GhanaStar
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Music
No Result
View All Result
GhanaStar
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Music
No Result
View All Result
GhanaStar
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

And I Realized I Was Dreaming

August 25, 2016
in Opinion
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

I have no idea why I live; maybe to protect myself from dying or maybe I live just to hide under my dreams. Bedwetting is something I dread a lot, so in many instances when I’m about to dream, I remind myself that, hey, make sure you don’t think you are standing by a gutter.

You Might Also Like

4 Reasons Not To Give In To Social Pressure

11 Beautiful Signs Your Relationship Is Perfect

An Interesting Travel Experience Through The Eyes Of Amarachi, A Travel Blogger

In so far as I don’t dream that I’m standing by a gutter, I will not be deceived into believing that it is time to wee-wee, so I will not face any morning shame.

So I have come to assure myself that I live to dream. I don’t want to wake up, even though I feel the realities of everyday life. And that is the problem I have with myself; my own doubt of my own existence.

You remember the judges who took the goats as bribe to subvert justice? And you remember those judges who exchanged sex for justice, as in Anas’ video? When I first heard these scandals about the judges I knew I had done my thing again, dreaming to think that anything of that sort could have happened, that these few judges could be so contemptuous of their own selves, so much as to open their courts for ordinary mortals like us to ‘pee’ inside.

I’m waiting for a day when someone will attempt to wake me up from my dream, that day will be war, maybe that will be the first time I will commit murder, and my wish is that when I have finished killing and found myself in jail, my feeling of being in jail will also be a dream that I will never wake up to.

Reality is just too harsh, difficult and contradictory. I have wondered many times why someone is not waking me up from my dreams just so that I can taste life, just to know what real life looks like, real life just for a day. My only fear is whether I will be able to resume my dreams after I have tasted reality.

Then I told myself that it is not necessary. It is a risk that could be too costly, assuming am unable to go back to sleep, and to continue to dream, to dream of a world where I could go to the president to ask him directly, whether, taflatse, he too is dreaming?

Why not? It would not have been my fault. This is something I could easily blame on my state of affairs, dreaming, that I’m just dreaming that I’m telling the president in the face what he needs to be told.

After all it is only in my dreams that I could go to the president, without any appointment, and without any security barriers, to sit down with him as a friend, and to have such conversations with him, and if I realize anything wrong with his dreams, I will let him know.

That in my dream I will see all the powerful men, and all the less powerful men, at war with each other. I will see who initiated the montie petition, how the petition got to the Council of State, and what went into the advise upon which the president did not pardon, but remissioned (whatever that means) the montie 3 contemnors, and I will know which interest the president served, Ghana or his party.

Unfortunately during the cause of this dream, I came across myself praying, a very nice successful prayer; that God has pardoned Ghana’s deadliest convicted criminal, Ataa Ayi… I never believed myself, even in the dream, I thought this was a mistake. But no, it wasn’t. Ataa Ayi had actually, in my dream, been set free, visiting the homes of the families of the victims of his robbery, to demonstrate that he is now a free man, visiting the children of the men who he killed, and the women he raped, most of them living in squalor.

In one of such instances, still in my dream, I saw Ataa Ayi waving to a woman whose husband he killed, after she was raped, and then I realized this woman bore a child out of that rape, and this child sat by this woman while Ataa Ayi passed by her in full royalty. The woman did not comment, except a small notice; that pain, hate, and vengeance have taken over this woman’s heart.

One of the episodes of such unrelenting dreams was when I saw the Chief Justice, Justice Georgina Wood, at a wedding reception somewhere in Cantonment. And she came with her husband and children, and uncles and aunties. At the same wedding was Salifu Maase, Alistair Nelson, and Ako Gunn. The president, His Excellency John Mahama, joined midway into the ceremony.

As the Chief Justice sat through the ceremony, with all the many years of law school, and with all the many years of practice, and with all the many years of being at the Supreme court, sitting with her family, side by side Salifu Maase, as the president introduced them to each other; this is Ako Gunn, this is Alistair, the two young men who wanted to marry you…

And as the president did the introduction, Georgina Wood’s husband looked on, her children looked on, and there flew a couple of tears, and I saw her reaching out for a wiper, attempting to hide her shame, struggling to be unnoticed, as she cleans her eyes, of the tears, tears caused by impunity, cleaning the tears caused by a woman’s world, and the one caused by power…

Still in my dream, unwilling to wake up, I saw Alistair, Ako Gunn, and Salifa Maase, as they shoveled behind the president, moved from table to table, shaking hands and hugging, and congratulating themselves, of a team that works, a partnership of pain, of freedom that sacrificed justice, or maybe of a gross moral gloss.

As more people joined the wedding party, I saw Justice Atuguba left the venue in silence, trying to be a man, refusing to tear. I saw a dispirited Justice Sophia Akuffo and her husband and children, walking away in fear and trembling, trying hard to avoid the president’s entourage making their way to her table, for she was too afraid to behold the sight of Salifu Maase, a man invincible enough to escape the attention of our woman Attorney General so as to see nothing wrong with him issuing death threats on the only woman Chief Justice Ghana has ever produced.

As the judges, one after the other, filed out of the wedding reception, it was obvious to me how they had lost the battle with themselves, and I wondered the meaning of the tears they wore in their eyes.

As I flew in my dreams, I saw a Supreme Court where judges queued to be married to political appointees. I saw a supreme court whipped in line with politics, I saw a supreme court where the judges will confer with the presidency before delivering judgments. I saw a supreme court which freed rapists, murderers, and robbers once such criminals were seen in political colors.

I saw judges, men and women, who began to dream of the end to themselves, a de-motivated judges who only existed because they wished to continue drawing their salaries.

I saw Justice Georgina Wood going to the bank, asking her banker how much balance was in her account, and I saw her writing GH¢200 on the cheque, and handed same to the cashier, and as she was handed back the GH¢200 in cash, I saw her sneaked out of the bank as she fought back tears.

Then as she emerged out of the bank, I saw Salifu Maase entering the same bank, and without asking for his balance, he wrote GH¢5,000 for a weekend, a reward for a well deserved taming of our courts.

In one of the dreams, I think the part three of the dreams, I saw myself having a conversation with President John Mahama, and he was asking my opinion on the Remission he has granted the montie 3, and I had told him the truth; that he might have been legally right to have freed the three contemnors. He might have lived within his powers to grant pardon. It might have been a good thing he did by following due process and getting Alistair and his men out of jail.

But I also told him that he had just killed a baby girl called Georgina Theodora Wood, that he had just ran a knife through and sliced her life away. The president asked me to be honest with him, so I was, even in my dreams, that he had just killed the only female hen left to lay our eggs.

Then I walked away quietly, as I realized it has all been a dream…

Tags: dreamjudgesPresident John MahamaSupreme Court

Related News

4 Reasons Not To Give In To Social Pressure

by
February 28, 2017
0

There is something about pressure from loved ones, peers and people in our social circle that places such a heavy...

11 Beautiful Signs Your Relationship Is Perfect

by
February 28, 2017
0

Most of us have read enough and been through enough to know the signs to look out for that indicate a relationship's...

An Interesting Travel Experience Through The Eyes Of Amarachi, A Travel Blogger

by
February 27, 2017
0

Jumia Travel had an interview with Amarachi, a Systems Engineer who runs Chapter One travel blog. She shared her travel...

Ten Tips For Girls On How To Get Ready For A Date

by
February 27, 2017
0

When you are getting ready for a date, especially when it's a first date or when you've only met the...

Next Post

Mahama Should Focus On Pertinent Issues, Not Akufo-Addo – Agyarko

IMANI Shreds NPP, NDC Campaign Promises

Categories

  • Africa & World
  • African Music Lyrics Directory
  • Business
  • Business Directory
  • celebrities
  • Computing
  • Diaspora
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Feature
  • Featured
  • Ghana Elections 2016
  • Headlines
  • Health
  • International
  • Internet
  • Jobs
  • lifestyle
  • Music
  • News
  • Offbeat
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Profiles
  • Religion
  • Security
  • Seth Terkper
  • Smart Home
  • Social Networks
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Top Stories
  • World News

Tags

accra addo africa Association football Banks - NEC business Business_Finance chairman Donald Trump economy education Entertainment_Culture environment Geography of Africa ghana Ghanaian people government Government of Ghana Human Interest John Dramani Mahama john mahama Law_Crime mahama minister MPs elected in the Ghanaian parliamentary election Nana Addo Nana Addo Dankwa Nana Akufo-Addo National Democratic Congress National Democratic Congress (NDC) New Patriotic Party New Patriotic Party (NPP) nigeria politics Politics of Ghana president Social Issues Social Media Social Media & Networking sports United Kingdom United Nations United States Vice President War_Conflict

Recent Posts

  • Government of Ghana Unveils Official Portraits of President John Dramani Mahama and Vice President Prof. Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang
  • Who Is the Woman (Sheena Gakpe) in Sarkodie’s Latest Hit “No Sir” and Why Everyone Is Talking about It
List of Ghana Holidays for 2020
Ghana Geocoding
Ghana Cedis Exchange API
Ghana Maps Service
Toyota Cars Auto Auction History
  • African Music Lyrics Directory
  • Business Directory
  • Diaspora
  • Top Stories

All rights reserved © 2021 GhanaStar.com

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Music

All rights reserved © 2021 GhanaStar.com