You know how we are often told we are all
born for greatness, and we will be famous and do awesome things and travel
around the world touching lives and we will be awesomely great.
Some even take it a step further; if your
name is not yet popular, then your life isn't really worth much. You aren't touching
a lot of lives. I hear this more in church and I'll like to, with your
permission, address a few things about such teachings.
Now then, if greatness depends on how
famous your name is, how many parts of the world you have toured, the audiences
you have spoken to, how influential you are, how wealthy you are: how about the
man in the village teaching teenage girls and mothers about maternal health,
canvassing for pads, birth control, etc., ones whose work is saving lives; is
he a failure?
How about doctors and health workers who
are risking their lives in battle lines treating war victims: are they failures?
How about a young girl who educates other youths on the importance of youth
participation and awareness in politics and rallying young people together to
change their societies: is she a failure?
How about the lady who nurses old people in
homes with a smile on her face every other day: she too is a failure? How about
a mother who's been left with five
children and makes sacrifices everyday to see them eat and through school, who
probably doesn't even have a name or an online presence: is she also a failure?
Or the young graduate who had to improvise on Keke transportation to earn an
income because he couldn't land job: on whom a family of 10 depends on; is he a
failure?
We need to redefine greatness. We need to
get back to basics. If greatness were about fame, how about actors, singers, celebrities
whose names resound in all parts of the earth, who have large followerships but
whose lives exude such negativity. Many of them strung up on drugs, court cases
and riotous life styles. They are great?
If greatness were about money and
influence, how about our politicians who are senselessly rich but whose wicked
policies have cost millions of lives across the world. Are they great?
What then is greatness? I will simply
define it from my heart, and not from any dictionary or source. Greatness is
doing something that makes you happy and that makes another person smile. It could
be a one off thing or something you commit your life to. It could be doing small
things in a great way or doing great things in great ways. Bottom line is that
you are happy doing them and you are adding value right where you are.
When greatness is defined this way we see that
everyone is great. We also see that greatness is not a herculean task; it is an
everyday thing. A smile can be great when given to a broken heart. Food can be great
when offered to a hungry person. Medication can be great when administered to
an old woman who is almost losing her sight. You see, greatness is just around you.
We now see that we don't have to travel
around the world or answer big names to be great. We just do great and that everyday.
It also removes the pressure of doing extraordinary things to become popular or
influential or any other parameter used to measure greatness. I too have been told
I'll be great and popular and all that. You know what it does to you? It puts
you under pressure to perform or become what people expect or what the society
recognizes as greatness. At times you crush people who care, lose important life's
moment, do unbelievable things to become "great." You get there and
it becomes empty because you lost sight of the real essence of living: Happiness
and value.
So, I'm canvassing for a shift in paradigm.
Let's quit putting ourselves under pressure to fit into a picture of greatness.
Greatness is a daily thing and should be done naturally. I'm not asking us to
be lazy, not study, enhance on our skills and talents. Those are what makes
life worth living, enhancing yourself and getting better at what you do and at
living. (Wouldn't it be a shame for someone to still be bathing you, putting
food into your mouth, wiping your back after shiting while you are reading this
and you aren't sick? My six year old niece would rather die than allow me feed
her. The young lady is growing and that's what life should be.) While you do
all of that, enjoy life's beautiful moments, and make someone else smile. That's
greatness enough. When you eventually become the president of the world, for
the few of us who will attain those lofty positions, you will still have people
to enjoy your fame/wealth with.
And if you fail to make that list, what the
heck! You are great right where you are as long as you are really living from
your Heart and making one more person's life better.
To the great us, you and I.
Igbokwe Vivian Ijeoma
scriptwriter87@gmail.com
twitter/Instagram: @club7teen

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