post

My E.V.M.

Is it not interestingly queer that you sometimes find yourself whistling to some silly tune
from an advertisement that you cannot remember hearing yet you often forget important stuff?
Human memory has always fascinated me and after some research – well, not really, just prolonged
thought – I can table my findings.

If any memory happens to invoke joy, fear and sorrow significantly, then that particular memory
is likely to be vivid.

Joyous incidents are hardly forgotten – a bride never forgets the events of her wedding day.

Incidents causing fear will almost certainly never really leave your mind, and this is from
first hand experience. One chilly night (it was actually quite warm but I remember it chilly)
while in my bottom bunk bed, the top bunk came tumbling down right after I had scratched on to
it the first 20 elements of the periodic table of elements. Since then, I have never had a
problem remembering these elements.

Similarly, sorrowful events are etched onto our minds. It still surprises me that my mother
can describe, in detail, the killing and eating of her beloved pet sheep, Joginder, yet he
passed on when she was just six years old.

Indeed joy, fear and sorrow create vivid memories. What happens when they are all present in
one single memory? The result is what I call an E.V.M – extremely vivid memory.

One particular Sunday at Nyahururu Elite Senior School, whilst playing soccer match for a
300-piece carton of short-cake biscuits – which were quite valuable in a school where both
money and foodstuff are outlawed amongst students – I suffered a serious knock to the head
while defending a particularly lovely aerial ball that was goal-bound. That was the beginning
of my EVM

At that moment, it seemed like nothing. The excitement, constant encouragement to continue,
cheering fans and the desire for the biscuits kept me going. It was one of those moments in
team sports where you can hear and see nothing else but your team-mates, and you all play like
gods.

Two days later, that knock came back to haunt me in a recurrent nose-bleed. Having overwhelmed
the school nurse, I spent that night in a dingy hospital, sharing a room with a patient in for
excessive intake of (possibly illicit) alcohol, who kept murmuring incorrigible nonsense.

Never ending drowsiness, bad food, nurses bearing syringes and a large-fingered doctor trying
to stuff my nose with a cloth soaked in a sweet tasting, disgusting oily substance added to my
misery.

I had not slept a wink by 4 am. Unfortunately, the sorrow I was in invoked a recollection of
the day’s up-to-the-minute happenings. What had I done to deserve this? My sorrow brought fear.
‘What if I don’t make it?’ I asked myself. A song with the chorus: ‘I wonder will I ever see
tomorrow?’ played in my mind. My fear was now apparent. Not fear of death but fear of not
achieving my goals.

The next day, my parents arrived to take me home just as I was about to eat under the watchful
eyes of two burly nurses trying to wrestle my awakening room-mate. This, coupled with the
extremely simple treatment of my condition in Nairobi, brought me unparalleled joy.

Strangely, when I look back at this E.V.M, as I am doing now, I enjoy the memories. I might
regret this one day, but I would gladly welcome another E.V.M just so that I can live long
through it learn from it and be able to remember and laugh about it.

What’s your EVM?


Blab-away for as little as 1¢/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using Yahoo! Messenger with Voice.

post

To all KBWers: Kenyan Blogs Webring CARNIVAL

Hi. Has anyone noticed that the Kenyan Blggers webring is getting too large! (To large to keep in touch with all the blogs, or at least many of them)?

In fact, my friend who joined very recently says that he doesn’t even feel he is in a webring. We (him and I) have been thinking very hard about this. I think the KBW should be a more active part of the blogoshpere. We all keep our blogs up to date, but thats not what I’m talking about. We need to do something together, we as members of the KBW should be more involved in each other’s blogs. We need some activity to galvanize us as one and compell us to know our webring much better. (This will also help in next year’s Kaybees, ama?)

Having thought about this really hard, today I think I came across our solution: A Blog Carnival. This can be a neat way to keep up with all KBW blogs and give everyone a chance to be heard(read?) by the rest of us. I think its an idea worth thinking about.

What is a blog carnival?

I identified two types of carnivals, the first one, common in blog rings, is a type of travelling party in which each member of the ring is given an opportunity to host the carnival. Since we have 700+ blogs, we can give everyone one day on the spotlight. As in the carnival start from blog 1 on the ring going forwards. At least then, some of us would have 700 days to prepare for that day when all eyes and mice(that rhymes) are on us. I ruled out the carnival being weekly coz some of us would have to wait 700 weeks!!!

The other type of carnival is a type where the carnival management team (that would be KBW management?) gives us a topic that we all blog about and then hosts everyone’s posts on that topic on some site or, even better, on someone’s blog. This is much like what happened on Kenyan Blogger’s Day 2006.

I propose a sort of hybrid carnival; a travelling carnival in which each week we all write on a specific topic and then all our posts are collected and posted on one person’s blog. Of course this person should be someone who contributed to that week’s carnival. Sine KBW is so large, this thing can’t move from blog 1 onwards since some people would never get to participate so I propose that we come up with some way to choose the next week’s hosting blog. We could, probably, leave this decision to teach week’s host.

This is a very rough idea but I think all of us, as members of the KBW, should give it a serious thought.

Updates
1.This can significantly boost each hosts blog rank (eg at technorati)
2. Check out Blog Carnival.