tipping points. When travelling with friends I can compromise on
dinner plans. It is a skill that has served me well.
Being in different cultures means one’s attention to how
people interact is very important. Structures around age, general economic
class, and even race relations are completely different. You can’t bump into an
old lady in a market in Ghana and get away with an, “I’m sorry.” (Or rather, “Kafraa, waaye.”) You’ll probably end up
saying kafraa several times, carry
her bags for her, and ask the details of her childhood. In fact, that bus you
were going to catch? Yeah, just give her your seat.
This attitude of respect and connectivity extends to daily
life. I don’t just stop by my local corner store, buy eggs, and move on. I walk
up (usually around 8 pm) and theatrically slump on the bench next to the owner.
I spend ten minutes looking at her 10 year old’s homework, order my groceries
from her daughter, and exchange small talk with some other passing neighbors.
We must, of course, inquire into the health happiness of both her house members and mine.
I pay for my goods and spend five minutes just in good-byes (Twi and English) as I edge for the door. No matter how hard I fight for the last word, a final bye-bye
oooo usually chases me into the night.
Everything is built on a foundation of relationships. It
makes your life easier. If you know somebody who knows somebody, you won’t go
into the bank and wait in line with the rest of the unconnected plebeians.
You’ll call your friend’s cousin's former roommate from Uni, greet them like they’re your
best friend and walk past the line directly into her office. If I’m on a hunt
for the most recent statistics on the BECE pass rate for last year, I don’t go
online. I don’t call the statistics/data arm of the local education department.
No, I call my “friend” who works in the office and meet with him directly. The
minute you figure this system out, you realize life just got so much easier for
you.
Success depends on how well you navigate this system. It can
lead to quicker service, “discounts” from your “market guy,” or a few extra
tomatoes in your grocery bag. It’s a simultaneous mixture of ingratiating
yourself, maintaining your own authority, teasing, inflating egos, and
deferring an argument when it gets close to them inviting you to church. This
is not to say it’s a contrived system. These inquiries are all genuine. People
want to know you’re doing fine. In fact I regularly get calls from acquaintances
that last a whole 30 seconds.
Me: “hello?”
Me: “hello?”
Random person: “Ahh, Akua, how are you?”
Me: “Fine, thank you, how are you?”
Random person: “Fine. Fine. Your sisters, they are fine, too?” ”
ME: “Yes, yes, they are all well. How is your work?”
Random person: “Oh, it is fine. Dumso-dumso is hard. Can’t get any work done.”
Me: “Fine, thank you, how are you?”
Random person: “Fine. Fine. Your sisters, they are fine, too?” ”
ME: “Yes, yes, they are all well. How is your work?”
Random person: “Oh, it is fine. Dumso-dumso is hard. Can’t get any work done.”
Me: “I understand. It is a struggle for me, too.”
Random person: “Ok! Just wanted to say hi, glad you are
doing well, bye-bye ooo.”
Me: “Oh! Ok…bye!”
Maintaining and leveraging these
relationships is something a well-integrated ex-pat does. As brief as some of
the contact is, the brevity does not take away from the significance. Community
members soon enfold you in their daily life and routines. As strange as it
feels in the beginning, a new sense of home begins to stir. And this the
feeling, the feeling of strange customs becoming habits, that adds spice and
flavor to my life and work.
Myself, Kwame (manager of our go-to hostel in Accra, visiting us for a weekend in Kumasi), my two roommates |