Dear Hafizah: A Letter To My Threshold of Glee
Dear Hafizah,
I am sorry that you haven’t heard from me lately. I have developed a habit of trying to ignore
your existence, not because I don’t want to share in your smiles or because I despise the way
you own my threshold of glee, but because the way you pretend your love to me is too much
of a deception to bear and because, maybe, it is time that I could no longer retain a room for
you in my heart, and I have had enough tears from you that drown me away from your life.
Yesterday, exactly the time I used to overcome my ego to call you—that time when the sun
receded and the moon sparkled its glow, nearly adoring all the sky with its luminescence
that resembled your glimmering smile—I was so engrossed in thought of what was
actually the problem that my light didn’t send in a call to hear about the ache my body
developed in her absence. I tried calling all the lines you once called me with, but getting
you through was nothing I was close to. My heart grew a sudden consciousness, meditating
on what was happening, and my star’s light was dimmed with the rays of silence. I tried
consoling my heart to let go of the thought, but each effort I made drew me more and more
closer to the memories we had during our stay in secondary school.
That time when you would, during physics classes, turn around with, to me, the purest
cosmetics on earth—your smile—just to see if I was also stealing a glance at the angelic
beauty shrouded in your never-grow-old face. At biology classes, when the subject master
arrived, you would always find a way to tease me, a way to let me remember that I didn’t
love biology at all, yet it’s your favorite. You would spring up to your feet in merriment just
to greet the biology master. Still, the memories of the day you were made the head girl of
our school and I, the head boy, pierced my mind—that moment when I was smiling not
because of the position but because of the way I got myself cuddled to you in the students’
leadership. I thought that would catalyse the rate at which the exothermic reaction between
us occurred. Yet, all these memories are things of the past, and because I couldn’t get you
through that night, I walked out of my father’s house and proceeded to your area, praying
that God would help me have a clash with you.
I was moving with a mind that deserted my body when I got into an encounter with our
classmates; among them was a friend of mine whom you hold as your boyfriend. The first
time I learned that the love I wanted to get from you was already offered to someone
voluntarily, and he didn’t care about you the way you do, I became bereft of the words my
tongue would nurture for speaking out to you. Here I was—a student who demoted himself
back to your class, causing him an additional year in school—searching for your love only to
find it already placed in someone’s heart—a wretched blow that I couldn’t let pass just like
that without further trying to secure your love back in my heart, a place where only your
thoughts dwell.
The very moment I met them, I felt happiness surging in me and grief mushrooming in my
heart—a happiness that I saw someone close to your heart and a grief that my eyes caught a
glimpse of who took me away from owning your love. I was disturbed to meet him
conversing with you on a call that you insisted on initiating. To my surprise, you even moved
to ask him to come over to your house, but he refused. Out of the love I had to see you then,
I coerced him to go for you, promising to be in his company. I did that just to see you. Believe
me, that’s just it. And when I saw you, even though jealousy couldn’t let us speak to each
other, I got comforted that my eyes were fed with what they longed for, and my heart was
reminded that, however much effort was pulled together towards reaching your heart, there
would always be a single result: a barricade standing along the verge of a river that drowned
your heart.
Behold! My heart has endured so much pain that I will die for you by now. I was the first to
say I loved you. The first time I saw the light coming up from your smile at night, I wondered
why God created stars while you were still alive on earth. That time, I baffled with blocks just
to scribble sweet words of love that will quench your thirst for love. Do you think of the
times I carried our class’s marker just to paint our board with the colour of your love residing
in my heart? Can you recall the time a teacher asked me to explain what I wrote, and
punishment followed that? I doubt if you can still reminisce about the times I sent a love
letter to you, craving your genuine love and care. Yet, all my effort was in no way leading me
to you.
As the days grew old, you admitted me into your heart as a beloved brother whom you held
like blood. You share with me the tears you got, and we celebrate each smile one of us got.
You take me by heart more than a girlfriend does to her heartthrob. I really feel valued and
secured every time we talk.
Now that I no longer feel the pain of seeing you fall in love with someone who is not me, or
even if I do, it’s with less energy than the degree that can warm my heart, I decided to write
to you.
Dear Light of the World, it’s time to let out what my heart has been treasuring within its
house for a while. Like a pregnant-nursing mother, it straps your love as a sister in its flesh
and carries the baby of a love aiming to see you become a medical doctor in its center. For
the remaining days that our eyes will be met at a centre again, they will send a signal to my
life—a mark that there’s something huge you mean to me. The way you propel smiles to
cover me up keeps getting me closer and closer to you every day. My heart has already
treasured you as a light that brightens its way. My eyes are still hungry for your soul-
soothing smile. My ears became used to cuddling the melody your voice sparkles. My
sensitive skin now knows the softness of your palm. Thus, my life sees you as its threshold of
glee.
And now that our school days are about to turn a page in our history, causing us to explore
different routes of academic journey, how do I call myself a living thing when you, my soul,
are not in any way going to be mine? I ask. I only ask…
With love,
Hafiz
Contributor’s Bio
Yahuza Usman [Crawling Writer], the Secretary of Taraba State branch of Hilltop Creative
Arts Foundation, is a Nigerian award-winning author, essayist, spoken word artiste, book
reviewer, Wikimedian, typist, graphic designer, short-story writer, and a versatile poet who
has many of his works featured in literary magazines, including: Al-Mir’aatu Magazine, World
Voices Magazine, Literary Yard, Itell Stories and Everything Beautiful, ArtingArena, Afrihil
Press, Opinion Nigeria, Synchronized Chaos, The Daily Pointers, Spillwords Press, Cajum Mutt
Press, and elsewhere. He is the recipient of the first prize winner; Nigeria Prize for Teen
Authors (Poetry, 2024), On-the-spot Non-fiction writing at HIASFEST 2023, and emerged as
the most valuable male contestant [star boy] of HIASFEST 2024 after winning three prizes.
Yahuza hails from Jalingo and can be reached via [email protected] or on Facebook:
Yahuza Usman, Twitter(X): @YahuzaUsmanJ, and Instagram: @yahuzausman
This piece remembered me my first love, how i become a little madness simply because of a lady, just take heart maybe you are ahead of something good and more benefiting that’s why you didn’t get her love. I really appreciate with this write up keep the ink flowing.
This piece really touched my heart, just take heart start boy your future is good keep the ink flowing.