The Value of
Relationships
The past two years,
with all their trials, have offered a profound lesson in the importance of
relationships; those that endure and those that falter. Relationships exist
along a spectrum, from those that nurture our innermost selves to those that
deplete us.
Against this
backdrop, I have begun to treasure those rare connections where vulnerability
is met with empathy, and where the bond transcends circumstance or convenience.
At the other end of
the spectrum are exploitative and self-serving relationships, built purely on
transaction. They thrive when needs are met but diminish rapidly when
expectations go unmet, leaving little room for understanding or compassion.
No showing they care
Sadly, I find few
examples of truly healthy family relationships. Expressions of care are often
superficial, their evidence weak or absent. That realisation has prompted a
deliberate withdrawal, a choice to preserve space for safety, clarity, and
renewal.
As September
unfolded, following months of chaos and emotional upheaval, I decided to impose
complete radio silence on all communication from Nigeria. Messages remained
unread, calls unanswered, and I extricated myself from group chats.
While part of me was
unsettled by the choice, another part found unexpected peace in it. After
thirty-five years away, much of what happens there no longer requires my
attention. Most interactions involve people I have never met and could hardly
recognise in passing.
Distance became both
shield and salve. It allowed me to detach from the drama, rumours, and constant
reinterpretations of events that once held power over my emotions. Too often,
such narratives are presented as truth yet serve only to unsettle, casting doubt
on where fiction ends and reality begins.
Nurture the
profitable
This uncertainty
highlights the fragile nature of some relationships, as they exhibit little
evidence of trust or goodwill, with corrosive elements overshadowing any kind
of beneficial aspects.
By carrying this
silence into October, I found calm. The reward was a steady quiet, being
neither perturbed nor disturbed. It allowed me to engage, when necessary, on my
own terms, or more often, to refrain from engaging altogether.
We should constantly
review the quality and viability of our relationships, regardless of what has
hitherto made them significant, for they might have fallen into disrepair and
become unprofitable.
If I sustain this
until year's end, keeping close those who truly matter whilst maintaining
distance from those absent in my darker hours, I believe I will emerge stronger
and healthier. That, at least, is my conviction.