AN OPEN LETTER TO NIGERIAN PARENTS

AN OPEN LETTER TO NIGERIAN PARENTS

Dear All,

I wish to start by adding the benefit of my time as a Student, and was a resident in the United Kingdom, but residing in Abuja now.

The first thing that I discovered about UK-born, white, English undergraduates was that all of them did Holiday or weekend jobs to support themselves – including the Children of Millionaires amongst them. It is the norm over there – regardless of how wealthy their Parents are. And I soon discovered that virtually all other foreign Students did the same – except status-conscious Nigerians.

 

I also watched Richard Branson (owner of Virgin Airline) speaking on the Biography Channel. To my amazement, he said that his young Children travel in the economy class – even when the Parents (he and his wife) are in the upper class. Richard Branson is a Billionaire in Pound sterling. A quick survey would show you that only Children from Nigeria fly business or upper class to commence their studies in the UK. No other foreign Students do this. There is no aircraft attached to the Office of the Prime Minister in the UK. He travels on BA. And the same goes for the Royals. The Queen does not have an aircraft for her exclusive use.

 

These practices simply become the culture which the next generation carries forward. Have you seen the Car that Kate Middleton (the wife of Prince William) drives? VW Golf or something close to it. But there’s one core difference between them and us (generally speaking), they (even the billionaires among them) work for their money, most of us steal ours.

 

If we want our Children to bring about the desired change we have been praying for on behalf of our dear Country, then please, please let’s begin now and teach them to work hard so they can stand alone and most importantly be content, and not having to “steal” which seems to be the norm these days.

 

We have Nigerian Children who have never worked for 5 minutes in their lives insisting on flying “only” first or business class and using the latest Cars, fully paid for by their “loving“ Parents.

 

I often get calls from anxious Parents” my son graduated 2 years ago and is still looking for a job, can you please assist!”

 

“Oh really! So where exactly is “THIS CHILD?” is my usual question. “Why are you the one making this call dad/mum?”

 

I am yet to get a satisfactory answer, but between you and I, chances are that the big boy is cruising around Abuja with a babe dressed to the nines, in his Dad’s sparkling new SUV with enough “pocket money” to put your salary to shame. It is not at all strange to hear a 28-year-old who has NEVER worked for a day in his or her life in Nigeria but “earns” a six-figure “salary” from Parents for doing absolutely nothing.

I see them in my Office once in a while, 26 years old with absolutely no skill to sell apart from a shiny CV, written by his Dad’s Secretary in the Office. Ofcourse, he has a Driver at his beck and call and he is driven to the job interview. We have a fairly decent conversation and we get to the inevitable question- so, what salary are you looking to earn? The answer comes straight out – N250,000.00. I ask if that is per Month or annum.

 

“Ofcourse, it is per Month”

“Oh, why do you think you should be earning that much on your first job?”

“Well, because my current pocket money is N200,000.00 and I feel any employer should be able to pay me more than my Parents.”

 

No wonder corruption continues to thrive. We have a Society of Young People who have been brought up to expect something for nothing as if it were a birthright. Even though the examples I have given above are from Parents of considerable affluence, similar patterns can be observed from Abeokuta to Adamawa.

 

Wake up, Mum! Wake up, Dad! This syndrome – “my Children will not suffer what I suffered” is destroying your tomorrow. You are practically loving your Child to Death.

I learned the Children of Governor of a State with all the stolen (Billions) monies in their Custody, still, go about with security escort as wrecks. They are on drugs, several times and because of the drugs, they collapse in places. The escort will quickly pack them and off they go. What a life! No one wants to marry them.

 

Henry Ford said, “hard work does not kill.” We are getting everything wrong in Nigeria now, including the family setting. It is time to prepare your Children for tomorrow, the way the world is going, only those that are rugged, hard-working and smart working that will survive. How will your ward fare?

 

Please, forward this to all the Parents that you know and love. We must begin to save our young Children from the unintended consequences of “too much love” and weak parenting. It is the only way out. Let’s not leave everything to spirituality and say. God will help us.

 

The need for re-orientation among Parents is imperative and urgently desirable.

HALF A WORD, IS ENOUGH FOR THE WISE.

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