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Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale - NYSC - Nairaland

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Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Nobody: 11:23pm On Jul 08, 2016
by Olabode Emmanuel Olawumi

Camp was fun. Although, I didn’t love every part of it. There was the good, the bad and the ugly.

Let me tell you about the ugly and the bad before I tell you about the good.

The Ugly

*Pensive* The truth is, there was no ugly moment at the orientation camp. I didn’t have any ugly experience. Others might have, but I can’t remember a personal one.

The bad

Was there any bad moment for me in camp? I think I had a few of them. After eating at Mami market a couple of times, I ceased feeding my stomach with their food. There was this strange smell that made me nauseous. No matter how hard I tried to explain to people, only one or two people among those I explained to admitted they noticed the same thing.

It was this soapy taste and odour that came with the food. Someone said it could have been related to the use of little pepper. I heard the people here don’t like so much pepper. They add a minute amount to their delicacies. I committed myself to the food from the kitchen it was better (in taste for me). The turn off was how small each meal was.

It didn’t even get anywhere. Often times, I complemented it with Indomie and egg prepared at Mami. I didn’t have any complain about that. Being unable to get satisfaction from the meals was a turn off for me. Asides the food, I can’t remember any other bad moment. Wait a minute. The lectures were not meant for me. Too long and irrelevant. Personal opinion!

The good!

Holy Moses!

Where do I start from?

EBONYI WHATSAPP GROUP

I got added to TM EBONYI A’2 Group by Thomicom the Thursday before we were meant to resume camp. I wanted to get myself familiar with what was ahead me. I had earlier planned to travel Sunday morning but one Dhebbie in the group suggested we travelled on Saturday night so we could get to Enonyi during the day.

Thomicom and I agreed to join her on the trip, since her idea made sense. At 9:30pm on Saturday night, The Young Shall Grow Luxurious bus conveying us to Ebonyi state departed Jibowu bus stop. I slept most part of the night journey until we got to Enugu early the next morning. I was awake till we arrived Abakaliki. It was another 1 hour 30 minutes drive from Abakaliki to Afikpo, where the orientation camp is situated.

The three of us got to camp some minutes after noon and that was how the journey began. I also got familiar with a couple of people from the WhatsApp group. Some, I met in person, others I didn’t. So far, the group has been a sweet and interesting family. People like Marrie, Queen B, Busayo, Kristie, Massive, Dr Phil, Vingeophysicst, The Law, Debbie, Tomiwa, among others are names I can’t forget.

OBS…

OBS was turnt!

I joined the Orientation Broadcast Service (OBS) and was appointed the Head, Correspondent. My duty was to work with other correspondents to gather news for the news casters. I also had the opportunity to be a newscaster. I never knew I could do that. I think I should pay more attention to, and maximize my voice. It’s good for radio, acting (I know this already), presenting and the likes.

I became friends with and met lovely people at OBS; Obi, Diran, Ogaga, Uche, Dami, Uzor, Ngozi, Bobola, Ololade, Tobi, MC Believer, to mention a few. These young individuals confirmed the fact that Nigeria is filled with young, innovative, hardworking, excellent, creative, dedicated individuals. I watched them sacrifice a lot to work with the NYSC officials to organise and manage programmes.

They proved to me that truly, OBS is the light, voice and heart of the camp. These great men brought their skills to work and we all saw it. Time will not permit me to mention the special qualities and the lessons I learnt from the aforementioned persons. My only message for them is to continue being the best in their chosen field and make service and humility their watchword.

PARADE

The parade was another good thing that happened to me. I wasn’t just enchanted by the activities; the soldiers were the best thing after independence. From them, I learnt commitment, loyalty, sacrifice, leadership, victory, practice, diligence in words, humor and lots more.

Forget those huge figures dressed in Khaki, they were fun to be with in camp. They made camp rock. The commandant, the RSM, the other members of the army who led each platoon were amazing. The parade was something I looked forward to but once it gets to a stage I can’t stand the stress, I take a sick excuse or I flaunt my OBS card, claim I have work to do and move down to the studio.

Although I didn’t have to be in the OBS studio every time, It however was an escape from the parade ground when the need emerged.

PLATOON 8

My platoon was a conglomerate of back benchers from various universities. By benchers, I mean the lackadaisical ones. They were unbothered about anything and everything. We topped the chart in being punished. We had so much noise makers and care free people who just wanted to be done with it.

Thanks to Saheed, who got us gold in the Miss Pretty Competition and our girls who tried to find a 3rd position in Volleyball, we would have been as worse as platoons 2 and 5. I doubt if those ones got any recognition at all. However, in the last few hours of camp, I felt my platoon members bonded better.

I saw a lot of people participate in preparation for the cooking competition. We had inputs from a lot of people. At the end it was a great time. I can’t conclude this part without mention of Adaora, Emmanuel, Chichi (my platoon lover), Sherriff, Zubbie, IB  and their crew. They were the real gees.

Despite  the lack of interest, support and cooperation from a larger part of the platoon members, they gave their all into seeing that we could move forward as a team. They had the zeal but we underestimated them.

PLATOON 4

The Dreaded Platoon

Officer Sahaad! (I hope I got the spelling). That man is phenomenal. He is a true definition of a leader. Ambitious, motivated, a motivator, a disciplinarian to the core, a friend, a colleague. Words aren’t just enough to describe this man. I would pick him as my Man of the Orientation Camp. His platoon was the envy of all.

From the first day with his platoon members,  he made it clear he was here to win, win and win. He grabbed the highest number of trophies in the competitions held in camp. Although, he had some huge losses, he was undeterred. He soared high above other platoon officers and led his team to victory. I will never forget this man and I would say I was fortunate to have had an interview with him.

THE LADIES

I know this is a part a lot of people would want to hear. Before I went to camp, I have heard so much unprintable words about boy-girl relationships in camp. I heard a lot of people throw caution to the wind in camp. I also got familiar with the “What happens in camp stays in camp” line.

I witnessed a few firsthand but I heard stories too. The things I saw eeehn… My mouth cannot mutter. I had a crush on one particular girl, I liked another, but that was just all about it. I decline to speak further on this before SHE comes asking me questions.

Let’s just say, I didn’t get myself involved in anything that would have tarnished my image or ruined my relationship with the best woman in the world after my mother.

NYSC DG

The Director General of the National Youths Service Corps, NYSC, Sulyman Kazaure paid a visit to Ebonyi on July 17th. He visited us – Batch A, Stream 2 corps members at the Orientation Camp in Afikpo, Ebonyi State.

I had a rare privilege to have an interview with him, courtesy, OBS and the ever supportive Ebonyi camp, PRO. We also had an opportunity to take a picture with the boss himself, alongside the state coordinator, Mrs Gladys Mbachi. I felt I had just been in a picture with the president. I forever cherish that moment.

PPA

My heart beamed with joy when I received my letter for my Place of Primary Assignment (PPA). I was posted to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism without lobbying for anything. Eeerm. That’s God’s grace at work.

He’s a faithful God. I was thinking earlier today, and I remembered my final year project was: Promoting Culture and National Unity through Nigerian Films, using Tunde Kelani’s “Arugba” and “Thunderbolt” as a case study.

Could it be a coincidence? I don’t think so. A lot of people have been asking me if I redeployed. They get disappointed when I say NO. The next question they ask is “How will you be able to run OYA from Ebonyi?”

OYA is a moving train. OYA is not just me. OYA is a team of creative and talented individual coming together to make a difference in their society. As a team, we will combine our experience, influence and demography to build a global leading media brand.

We have a team of people in different parts of the country and we will all unite to serve our readers and client better. Personally, I’m optimistic about my posting and I’m believing in God for the best in this service year.

I am keeping an open mind. This will be the most interesting year ever. No time for negativity. Positive vibes only. Regardless of how the system frustrates us, we will continue to do our best in our own capacity. God bless Nigeria.

 http://lifedrama.com.ng/nysc-member-shares-orientation-camp-experience-a-corpers-tale/

23 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Kakamorufu(m): 11:28pm On Jul 08, 2016
cool experience
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by DucheSsMerezz(f): 2:49am On Jul 09, 2016
Nice.
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by veekid(m): 7:57am On Jul 09, 2016
Sighs

1 Like

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by brunofarad(m): 7:58am On Jul 09, 2016
Ok

1 Like

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Nobody: 7:58am On Jul 09, 2016
such an unforgettable experience, the drilling you receive in just that three weeks is enough to last you for a lifetime.
I serve in 13/14 but forget my morale still high die...

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by KenModi(m): 7:59am On Jul 09, 2016
Kk
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Tripplejay23(m): 7:59am On Jul 09, 2016
ok
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Cmoyor: 7:59am On Jul 09, 2016
hmnn
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by millionboi(m): 8:01am On Jul 09, 2016
If u support FG scraping Nysc like and share if u want it

15 Likes 11 Shares

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by FlawlesRebirth02(f): 8:03am On Jul 09, 2016
Seriously can't wait for mine,,, say in 2yrs from now•••
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by baddest04: 8:05am On Jul 09, 2016
Served dia 2013, it's better u relocate sharp sharp

1 Like

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Nobody: 8:06am On Jul 09, 2016
Every fried commodity in Rivers state camp had a repugnant smell too. I talked to people about it but only one person could reason with me. I later got to know the smell came from the oil. You're right about the camp lectures. They were way too long & boring. Rivers stat camp was fun too. Our RSM to me was the main official of the camp. Dude had a bizarre voice & hilarious attitude.

5 Likes

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by DesChyko: 8:07am On Jul 09, 2016
*sighs* .. The Good Old Days.. If only we knew how NYSC just makes a previously manageable situation become uncomfortable, we'ld have resorted to serving our pockets in that year.
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by drizzit(m): 8:07am On Jul 09, 2016
Camp McGregor..... Afikpo....OP drop pics naaa....sure won't mind seeing that camp again...fun memories I must say..eating at the mami market was a no no for me after hearing stories of donkey meat which I later confirmed was true about some areas of Ebonyi....fish, chicken end of story...nothing more..

3 Likes

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Vendoor(f): 8:07am On Jul 09, 2016
Nice read...

1 Like

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by MrDoGood(m): 8:07am On Jul 09, 2016
see as them plenty........................................ where the work dey?

it's time to start thinking outside education in this country.

our parents has filled our head with this thought of no education, no means of making it in life.

hian!!!!!!

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by sanandreas(m): 8:09am On Jul 09, 2016
Ebonyi is a good place to serve. My pop was in grand style. How can I forget css Amuzu. The teacher's and students were so friendly.

2 Likes

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by sheyizy1: 8:11am On Jul 09, 2016
CollinsWeGlobe:


by Olabode Emmanuel Olawumi

Camp was fun. Although, I didn’t love every part of it. There was the good, the bad and the ugly.

Let me tell you about the ugly and the bad before I tell you about the good.

The Ugly

*Pensive* The truth is, there was no ugly moment at the orientation camp. I didn’t have any ugly experience. Others might have, but I can’t remember a personal one.

The bad

Was there any bad moment for me in camp? I think I had a few of them. After eating at Mami market a couple of times, I ceased feeding my stomach with their food. There was this strange smell that made me nauseous. No matter how hard I tried to explain to people, only one or two people among those I explained to admitted they noticed the same thing.

It was this soapy taste and odour that came with the food. Someone said it could have been related to the use of little pepper. I heard the people here don’t like so much pepper. They add a minute amount to their delicacies. I committed myself to the food from the kitchen it was better (in taste for me). The turn off was how small each meal was.

It didn’t even get anywhere. Often times, I complemented it with Indomie and egg prepared at Mami. I didn’t have any complain about that. Being unable to get satisfaction from the meals was a turn off for me. Asides the food, I can’t remember any other bad moment. Wait a minute. The lectures were not meant for me. Too long and irrelevant. Personal opinion!

The good!

Holy Moses!

Where do I start from?

EBONYI WHATSAPP GROUP

I got added to TM EBONYI A’2 Group by Thomicom the Thursday before we were meant to resume camp. I wanted to get myself familiar with what was ahead me. I had earlier planned to travel Sunday morning but one Dhebbie in the group suggested we travelled on Saturday night so we could get to Enonyi during the day.

Thomicom and I agreed to join her on the trip, since her idea made sense. At 9:30pm on Saturday night, The Young Shall Grow Luxurious bus conveying us to Ebonyi state departed Jibowu bus stop. I slept most part of the night journey until we got to Enugu early the next morning. I was awake till we arrived Abakaliki. It was another 1 hour 30 minutes drive from Abakaliki to Afikpo, where the orientation camp is situated.

The three of us got to camp some minutes after noon and that was how the journey began. I also got familiar with a couple of people from the WhatsApp group. Some, I met in person, others I didn’t. So far, the group has been a sweet and interesting family. People like Marrie, Queen B, Busayo, Kristie, Massive, Dr Phil, Vingeophysicst, The Law, Debbie, Tomiwa, among others are names I can’t forget.

OBS…

OBS was turnt!

I joined the Orientation Broadcast Service (OBS) and was appointed the Head, Correspondent. My duty was to work with other correspondents to gather news for the news casters. I also had the opportunity to be a newscaster. I never knew I could do that. I think I should pay more attention to, and maximize my voice. It’s good for radio, acting (I know this already), presenting and the likes.

I became friends with and met lovely people at OBS; Obi, Diran, Ogaga, Uche, Dami, Uzor, Ngozi, Bobola, Ololade, Tobi, MC Believer, to mention a few. These young individuals confirmed the fact that Nigeria is filled with young, innovative, hardworking, excellent, creative, dedicated individuals. I watched them sacrifice a lot to work with the NYSC officials to organise and manage programmes.

They proved to me that truly, OBS is the light, voice and heart of the camp. These great men brought their skills to work and we all saw it. Time will not permit me to mention the special qualities and the lessons I learnt from the aforementioned persons. My only message for them is to continue being the best in their chosen field and make service and humility their watchword.

PARADE

The parade was another good thing that happened to me. I wasn’t just enchanted by the activities; the soldiers were the best thing after independence. From them, I learnt commitment, loyalty, sacrifice, leadership, victory, practice, diligence in words, humor and lots more.

Forget those huge figures dressed in Khaki, they were fun to be with in camp. They made camp rock. The commandant, the RSM, the other members of the army who led each platoon were amazing. The parade was something I looked forward to but once it gets to a stage I can’t stand the stress, I take a sick excuse or I flaunt my OBS card, claim I have work to do and move down to the studio.

Although I didn’t have to be in the OBS studio every time, It however was an escape from the parade ground when the need emerged.

PLATOON 8

My platoon was a conglomerate of back benchers from various universities. By benchers, I mean the lackadaisical ones. They were unbothered about anything and everything. We topped the chart in being punished. We had so much noise makers and care free people who just wanted to be done with it.

Thanks to Saheed, who got us gold in the Miss Pretty Competition and our girls who tried to find a 3rd position in Volleyball, we would have been as worse as platoons 2 and 5. I doubt if those ones got any recognition at all. However, in the last few hours of camp, I felt my platoon members bonded better.

I saw a lot of people participate in preparation for the cooking competition. We had inputs from a lot of people. At the end it was a great time. I can’t conclude this part without mention of Adaora, Emmanuel, Chichi (my platoon lover), Sherriff, Zubbie, IB  and their crew. They were the real gees.

Despite  the lack of interest, support and cooperation from a larger part of the platoon members, they gave their all into seeing that we could move forward as a team. They had the zeal but we underestimated them.

PLATOON 4

The Dreaded Platoon

Officer Sahaad! (I hope I got the spelling). That man is phenomenal. He is a true definition of a leader. Ambitious, motivated, a motivator, a disciplinarian to the core, a friend, a colleague. Words aren’t just enough to describe this man. I would pick him as my Man of the Orientation Camp. His platoon was the envy of all.

From the first day with his platoon members,  he made it clear he was here to win, win and win. He grabbed the highest number of trophies in the competitions held in camp. Although, he had some huge losses, he was undeterred. He soared high above other platoon officers and led his team to victory. I will never forget this man and I would say I was fortunate to have had an interview with him.

THE LADIES

I know this is a part a lot of people would want to hear. Before I went to camp, I have heard so much unprintable words about boy-girl relationships in camp. I heard a lot of people throw caution to the wind in camp. I also got familiar with the “What happens in camp stays in camp” line.

I witnessed a few firsthand but I heard stories too. The things I saw eeehn… My mouth cannot mutter. I had a crush on one particular girl, I liked another, but that was just all about it. I decline to speak further on this before SHE comes asking me questions.

Let’s just say, I didn’t get myself involved in anything that would have tarnished my image or ruined my relationship with the best woman in the world after my mother.

NYSC DG

The Director General of the National Youths Service Corps, NYSC, Sulyman Kazaure paid a visit to Ebonyi on July 17th. He visited us – Batch A, Stream 2 corps members at the Orientation Camp in Afikpo, Ebonyi State.

I had a rare privilege to have an interview with him, courtesy, OBS and the ever supportive Ebonyi camp, PRO. We also had an opportunity to take a picture with the boss himself, alongside the state coordinator, Mrs Gladys Mbachi. I felt I had just been in a picture with the president. I forever cherish that moment.

PPA

My heart beamed with joy when I received my letter for my Place of Primary Assignment (PPA). I was posted to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism without lobbying for anything. Eeerm. That’s God’s grace at work.

He’s a faithful God. I was thinking earlier today, and I remembered my final year project was: Promoting Culture and National Unity through Nigerian Films, using Tunde Kelani’s “Arugba” and “Thunderbolt” as a case study.

Could it be a coincidence? I don’t think so. A lot of people have been asking me if I redeployed. They get disappointed when I say NO. The next question they ask is “How will you be able to run OYA from Ebonyi?”

OYA is a moving train. OYA is not just me. OYA is a team of creative and talented individual coming together to make a difference in their society. As a team, we will combine our experience, influence and demography to build a global leading media brand.

We have a team of people in different parts of the country and we will all unite to serve our readers and client better. Personally, I’m optimistic about my posting and I’m believing in God for the best in this service year.

I am keeping an open mind. This will be the most interesting year ever. No time for negativity. Positive vibes only. Regardless of how the system frustrates us, we will continue to do our best in our own capacity. God bless Nigeria.

 http://lifedrama.com.ng/nysc-member-shares-orientation-camp-experience-a-corpers-tale/
can you please help with a soft copy of your project material
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by geezy01(m): 8:13am On Jul 09, 2016
I served at EB in 14/15 batch B set. Sgt Sa'ad has been on top of his game ryt from the begining. Even his colleagues envy him.The best platoon commander in macgregor camp.

4 Likes

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Taeewo(m): 8:16am On Jul 09, 2016
Ffg
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by philoo(m): 8:37am On Jul 09, 2016
served as financial secretary batch 15A , platoon 8 (officer sa'ad). we took virtually the whole gold, kept some silver and 'abandoned' our bronze medals. we were his best platoon ever and like you. he impacted much in three weeks than I got most of my adult life. he was the salt of our camp @ (very) old macgregor.
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by PraiseGyps(f): 8:38am On Jul 09, 2016
CollinsWeGlobe:


by Olabode Emmanuel Olawumi

Camp was fun. Although, I didn’t love every part of it. There was the good, the bad and the ugly.

Let me tell you about the ugly and the bad before I tell you about the good.

The Ugly

*Pensive* The truth is, there was no ugly moment at the orientation camp. I didn’t have any ugly experience. Others might have, but I can’t remember a personal one.

The bad

Was there any bad moment for me in camp? I think I had a few of them. After eating at Mami market a couple of times, I ceased feeding my stomach with their food. There was this strange smell that made me nauseous. No matter how hard I tried to explain to people, only one or two people among those I explained to admitted they noticed the same thing.

It was this soapy taste and odour that came with the food. Someone said it could have been related to the use of little pepper. I heard the people here don’t like so much pepper. They add a minute amount to their delicacies. I committed myself to the food from the kitchen it was better (in taste for me). The turn off was how small each meal was.

It didn’t even get anywhere. Often times, I complemented it with Indomie and egg prepared at Mami. I didn’t have any complain about that. Being unable to get satisfaction from the meals was a turn off for me. Asides the food, I can’t remember any other bad moment. Wait a minute. The lectures were not meant for me. Too long and irrelevant. Personal opinion!

The good!

Holy Moses!

Where do I start from?

EBONYI WHATSAPP GROUP

I got added to TM EBONYI A’2 Group by Thomicom the Thursday before we were meant to resume camp. I wanted to get myself familiar with what was ahead me. I had earlier planned to travel Sunday morning but one Dhebbie in the group suggested we travelled on Saturday night so we could get to Enonyi during the day.

Thomicom and I agreed to join her on the trip, since her idea made sense. At 9:30pm on Saturday night, The Young Shall Grow Luxurious bus conveying us to Ebonyi state departed Jibowu bus stop. I slept most part of the night journey until we got to Enugu early the next morning. I was awake till we arrived Abakaliki. It was another 1 hour 30 minutes drive from Abakaliki to Afikpo, where the orientation camp is situated.

The three of us got to camp some minutes after noon and that was how the journey began. I also got familiar with a couple of people from the WhatsApp group. Some, I met in person, others I didn’t. So far, the group has been a sweet and interesting family. People like Marrie, Queen B, Busayo, Kristie, Massive, Dr Phil, Vingeophysicst, The Law, Debbie, Tomiwa, among others are names I can’t forget.

OBS…

OBS was turnt!

I joined the Orientation Broadcast Service (OBS) and was appointed the Head, Correspondent. My duty was to work with other correspondents to gather news for the news casters. I also had the opportunity to be a newscaster. I never knew I could do that. I think I should pay more attention to, and maximize my voice. It’s good for radio, acting (I know this already), presenting and the likes.

I became friends with and met lovely people at OBS; Obi, Diran, Ogaga, Uche, Dami, Uzor, Ngozi, Bobola, Ololade, Tobi, MC Believer, to mention a few. These young individuals confirmed the fact that Nigeria is filled with young, innovative, hardworking, excellent, creative, dedicated individuals. I watched them sacrifice a lot to work with the NYSC officials to organise and manage programmes.

They proved to me that truly, OBS is the light, voice and heart of the camp. These great men brought their skills to work and we all saw it. Time will not permit me to mention the special qualities and the lessons I learnt from the aforementioned persons. My only message for them is to continue being the best in their chosen field and make service and humility their watchword.

PARADE

The parade was another good thing that happened to me. I wasn’t just enchanted by the activities; the soldiers were the best thing after independence. From them, I learnt commitment, loyalty, sacrifice, leadership, victory, practice, diligence in words, humor and lots more.

Forget those huge figures dressed in Khaki, they were fun to be with in camp. They made camp rock. The commandant, the RSM, the other members of the army who led each platoon were amazing. The parade was something I looked forward to but once it gets to a stage I can’t stand the stress, I take a sick excuse or I flaunt my OBS card, claim I have work to do and move down to the studio.

Although I didn’t have to be in the OBS studio every time, It however was an escape from the parade ground when the need emerged.

PLATOON 8

My platoon was a conglomerate of back benchers from various universities. By benchers, I mean the lackadaisical ones. They were unbothered about anything and everything. We topped the chart in being punished. We had so much noise makers and care free people who just wanted to be done with it.

Thanks to Saheed, who got us gold in the Miss Pretty Competition and our girls who tried to find a 3rd position in Volleyball, we would have been as worse as platoons 2 and 5. I doubt if those ones got any recognition at all. However, in the last few hours of camp, I felt my platoon members bonded better.

I saw a lot of people participate in preparation for the cooking competition. We had inputs from a lot of people. At the end it was a great time. I can’t conclude this part without mention of Adaora, Emmanuel, Chichi (my platoon lover), Sherriff, Zubbie, IB  and their crew. They were the real gees.

Despite  the lack of interest, support and cooperation from a larger part of the platoon members, they gave their all into seeing that we could move forward as a team. They had the zeal but we underestimated them.

PLATOON 4

The Dreaded Platoon

Officer Sahaad! (I hope I got the spelling). That man is phenomenal. He is a true definition of a leader. Ambitious, motivated, a motivator, a disciplinarian to the core, a friend, a colleague. Words aren’t just enough to describe this man. I would pick him as my Man of the Orientation Camp. His platoon was the envy of all.

From the first day with his platoon members,  he made it clear he was here to win, win and win. He grabbed the highest number of trophies in the competitions held in camp. Although, he had some huge losses, he was undeterred. He soared high above other platoon officers and led his team to victory. I will never forget this man and I would say I was fortunate to have had an interview with him.

THE LADIES

I know this is a part a lot of people would want to hear. Before I went to camp, I have heard so much unprintable words about boy-girl relationships in camp. I heard a lot of people throw caution to the wind in camp. I also got familiar with the “What happens in camp stays in camp” line.

I witnessed a few firsthand but I heard stories too. The things I saw eeehn… My mouth cannot mutter. I had a crush on one particular girl, I liked another, but that was just all about it. I decline to speak further on this before SHE comes asking me questions.

Let’s just say, I didn’t get myself involved in anything that would have tarnished my image or ruined my relationship with the best woman in the world after my mother.

NYSC DG

The Director General of the National Youths Service Corps, NYSC, Sulyman Kazaure paid a visit to Ebonyi on July 17th. He visited us – Batch A, Stream 2 corps members at the Orientation Camp in Afikpo, Ebonyi State.

I had a rare privilege to have an interview with him, courtesy, OBS and the ever supportive Ebonyi camp, PRO. We also had an opportunity to take a picture with the boss himself, alongside the state coordinator, Mrs Gladys Mbachi. I felt I had just been in a picture with the president. I forever cherish that moment.

PPA

My heart beamed with joy when I received my letter for my Place of Primary Assignment (PPA). I was posted to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism without lobbying for anything. Eeerm. That’s God’s grace at work.

He’s a faithful God. I was thinking earlier today, and I remembered my final year project was: Promoting Culture and National Unity through Nigerian Films, using Tunde Kelani’s “Arugba” and “Thunderbolt” as a case study.

Could it be a coincidence? I don’t think so. A lot of people have been asking me if I redeployed. They get disappointed when I say NO. The next question they ask is “How will you be able to run OYA from Ebonyi?”

OYA is a moving train. OYA is not just me. OYA is a team of creative and talented individual coming together to make a difference in their society. As a team, we will combine our experience, influence and demography to build a global leading media brand.

We have a team of people in different parts of the country and we will all unite to serve our readers and client better. Personally, I’m optimistic about my posting and I’m believing in God for the best in this service year.

I am keeping an open mind. This will be the most interesting year ever. No time for negativity. Positive vibes only. Regardless of how the system frustrates us, we will continue to do our best in our own capacity. God bless Nigeria.

 http://lifedrama.com.ng/nysc-member-shares-orientation-camp-experience-a-corpers-tale/




Officer Sahaad.... The most respected officer in NYSC Macgregor camp... I served at Afikpo North Development Centre#Stayed close to the camp (Okogiri lodge) #EBOKopa#team2013batchC#401..Enyoy your service year Op.. Ebonyi is a calm place
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by brainbox1000(m): 8:43am On Jul 09, 2016
Very nice... can't wait
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by lebixe007: 8:50am On Jul 09, 2016
Saheed has always bn de best commander in Ebonyi camp. I cud remember during my time dere, 2014 batch C. He won every competition winnable. He has always bn de best.

1 Like

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Gaxx01(m): 8:50am On Jul 09, 2016
holamiday:
Every fried commodity in Rivers state camp had a repugnant smell too. I talked to people about it but only one person could reason with me. I later got to know the smell came from the oil. You're right about the camp lectures. They were way too long & boring. Rivers stat camp was fun too. Our RSM to me was the main official of the camp. Dude had a bizarre voice & hilarious attitude.

Yea, exactly how i felt.. The smell from d oil was horrible, had to buy oil from when returning to my ppa.. Rivers is fun n cool
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by mightyrocket(m): 8:51am On Jul 09, 2016
Didn't really enjoy my stay in Kano(Karaye camp) but hopefully i should enjoy my stay in ebonyi
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Nobody: 8:58am On Jul 09, 2016
guy you are right about one thing. platoon 8 was full of crazy shit. that was because most of them were above 35yrs old and they believe they were above the rules. anyway I love camp. but PPA is whack.
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Nobody: 9:00am On Jul 09, 2016
lebixe007:
Saheed has always bn de best commander in Ebonyi camp. I cud remember during my time dere, 2014 batch C. He won every competition winnable. He has always bn de best.
his name is sa'ad. he is very competitive.
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by EROMS38(m): 9:08am On Jul 09, 2016
Served there in 2007 Batch A. Izzikworo High Sch ukometa Ezza south lg..camp was @ Izzi. My experience was the good, bad and ugly.

2 Likes

Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by Yezzy(m): 9:11am On Jul 09, 2016
Contact me about the OYA thing. Think I'll be interested. Dats my digit. 08120917657. Thanks
Re: Ebonyi Corper Shares His Orientation Camp Experience – A Corper’s Tale by beamzy08(m): 9:24am On Jul 09, 2016
staff sergeant sa'ad......dat man is on point....selfless, relentless, hardworking, gud advisor and ever funny...one of the soldier's dat make d camp lively....cnt forget him EB batch B 2015

2 Likes

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