Friday 3 July 2015

Tanure's Journey by Eloho Onwah #100DaysOfGrowth



 Entry 17 by Eloho Onwah (Twitter: @Eloxie)


It was his send forth, the last day of his internship. Tanure looked around at the people that had become like family and sighed. Three months ago, his mum had told him he was going to be spending his summer interning at his uncle’s firm. He had his own ideas alongside his friends as to what they planned to do for summer, working wasn’t one and certainly not with his uncle. Looking back now, he could hardly believe how much he had changed.  He literally said to himself under his breath ‘is me be this?’ It felt as though he had gone through his own Karate Kid experience with lessons in every twist.

He remembered how on his first day as he was introduced around the company, he plotted how to be the worst behaved employee ever so he could get kicked out. He was obnoxious and condescending and made silly comments about the office as they went around.  

First thing he noticed was how everyone had a voice in the meetings. His uncle the CEO sat in the meetings and encouraged everyone to speak and in those meetings was such wisdom.  He learned there and then, not to always speak. Some people sit, listening and learning what others know. Others talk so much; they lose the wisdom they have. Looking back, he realized that everyone needs 3 clear strata of relationships. Older people to gain wisdom from and have strong links to leverage on today, peers to inspire you to greatness and create potential relationships for the near future and much younger friends to inspire freshness and to rely on in the latter years.

He was immediately assigned tasks and he remembered how he kept botching them deliberately. He learned to fail forward and that was not even because he knew better but because his supervisors stayed patiently goading him on. Nobody gave him a chance to fail until he got to a place where failing at a task was more about failing his supervisors than failing himself.  Subtly, he was inspired to be better and do better because in the team, he found someone to be better for. He realized that leadership was about his person more than his position.

Oh my, he learned the strength of relationships. His uncle was a fixer. If anything needed to be sorted, he knew someone. Secondary school friends, university friends, former work colleagues, they were all willing to assist. One day, he heard his uncle telling a manager, if you need to call a contact only when you need help, you don’t have a relationship. Nurture your contacts and make them fruitful. He saw how much work relationships required but he also saw first-hand how much they mattered. 

One day, he made an erroneous transfer, he was supposed to seek authorization but he didn’t. He saw his team lead own up for his error and take the fall for it. That forever changed his perception of authority and leadership. He learned that leadership was service and that there truly was no I in TEAM. As he warmed up to the organization, he didn’t even know at this time what his talents were.  He realized that some people see 'you'. They see what you can do and be long before you even see it yourself.  He learned to train his ears and heart to recognize those people. He affirmed this when he was given a project to handle. He didn’t feel capable but he didn’t realize his bosses had seen his latent skills for project management. With help, it turned out really successful.  He learned that God hides the 'graces' you need for your journey in people all around you. By simply recognizing the CEO’s ability to keep relationships, Mrs Alabi’s ability to plan and organize events, Kemi’s uncanny thing for numbers and Uduak’s thing for presentations, he was able to learn from each of them. Truly, recognizing and honoring what others carry was the first step to learning from them. 

He learned that the things we want the most typically have their downsides, often hidden and invisible like the underbelly of the lizard. He learned to embrace life as it comes, understanding that like this job turned out to be a blessing,  great things are not always packaged in our favorite wrapping paper.

His friends told him that he was different when they hung out during the weekends. He had realized that it was because his company had changed. Stay around older, wiser people and they drop off priceless, life changing nuggets inadvertently. Hidden in even their jokes are keys of life. He saw this first hand when he walked with Mrs. Salim to her car or when he offered to help Mr. Nnamdi get lunch. There was wisdom in even the jokes they cracked.

As he stood to say thank you to this small team that had changed his life, he realized more than ever before that gratitude is a fragrance so pleasant that it persists long after you are gone and makes people want you to visit again. He was determined to give his gratitude form in words and he saw how much it meant in the smiles in their eyes and in the warmth of the hugs.

Who would have thought a 3 month holiday job could change his life so much?

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