I've always loved music because of its ability to transport me to a different place in time, remind me of happy or sad times and get me up, up, up when I need to be. And if you have ever seen footage of a Michael Jackson concert in China, you know that music is more about the emotion than understanding the lyrics or the language being spoken. So yesterday, music somehow found a way to work its way into every part of my day...and what a day it was!
I started off the day with a date to meet Jackie at Accra Mall at the ShopRite. Jackie is the cousin of my friend Zenobia's daughter's father (whew!) who lives in this area with her husband Patrick and six-year-old son Tymon (I love Tymon because he calls me Auntie). My favorite guy at the hotel Nenekwame got me a cab outside the gate and tells the driver that I am going to Accra Mall - no problem. Then he tells him to play music popular in Ghana right now for me on our way there - it was a mixture of hip hop, R&B and reggae, the best of all three worlds. So off we go!
Now ya'll, traffic in D.C. and Dallas can be a mess but this traffic TAKES THE CROWN! Imagine sitting still in a hot car with no A/C for 5 minutes, moving 50 feet, sitting there for 5 more minutes, moving 50 more feet and so on and so forth. So the music was a saving grace and served as a conversation piece throughout the hot ride. And by the time we reached our destination, I was a sweaty hot mess and about 100 pounds lighter. This is where the drama begins: After an hour in a hot car, my cab driver took me to the wrong place and then lied and told me that this is where I wanted to be (hindsight = 20/20 because I didn't realize this at the time; Kate told me later that he was probably illiterate and didn't really know where the mall was in the first place). Unfortunately for me, I didn't have Jackie's number or a phone to call her on to confirm, so I got out of the cab and set off into the masses of people swarming around the "Accra Mall."
Well folks, if this was the mall, it wasn't like any I'd ever seen before. It was the Makola Market. Umm, let's see, what words can describe this. Ok, you know that swap meet I mentioned the other day at the Cultural Centre? Well, multiply THAT by five, add hundreds more people walking around with stuff on their heads, 20 degrees hotter than hell, the most massive traffic jam ever, people selling everything from huge pig's feet, snails, okra, fish and carrots to Issey Miyake and Obsession cologne...all on the street.
I was initially a little panicked. All I kept thinking was "How the hell am I going to find Jackie in this mess?" (it hadn't been confirmed for me yet that this wasn't the mall because a few blocks back a sign said "Makola Mall" and my driver had told me this was the same thing). After squeezing past cars, people and pig's feet, I saw a Fire Station - public servants to the rescue! I mean, if people who don't want their kids can leave them at the fire station in a basket then surely they can help me out of this hot ass conundrum. Hmmm, well, the most help they gave was breaking the news to me that this was indeed NOT the Accra Mall and that it was all the way on the other side of town (read: you can't walk there).
Ok, no problemo, I'd just get another cab to take me over there...or so I thought. Noone would pick me up, I mean NOONE. The drivers were not overly thrilled about getting out of one traffic jam to join another one going in the opposite direction. All the while I'm still maneuvering my way through the crowd and out of the market in the mall's direction so at least I'd be headed the right way when I found a cab. The whole way all I could think was "If only I had my iPod this wouldn't be so bad." So I started to sing some of my favorites in my head, humming as I went along to help ease the anxiety that was trying to creep up.
One mile and probably 10 cab rejections later, I was sweating my butt off - literally. Once I reached the National Theatre, I saw an older gentleman and asked if I was still walking in the right direction toward the mall. His name was Kopla, a jovial man who was definitely very proud to be from Ghana and beamed when I told him that I lived near President Obama. Well, Kopla jumped right into action to help me hail a cab, negotiate a fare and set me on my way to the mall. (Side note: I'm learning that if I mention that I live near Obama, I can get some kind of positive reaction out of people here). Another hour of traffic and more good Ghanaian and Nigerian music and I finally landed at the ShopRite at Accra Mall. I have never been so happy to see a grocery store in my life (and I loves me a grocery store)!
I knew Jackie wouldn't be at the mall anymore but I was determined to contact her to make sure she knew I'd come. This mall was similar to any you'd see in America, so I was sure I'd be able to get a phone and use the computer somewhere in here. I walked a little and spotted an Internet Cafe (check!), learned that I could get a phone a few stores down from that (check!), bought the phone, put minutes on it, went to the Internet cafe, got Jackie's phone number out of my email and gave her a call (check check check!). She was soooo relieved to hear from me (and I her) and was just returning to the mall to look for me that minute. We finally found each other and set off in traffic toward her house on the outskirts of Accra talking about jazz, Miles Davis and Kenny G on the way there.
All of this completely wiped away all the drama that I went through trying to get to Jackie, it was worth it all. I spent the rest of the day with Jackie and Tymon talking about everything under the sun in the kitchen while she cooked plantains, goat and fish soup and fufu for me and the family (her eyes lit up when she talked about how much she LOVES to eat McDonald's and go to the Chinese buffet when she visits America). The soup and fufu was THE BEST, seriously. She showed me pictures of family and church gatherings; Tymon's school performances; when she went to the Kenny G concert and he got so close she could reach out and touch him; plots of land her and Patrick just bought out in the country; and, trips to her cousin's pineapple farm in the country. We talked and laughed for hours until her husband Patrick came home to join the party in the kitchen. We all talked for awhile and then Patrick took me back to my hotel.
It was the best car ride ever! He played all kinds of Ghanaian and Nigerian music from his iPod and told me all about "Hip Life", the style of music that I'd been listening to in the cabs that's a mixture between hip hop and what they call "High Life." And if I'm the Queen of Random R&B, Patrick is the King (he had Syleena Johnson, Terrence Trent D'Arby and Soul for Real on his iPod- random!). His iPod was any girl's dream, a mix of all kinds of music from all around the world, new and old. When we reached the hotel, we sat out front for awhile going through each other's iPods, comparing music, introducing each other to new artists, playing the "Remember this one?" game and reminiscing about the good old days when music was great. What I loved about this moment was that we grew up worlds apart from each other but music united us in a moment in time with a similar good emotion that made it feel like we were neighbors. It was beautiful and such a great way to end a day that started off all wrong. One of the artists he introduced me to is a woman named Asa (pronounced "A-sha") from Nigeria. Her music is the truth ya'll, I love her. She just released her second album and I can't wait to get back home and download all her music. Here's one of my favorites: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pfiwtl3OhM.
Throughout the craziness of the day, I had music in the car, blasting from speakers in the market, floating through the mall from the music store (FYI: Rick Ross is in concert here on 12/28) and in my head as I walked down the street.
Music was my saving grace today and thank God for it (and Jackie, Tymon, Patrick and Kopla too).
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| Yes folks, that's right, we are driving into oncoming traffic. Why you ask? To avoid going up the road and making a u-turn. |
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| Here's the National Theatre...I couldn't walk any longer and was about to die of heat exhaustion when Kopla saved me! |
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| Peeps here LOVE them some Barack! |
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| Jackie's goat soup and fufu...yummmmmyyyyyy! |
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Sitting in traffic isn't so bad when you have constant reminders of how good God is everywhere you turn.
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