Hubby once asked how I always knew when he
was short of funds and I told him the same thing I’ve said to broke people
who had been broke at some point in time but had tried to hide their broke status.
Broke people give out same “vibe” everywhere. And brokenness has no hiding place. Lool
Hubby used to belong to the school of thought that
you only start saving when the money has accumulated into tens and hundreds of
thousands and anything below that is meant for “flenjure” and to “jollificate”.
No thanks to PMB’s regime and his ever aka-gum prudent spouse, he now
understands that’s a very terrible mentality.
There are some good sides to being broke though and
usually, when you are broke, you start seeing the good benefits to things or
situations you would have never even given a second thought before.
YOU
BECOME EXTREMELY HUMBLE & POLITE:
This is the most visible
sign of a broke person actually. You see in Nigeria, the most surplus attitude
a lot of us have is pride. We show our pride everywhere, on Lagos roads,
parties, on Instagram, Facebook, when we meet LASTMA, FRSC and VIO officials,
everywhere you can think of. The air of pomposity we display daily can’t be
quantified and we try as much as possible to intimidate everyone we come across
with the “Do you know who I am” attitude.
Some try to keep it subtle but pride and arrogance has no idle place. But you
see, when you are broke, humility becomes your middle name. You start to notice
the lower echelon people on your street, exactly how much PHCN charges you this
month and compare it to last month’s bill, scrutinize the bill from Shoprite,
argue with your mechanic and vulcanizer heatedly and shamelessly. And for the
men, they become humble at home using more of “please” and “thank you” whenever
they are offered food or something they know they didn’t contribute a dime
to.
This is usually the first sign women
see and know “bobo yii tii broke gan nii”.
Even on the road, when you are broke, you become very polite and less
aggressive because you don’t want to jam
anybody as money no dey. This also
extends to parties. When you have wads of cash in your pocket, you go to a
party reeking of extreme arrogance such that when it’s time to spray, the way
you even saunter to the center stage sef,
they will know you have arrived. But when you have just a flat line wallet, you
collect your jollof rice and one fish with humility from the ushers and also
quietly leave. Lol. This is why I’m wary of humility from people who are yet to
hammer. Most times, na wash.
YOU
BECOME VERY GENTLE:
This is another giveaway sign. I once visited
a friend whose hubby was amazingly quiet that day, extremely nice and very patient
with the kids. When he left us to go into the room with the kids in tow, I had
to voice out to my friend “mehn, your boo
is so quiet and peaceful” to which she responded very fast, “ma da lohun, ko sowo lowo e nii. If not,
koba ti ri irin gbere gbere e lo”. (Let your Yoruba friend or neighbor
translate that for you. lol) This even applies to me as well. When Hubby usually
stayed back home on a Friday night, I initially expressed concern and worry and
hoped he wasn’t coming down with a fever. But as time passed, I knew being home
on a Friday meant he was short of cash. A man’s ego most especially is tied to
his wallet. So when a man is short of cash, the gentility in character becomes
laughable. When we are broke, humans generally take life easy and are very
polite to the next person.
YOU
BECOME AWARE OF WHAT’S HEALTHY & WHAT’S NOT:
It’s safe to say the sweetest things in life are not usually the healthiest.
The more processed a meal, the more unhealthy it is perceived to be; pizza,
burger, frizzy drinks, indomie, Sugar, Popcorn, expensive jewelry etc. Lol.
When you are broke, you become very prudent and begin to convince yourself that
the things you cannot afford are actually not good in the first place. Remember
the Naija arrogance pointed out in
the first point? It applies here. Rather than tell ourselves we simply cannot
afford it, we try to convince ourselves that it isn’t good for our blood sugar,
our skins and blood pressure anyway. And besides, isn’t it the best time to lose those calories gained during
Xmas?
YOU
BECOME MORE RECEPTIVE TO BUSINESS IDEAS AND MORE AGGRESSIVE TOWARDS LOOKING FOR
MORE STREAMS OF INCOME:
When you are broke, you become jack of
all trades (gbogbo oja lowo). What
you sold last week is usually different from what you are now selling. People
may even begin to wonder if you are not trying to engage in yahoo yahoo as such is your hunger to do
everything. All na jamajama. And the
more broke you are, the higher the likelihood that you will churn out new
business ideas daily. (Lool, nope don’t
look at me Jide. I’m simply a woman of many passions).
YOU
BECOME VERY PRICE CONSCIOUS:
I won’t even lie, I’m also
guilty of this. I usually don’t bother so much about the prices of products as
I purchase in bulk most times. But whenever I was short of funds and I was
charged in bulk, I switch straight to the local side of me, “bawo ni mefa shey ma je N7,500? Elo wa
leyokan? Oya eyo meta kuro”. (Ask your Yoruba friend to translate for you.
Lol) Even at awkward places, you haggle prices. I once tried to purchase a high
end brand pain relief medicine for my toddler at Medplus but when I heard the
price, I had to bring down my brand choice to a much more affordable one. All na paracetamol. S**t happens jare.
You also find yourself noticing N50, N100, N150, and N200 price change in some products and begin to haggle prices of things that ordinarily, you just picked up without any care in the world; agbalumo, tatase, watermelon, crayfish, Pampers and hoping the seller removes at least N100 or more. One funny time, Hubby saw a hairstyle he wanted me to adorn on Instagram but by the time I was ready to get the hair done, he was already short of cash but had to still pay for it as per his promise. The hair was so pricey that when he saw the total, he didn’t know when he blurted “jekin mo koto tu irun yen o”. Lmaoo. May God help us all jare.
You also find yourself noticing N50, N100, N150, and N200 price change in some products and begin to haggle prices of things that ordinarily, you just picked up without any care in the world; agbalumo, tatase, watermelon, crayfish, Pampers and hoping the seller removes at least N100 or more. One funny time, Hubby saw a hairstyle he wanted me to adorn on Instagram but by the time I was ready to get the hair done, he was already short of cash but had to still pay for it as per his promise. The hair was so pricey that when he saw the total, he didn’t know when he blurted “jekin mo koto tu irun yen o”. Lmaoo. May God help us all jare.
YOU
BECOME MORE EMPATHETIC TOWARDS THE PLIGHT OF PEOPLE WHO PRACTICALLY LIVE LIKE
THIS ALL THROUGH THE YEAR:
Being broke makes you literally understand
the plight of other people who are lesser than you in terms of financial
strength. In Nigeria, our average level of empathy isn’t so enormous. So long
as it’s not happening to us or those around us, we rarely bother. So if you had
never been broke, there’s no way you would have known what the other side of
the fence looked like. But when you now experience brokenness on a medium or
large scale, forgerrit, you
automatically become more empathetic. Your listening skills also double during
this time and you become less judgmental. Sometimes, you channel this boredom
to social media. Lool. You may also attend church services more. You
automatically become more religious especially if you attributed your
brokenness to the woman you saw when you travelled last to the village and who
prayed for you longer than usual. It will conveniently fly from your brain that
you attended too much Hard Rock café or Quilox events in the last few months or
the various people you bought Vals gift for, or all the hair wigs you bought
and Uber trips you took were responsible. During this time, you will rather
faint than acknowledge that you acquired more liabilities than assets hence
your brokenness. So the more suspicious you are of your sudden brokenness, the
higher your church or mosque activities.
YOU
BECOME VERY HELPFUL AT HOME:
Well, we are all
guilty of this sha especially if the
person we are living with is now left to help our broke status. Once you are
broke, you become very available to help around the home and may even offer to
run some errands and even attend the family events you hadn’t attended in
years. (Lol yeah guys, we know that when
you stay more at home especially when you are not ill, your wallets aren’t
smiling)
All in all, while being broke should be a time that
calls for some deep retrospect and change in attitude on what was not so good
in the buoyant days, most times, the feeling is more temporary than a sore
throat because many people simply go back to their spendthrift state once some
small change comes back to them. We simply forget everything we picked up while
being broke. It’s one of the many reasons some ladies are wary of sticking it
out with a struggling man because based on past logistics, the humility that
was shown during these days were temporary and their real colors come out once
the money starts to flood in.
Money changes people basically because there is
the inherent notion that power should automatically follow whoever has the money.