Saturday, 3 December 2016

International Day for People with Disabilities at Ekwetsembeni Special School

Today is International Day for People with Disabilities and I spent the better part of it at Ekwetsembeni Special School in Mbabane. An organisation called Farai Foundation (I hope to write about them soon), with the help of other sponsors, threw a Christmas party for the children at the school. I had planned to go to the function about a week ago, then something upset me and I decided I would spend the day moping. Then early this morning the managing editor of the paper I contribute to called and asked me to come to the function. I wasn’t particularly dismayed about going because I had initially planned to go. I am glad I attended.
Being a mom to an autistic child, there are times when I feel autism is the absolute worst thing that ever happened to this planet. Attending the Ekwetsembeni Christmas party made me think; hmm autism is probably not the worst of conditions (I still wish I could wish it away regardless). I saw children with all manner of physical disabilities, some that I had never seen before. I don’t know if this is a sin, but I found myself with a lump in my throat and hot tears in my eyes asking, “Where was God when all this was happening?” Most of the children were evidently from disadvantaged backgrounds and it was quite sad to think about what their future looked like in country where people with disabilities are not fully supported. It strengthened my resolve to keep raising awareness on disabilities and the pushing for the need to support people with them so that they reach their optimal.

People with disabilities should only fail to get somewhere because of natural limitations that cannot be surpassed, never because society failed them by not creating an enabling environment. What I yearn for all people with disabilities is access to education and health care. The world is too rich for people with disabilities to go through life without those two essential needs. It only takes a bit of commitment from government, the corporate world and society in general to ensure that people with disabilities are able to lead a dignified life. Farai Foundation joined forces with many organisations and the day was a resounding success. It can be done – on an even bigger scale than one day events (not to belittle what Farai Foundation did, but to encourage people that we can go bigger and better). Imagine how the country, or the continent of Africa would be if everyone who could would financially adopt a child with a disability by offering to put him/her through school and providing all the necessities? People resent it when people with disabilities sit by roadsides asking for alms, but how do they not take to the streets if they are not educated?
Congratulations Farai Foundation for hosting a successful event. It was very heartwarming to see how happy the children were. However, I wish the playlist had been more carefully selected. Playing Nasty C's Juice Back and Hell Naw at a children's party was a quite in bad taste.
What have you done lately to assist someone with a disability? 

Monday, 22 August 2016

First Swazi Traditional Wedding I attended

Last week I had the pleasure to attend the first Swazi traditional wedding since relocating here in 2014. It was quite beautiful and captivating as I'd never witnessed anything like it before. In Zimbabwe there are traditional marriages, but I have never heard of a Zimbabwean traditional wedding. How the bride danced the day away!! It was her day to shine, so I thought, dance away girl! I also couldn't help thinking, "I hope her man will give her a reason to dance all the days of their lives together. Even if she doesn't dance, I hope he treats her in a way that  makes her always feel like dancing." The tendency nowadays is to expend so much energy into having the perfect wedding day and be neglectful of perfecting the marriage, or the relationship itself. Best wishes for the future Mr and Mrs Mamba.

Take a look at the pictures. I will be posting the enthralling dance videos in a few days.


The bridal party waiting to usher in the bride with song and dance



Women singing before the arrival of the bride


Here comes the bride. She's hidden under that cloth


Maidens singing at the wedding



The bride dancing up a storm, who needs dancing shoes :)






The groom and his men joined the bridal party after the bride's arrival




They danced towards the bride


These ladies are myself and a friend. That skirt is huge, woolen and heavy and hot!!!!



A choir serenades the guests


This little man rocked his traditional attire for the wedding




I was perplexed, on arrival, to see vendors selling foodstuffs. I thought oh oh, here I was hoping to eat special food only to find I have to buy popcorn and cool drinks from vendors! But there were copious amounts of good food available :).





Monday, 18 July 2016

Blueberry Smoothie


My sister, Susan is a smoothie fanatic and it has somehow rubbed off on me. She gave me this recipe (and an opportunity to use a blender that has been gathering dust for the past 11 years!) and I really enjoyed the results, even though my smoothie turned out to be too thick.She didn't give me any measurements so I just went with that i thought would work out. My children also loved the smoothie and asked for seconds. 


I will be making more smoothies, since I'm trying to be healthy, lose some weight, and all that. I will be running a 10km race in September, which is quite ambitious of me. Wish me well!!












 Ingredients

Blueberries
Banana
Avocado
Coconut Milk
Honey 
Ice blocks














What advice would you give to your son who is getting married?

In a recent episode of one of my favourite South African soapies, Ashes to Ashes, a young man, Tsietsi was about to get married. The father, Sello and his friend, Mickey were standing with him in an office and the father asked Mickey to help him counsel Tsietsi on how to handle marriage. Together they said if you ever have a girlfriend and her bed is warmer, always ensure you sleep at home every day. If the other woman is a good cook, eat her food but make sure you eat again at home. If your wife catches you out, lie! Remember your lie and stick to it. BOOM! Marriage counselling was done in less than two minutes. They were convinced they had equipped the young man for his upcoming marriage. I just thought to myself, what a load of BS.
Picture sourced from Internet
But this is not just drama. My own research with men in my circle showed that most men never really got premarital counselling. They just bumble through marriage with no clue whether they are coming or going. People just assume, “Oh he’s a man. He’ll figure things out.” This is hardly fair on the man and the wife he marries. Not giving your son guidance on marriage is setting him up for disaster. Even if he got an angel for a wife, it would still not work because it takes two to tango.
I went to my friends and asked them what advice they would give to their sons and I got what I thought were very enlightening answers. I do hope all of them follow their own advice. My input is at the very bottom. Enjoy reading, share with your spouse if you are already married, do some self-introspection, and most of all, communicate with your significant other to find out what would make them happier.


FARIKANAI :  This is a piece of advice I just gave to one of my sons in the Lord. 1 Peter 3:7 Likewise, ye husband, dwell with [them] according to knowledge, giving honour unto the wife, as unto the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together of the grace of life; that your prayers be not hindered. Most married men struggle in life because they live contrary to this scripture. If you check all men who abuse their wives, they haven’t achieved much in their lives and they have no peace. It’s like they reach a dead end. I like the part that says that your prayers may not be hindered. Yes the basis of a strong and great marriage is God. You need God in totally every aspect of your marriage. Know that the woman is a weaker vessel and needs to be taken care of and do not be offended by her weaknesses. I’d also advise him that he is the head of the family and should provide for his family. His wife is there to help him and not to fend for the family. Remember your wife is not your mother to feed you and provide for you. Love your wife.

CHIZ: I take it this is advice to a son who is ready for marriage, meaning one who is in a serious relationship and is really considering it! in which case I would have to repeat the values I have been instilling in him all along, because for me this topic shouldn’t just pop u at this critical moment like it did in my own case with my dad. To be honest I don’t remember half the things he said in that discussion because I brought it up, received the talk, and in two weeks I was married. This marriage advice should really start from the time this lad starts noticing girls, at these stages though, it would be mostly about how he should treat women, what the bible teaches on the subject etc. be involved in his life, creating an atmosphere where the lad would rather talk to you about relationships rather than his peers (sounds strange, I know, but it can be done). So when it comes to the real deal…it’s a matter of highlighting a few reminders and bringing to his attention some of the responsibilities that are associated with this life-changing decision and of course supporting him all the way.

DANIEL: firstly marriage is about giving and receiving. It must be balanced. If you find yourself just giving or just receiving, there’s something not right. Secondly never say or do things you don’t want said or done to you. Last but not least, don’t take someone’s child into marriage if you’re not ready to love and respect them. They could be happy with someone else so make sure you make her happy always.

RUTH: what I always tell my son is, “don’t be like your father,” because he knows all about his father’s cheating ways. He caught him in the act so he’s been saying he doesn’t want to get married.


SUSAN: would ask him to remember karma, golden rule. And to go out and experience the world, to know about condoms and safe sex- not to rush to settle. Have fun, get a profession, travel before you settle and only settle with one who is your friend – don’t settle  because of societal pressure, and have a bit of time to bond with your wife before babies. If after two years or so you see that you’re still good, then procreate – otherwise be free to move on. When you settle dear boy – spoil her rotten, tell her you love her, appreciate her make-up, her dressing, her cooking – buy her flowers. Kana mari isipo maputi (When the money isn’t there he can buy maputi.) Kiss and hug her, hold hands, be her lawyer, her critic (who you criticize with love), be her best friend, her better half and helper. She isn’t your slave or subordinate – she is your equal whom you should love and adore. Ndapedza hangu (I’m done here).


TADIWA: I will tell my son that ideally a man should work and provide for family. The wife is his helper and kubatsira hakumanikidzwi (help should not be compulsory). He should love his wife and everything else will fall into place. He should appreciate it when he argues with his wife…the moment she stops arguing or correcting or ask about his whereabouts…he is SINGLE again. 

MANDY: Work hard for the family. Knowing that family comes before all else. Respect the wife, support her dreams. No belittling or verbal, emotional, physical or financial abuse.
  • Help the extended family from afar rather than bringing then into the home. Empirical evidence has proved that it strains or even ruins the marriage.
  • Incorporate wife’s suggestions and make decisions together rather than being wayward and headstrong.
  • Take care of the in-laws who brought up his wife, or at least allow the wife to do so if she has the capacity.
  • Be a good role model for the kids through good character, work habits, relationship with wife.
  • Strive to keep wife and kids happy. Spend quality time with them, teaching them to fix plugs, gadgets, going for holidays, fishing, taking walks in the hood, watching movies t home/cinemas.
  • Invest for the family. Having trust funds, school accounts, rainy day accounts, houses, etc.
  • Go to church, love God, pray. It usually helps somehow.
  • Help around the house even if you become rich – mowing lawns, unblocking drains etc.
  • Instill and maintain healthy habits and fit body.
  • Cut the repressive traditional crap such as kugezeswa maoko(having the wife kneeling before him with a dish of water so he can wash his hands before meals), leaving clothes on the floor etc kungoti ndezvemukadzi come what may.



ZA: I would advise him to choose wisely, not to look at the outward beauty only but to take time to know her and see if she is also beautiful on the inside. I will tell him that he should take good   care of his woman so that he won’t be ashamed of her kwete kuzochiva vari kuchengetwa nevamwe (not covet women that other men look after). When he’s looking, I’d advise him to pray for a God-fearing wife…and never to expect miracles from a wife he would have met at clubs and pubs. I’d tell him that it’s not always about finding Mrs Right but the question is if he is the right guy. And he should get to know the girl’s family first because in our tradition, you don’t marry one person but the whole clan. And look at how well the mother has aged so that he can picture her 40 years down the line ha-ha *tongue out*. Not forgetting one important aspect, he should find someone with at least a basic level of education; even form 4 to begin with. An illiterate wife can be too costly and a constant source of embarrassment, which will tempt him into extra marital affairs with educated ones. And no matter the circumstances, he should never raise his hand to a woman, NEVER! We should be good examples as parents because no matter how much we talk, if we do the opposite they are bound to copy that, especially the fathers. They should be positive role models to their boys. And moms, be an example of an ideal wife of course because when boys search for a wife, they look for a woman who resembles their mothers as much as possible in most cases.

CHIDO: My son, here is what I’ve learnt about marriage. Marriage is about friendship. Your spouse is your go-to person. You do not go behind her back or go over her, you go with her. Marriage is about trust and every day you are building that trust. One day you will need to withdraw from this trust bank, so deposit as much trust as you can in your spouse. Lastly marriage is about forgiveness. Marriage is made up of two great forgivers.


CHIEDZA: I would advise my son to not let anyone come between him and his wife and to treat his wife as his best friend – no secrets. Be very open about anything no matter how bad it is. He has to share his happiness and sadness with his wife and she should come first. Children are an added blessing to the marriage, but wife comes first because he came to know wife first before the kids.  Plan everything together with her and not make decisions alone. He has to consult her in everything.

TSITSI: Marriage is a lifetime commitment thus you need to settle with someone you really love. Take time to know your partner so that you will not discover some traits you don’t like when married. If there are things you don’t like, it’s best solved before marriage. Be faithful and honest. Everything should be transparent. Most marriages are failing because people are not faithful and honest. If there are any traits you don’t like in your partner be open and say it. Never pretend because eventually this might affect your marriage. Always respect your partner. Marriage is a mixed bag of everything thus you need someone who you will respect and love even in difficult situations.

GREATMAN: I would advise him to perceive marriage as a lifetime commitment that requires special attention from both parties, an arrangement where one gets what they give. Really would love him to perceive marriage as a process not an event. To get the best out of your partner, view them as a partner and friend instead of object to be bossed around. Most importantly, I would advise him to learn to be humble and apologise in case of a mistake and never tell a lie.

NGONI: I would tell him that I raised him to be able to treat people well, particularly women. Since marriage is meant for life he must take his time to choose a life partner and not bow to social pressure. There will be challenges in marriage and he must face them head on. He should not involve people in his affairs unless necessary. Treat his partner as the other half meant to complete him. Involve her in decision making but must also be firm as the head of the house (not be put under petticoat government). He should remember to make a balance between the two families in terms of social and financial support. Above all, treat your wife as you would want your daughter or sister to be treated by a man.

ERNEST: I will advise him on being content with his wife and always pray to God to protect their marriage, to love, forgive, be happy and have lots of sex. I will give him Psalm 91. It’s the verse we were given by our late friend who was a priest.

VITALIS: I suggest your article could be in two parts, courtship and staying together in marriage (!!!Vitalis was my O' Level English teacher y'all hehe). During courtship
  1. Pray hard. It needs holy guidance.
  2. Befriend first to see habits.
  3. Go check how they live.
  4. Should be a Christian.

Plus, my son, look for someone who’s loving, who is beautiful in your eyes. Find a people’s person who will love your relatives or else you will be isolated in the family. She should be well-behaved. She needs to be smart and a good cook. If it’s about marriage, you need to have cardinal principles to guide you: transparency, honesty, accountability etc. the truth is most good men are led astray by women and vice versa.

CEBI: My take would be to find out if he knows what marriage is. Knowing that marriage is a commitment not a feeling will make the union a happy one. Feelings change, so marriage should not be built on them. When you disagree on something you may feel unhappy but that doesn’t mean you’re not committed to each other. Beyond being a commitment, marriage is a covenant between two people. Proverbs 3:19-20… it takes wisdom, knowledge and understanding to build a marriage.

REJOICE: I would advise him to pray for his marriage, respect his wife, not to keep secrets, not to cheat, love his wife’s relatives. Stand by his wife always. He should communicate and to have fun.

PAIDA: Know her HIV status. Investigate sexual history; know her relatives, religious background. Level of education should not be the foundation of your marriage. Your choice should not be influenced by what you see on social media.

SEKURU MILTON: Ngaatsvage musikana ane chimiro chaanofarira kuti asazobhoekane naye mangwana. Azive kuti anogona kumuwana ari or asiri mhandara (kana amuda asiri mhandara ngaabve agutsikana naye asazozvidya mwoyo  nazvo till amen). Mukadzi haasi wekudzvanyirira pazvose. Asamhanyire bonde naye vasati vaitwa HIV test. Changamukawo kutsvaga nzira dzekufadza mukadzi wako pabonde. Ukapusa unotorerwa netwakachangamuka. Musikana ngaavewo mudiki ne4 years or more please. (He should find a girl with a physique that pleases him to avoid future frustration. He should know that she will probably not be a virgin, and if he loves her regardless of that fact, he should forever hold his peace till amen. Women are not to be oppressed all the time. He shouldn’t rush into sex before getting tested for HIV. Be sure to satisfy your wife in bed because someone might snap her away from you. The girl should be younger than him by 4 years or more.)


ANGELINE:  I’d advise my son to be an honest, loving and faithful man. To appreciate and treasure his wife, to be her best friend and stand by her no matter what, to respect and protect her and their kids whole-heartedly.

FARAI: when he’s old enough, I’ll tell him that marriage will be one relationship where he doesn’t have to win every fight, compromise is the name of the game.

NYARADZO: I will tell my son to love his wife but still asambunyikidzwe nemukadzi (he should not be oppressed by the wife) because at times madzimai tinotonga (women are control freaks). All I want is to see my son happy saka ndikaona asina mufaro or kana kandiudza kuti ari kutongwa ndinotopindira munyaya dzavo chete (if I see him miserable or if he tells me he’s being oppressed, I’ll definitely be involved in their affairs).

ERICA: conflicts are inevitable in every marriage. You will be married to a person, and every person is unique. In marriage learn to resolve conflicts and to work in harmony not fight over petty things. Marriage is a team of two, from a Christian perspective, to process life together for the Glory of God. Respect your spouse’s ideas even when you disagree with them.

OTTILIA: Follow your heart, your instinct. Marriage is successful if you are equal partners giving as much as you receive, and willingness to compromise. There is no head or tail in that sense. Knowing that the head would be useless on its own allows you to appreciate the importance of the tail (this is in a metaphorical sense.)

MHONDA: the wedding ring is the smallest but toughest handcuff ever made. Think twice before you decide to lock yourself in. Don’t get into marriage so that you can fall in love.

KUDA: I guess I would tell him to follow his heart and seek a friend, companion first before all glitz and glamour. The lady should be your best friend.

CLARA: Go for HIV testing and stick to the one you have chosen.

DORCAS: to put it simply – be a good husband and find someone who values him and values family.

MYSELF:  Your marriage is not likely to survive or at least be happy if you’re not friends. Friends might butt heads a few times, but they look out for each other, they like spending time together, they don’t do things that they know would hurt the other.  Be the reason why your wife would want to go around telling people that marriage is a blessing. Don’t be the reason why she goes on her knees every day with tears in her eyes and says to God, “You say you neither sleep nor slumber, where were you when I married this person?” Your presence in her life should add value, not take away anything from it. Marriage is about companionship and loyalty. It’s not about the woman worshiping the ground that the man walks on while he doesn’t make an effort to make her happy – to every king there must be a queen. It’s not about flowers that wither, clothes, or a car that she could very well buy for herself. Yes the material things count too, to augment the love you have for her, but they should never replace it. They’re not the most important; otherwise you’ll just be the cash cow while she continues to look around for other things that she’s not getting in the marriage. Do as you would be done by – if you don’t like to be cheated on, don’t cheat, if you like to be respected, show some respect, if you want transparency, be transparent, if you like being shady in the relationship, accept it when she does it too.  You’re getting married because you chose this woman. Don’t allow anyone, not me, not your father, or your sisters to influence how you relate to her. If she’s nasty, you’ll see it. Don’t let someone else be your eyes. A family that prays together stays together. It’s a tried and tested concept.

Related Post Marrying Wisely



Tuesday, 24 May 2016

Epilepsy: The "annoying" child

Yesterday I visited a friend whose 10-year-old child has epilepsy. He (I’ll call him Percy) is such a sweet and bright child, who unfortunately has to tip toe through life to avoid triggers for his condition. He has had many epileptic attacks at school, which has affected his academic performance and his social life, judging from what he told me.
I was just making small talk and asked him if he was having fun at school. Here is how our conversation went:

Me:  So are you having fun at school

Percy:  Not so much.

Me: Why?

Percy: I don’t have many people that like to be my friends.

Me: Why?

Percy: They all think I’m annoying.

Me: Do you enjoy annoying people? What exactly do you do to annoy them?

Percy: I don’t know what I do to annoy them. I don’t want to annoy them, I want to make friends. Sometimes I make funny sounds to make them laugh, and they say I’m annoying. Then sometimes I keep quiet, and they still say I’m annoying. I think I have an annoying personality.

That conversation broke my heart. I am convinced that the other kids are just afraid or uncomfortable with his epileptic fits at school and they now avoid being around him.   There is so much that needs to be done to educate our children about disabilities and how they should handle themselves around people considered to be “different”. Now Percy goes through life thinking he has an annoying personality, yet his failure to make friends has nothing to do with his personality at all. He’s just a regular kid but happens to have epilepsy, which ranks highly among stigmatized conditions.
I remember when I grew up, there was a boy called Chemadota, who has since passed away. Loosely translated, his name meant “the one covered with ashes”. That wasn’t even his real name, but he acquired it because he was epileptic. He would fall on the ground and have serious fits and people were scared of him, even though they still found time to laugh at his condition. By the time the fits passed, he would be covered in dust from head to toe, hence the name Chemadota. The severity of his epilepsy resulted in him being developmentally challenged, which people found hilarious.  It did not help that he was from a very disadvantaged background and was always barefooted and in tattered clothes. He was taunted everywhere he went, but was just a harmless boy with epilepsy.

I remember people telling me that people with epilepsy would foam at the mouth during a fit, and if you came into contact with the saliva, you’d automatically catch the epilepsy too.  I also heard the ridiculous assertion that if you looked in the middle of the footprint of a person with epilepsy there would be the paw print of a dog in the middle. People alleged epilepsy was demonic and once you fell into the fire, it would be untreatable. I don’t know where people got all that, but the message was clear: We were to stay as far away as possible from Chemadota or anyone with epilepsy. All that happened more than 20 years ago. It’s painful to note that nothing much has really changed in terms of raising awareness for epilepsy and other disabilities. 
When I was pregnant with my 10-year-old, I used to interact with many people with disabilities. I was advised that whenever I saw a person with a disability I was to discreetly spit in my dress to avoid having a baby with a disability. I never followed that advice, and had a child with autism, but I know it had nothing to do with not spitting. You spit when you have nausea, when there's a bad smell around you and you're revolted. You don't spit because someone has a disability.
I was telling my friends that I wish schools would just have about 30 minutes per week to discuss disabilities, prepare children for them. There are so many disabilities that children need to know about. They are growing, they will be parents who will probably also have children with disabilities. They will want to know how to treat them and they will want them to be treated well out there in the big, bad world full of uninformed people.  My friend, Celi, who’s a staunch advocate for disability awareness said: “…it does not come naturally for kids to shun others. It is learned behaviour.” I totally agree. Discriminatory kids grow up to be discriminatory adults who will also raise their own discriminatory kids. We will never see the end of this is something drastic is not done. 

Monday, 16 May 2016

Tilapia Recipe from Global Village

Chef Sifiso Mhlanga
Serving suggestion
I got this recipe from Chef Sifiso Mhlanga from The Global Village. He is a boisterous young man who said his passion for cooking started when he was still a baby and would cook with sand and water. He owes his love for cooking to his late mother who used to prepare and sell food at the Luve market. From watching his mother, he started cooking for the family before getting training at Oliver’s Restaurant in Nelspruit as well as at Bulembu. “When I prepare something really good, I just wish my mother was here to see it because she’s the one who encouraged me,” he said. He has been with The Global Village for a year but has been cooking since 2002. Chef Sifiso said he loves spoiling his wife, who teaches out of town, with decadent treats when she comes home for the weekend.

 

INGREDIENTS
Ingredients for the whole Tilapia meal
Tilapia fish

Fish spice

Mixed herbs

Cake flour (to dust the fish)

4 lemon rings (to garnish) the fish

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
METHOD:


 ·         Season the fish with fish spice or salt, and mixed herbs.

·         Dust it with cake flour.

·         Fry the fish briefly on both sides, ensuring that it has browned.

·         Move the fish to the grill and grill it until it is golden brown.

·         Remove it and set it aside.


Preparing tilapia for cooking
 
SALAD INGREDIENTS

1 medium onion

1 medium tomato

8 slices of cucumber

Slices of olives

2 mushrooms to garnish the salad

6 cubes feta cheese

Quarter medium carrot, sliced

 
COOKING TIPS

Sealing is a foolproof way to keep your fish juicy.  It is the process of frying the outside surfaces of fish, or any piece of meat, to "seal in" the juices and maximize flavor. The oil in the pan must be very hot. Carefully place the fish into the pan and leave it for 10 to 20 seconds, then flip and do the other side, before putting on the grill to finish cooking. This type of cooking also prevents the fish from sticking to the pan. Be careful when handling very hot oil.

 

 


 


 

The dinner-that-never-was at Global Village Restaurant

Saturday May 14 was our 11th wedding anniversary. My husband asked me to choose which restaurant to go to. I picked Global Village in Manzini because we had his birthday dinner there, which was perfect, and my friend is the manager there and I wanted to support her business.
We arrived to a lukewarm reception from a self-effacing waitress and we had to ask if they had drinks as she had not offered anything. We planned to have a 3 course meal, and ordered crumbed mushroom and chicken livers from the menu as starters.  They each cost about E50/R50. The waitress said she would go and find out from the kitchen if they had ingredients for our order. She came back with the shocking news that they had neither chicken livers nor mushroomsL. I asked how that could be, because that restaurant is located less than 10 minutes from Manzini town where supermarkets had mushrooms and livers. A punnet of white button mushrooms costs E28 at Pick ‘n Pay, and they serve you less than a third of the punnet. A kilogramme of chicken livers sells for E16, and they give you about E5’s worth as starter. So I could not understand how a whole restaurant could fail to procure commodities that were so cheap and would still have given them a profit.
Moving on, we said so what do you have, she said they had samoosas. We didn’t want samosas so we decided to skip starters and moved to the main course. My husband chose a tilapia dish. The reason why we had settled for Global Village in the first place was because of their tilapia which we enjoyed when I was writing a cooking column for a local newspaper. Read here for their tilapia recipe*. We had always vowed to visit  Global Village again for the fish. The waitress said they did not have tilapia and said my husband could have hake insteadL. He didn’t go there for hake so he declined. I ordered chicken lasagna, and the shy waitress said she would check if they had it. I said they should surely have it because there are chicken dishes here, and chicken is the main ingredient in the lasagna that I want. I was to be dismally disappointed. They didn’t have chicken lasagna eitherL. I said ok what do you have? She said they had pork chops and grilled chicken. If I wanted grilled chicken I would have gone to Nandos, they make the best grilled chicken as far as I’m concerned.

Dessert from Lugogo Sun Hotel
I then asked my husband that we go to Lugogo Sun where they have buffet dinner every day. I was not going to eat what I didn’t like on a special occasion and have an unwanted dinner shoved down my throat by people with zero regard for their customers. We were paying customers for crying out loud, so why were we supposed to be the ones that bend over backwards to impress the restaurant with our patience with their bad service? It’s as if people just expect you to understand that they’re not serious and you should just grin and bear it and say it’s ok. No it’s not OK that by 8pm I was still driving around to the next restaurant with a rumbling stomach. I was quite hungry! We told the waitress that we were just paying for the drinks and would find food elsewhere, and she said OKK. Well, we took our money elsewhere, and that’s what I would want everyone to do – walk out on service providers that are not out to impress you and give you value for your hard-earned cash.
On our way to Lugogo Sun, I felt it was wrong to just go quietly without talking to my friend, the manager at Global Village. She had to know so that she could try and salvage the situation. I sent her a text reading:
Hi *Name* we’d come to clelebrate our 11th anniversary at your place but we’ve left without eating. We wanted mushrooms and livers as starter but were told there were none. Then main meal we wanted tilapia and chicken lasagna and were told we also couldn’t have that. So we’re not going to Lugogo SunL. 1kg liver costs R16 in town and mushrooms are there at Spar. We will bring our own food next time, because we know where to find it, then the chefs will just cookJ.
She responded saying sorry and that she would deal with the issue. I wonder how many more customers just walk our quietly and spread the word on the bad service. Word of mouth can actually floor a business.
I had avoided Lugogo Sun initially because I was trying to avoid the buffet, which I feel prompts me to overindulge a little. They always have a wide array of meats to pick from – chicken curry, chicken stew, roast chicken, leg of lamb, roast beef or pork, goat stew – you want it, they’re bound to have it. They also make the most delectable eclairs, cakes, custard, pudding, ice cream for dessert. Don’t get me started on their yummy creamy soup of the day. No, they didn’t pay me to say this, and yes, they’re that good! They also make the best pizza in town, which I didn’t have the pleasure of eating on this day. As soon as we got into their restaurant, I looked around, felt my taste buds tingling with anticipation, and thought, “Now we’re talkingJ!” We had a good dinner at Lugogo Sun, and guess what, they had mushrooms! YayJ.  All is well that ends well. To 11 x 11 more years!