Zulu Lesson The Head
Gentle reminder. We have a head, and it is full of twists and turns nature engineered, so that we can think. We don’t think anymore, because we are very busy, punching our phones. Hopefully, common sense will return from the extended vacation one day, and we’ll use our heads again.
The head is ikhanda in Zulu. I-kha-nda. Remember, you always say the first part like e-mail. You say the second part like car and the last like Linda. The English language has many proverbs about the head, for example: let’s put our heads together or use your head. For starters, let’s double check if we still have the head. Touch it.
Ikhanda lam’ means my head.
Ikhanda lomuzi means the head of the family.
Ngiphethwe ikhanda means I have a headache.
Akana khanda means he’s senseless. He doesn’t think.
The head is super important because it is just one thing, but we have two ears, two hands, two feet, two legs, two lungs, two eyes etc. What these pairs do, ends up in the head. That’s why little kids want to ‘walk’ in public places like malls. They get tired and push their own strollers. It’s inevitable they’ll get tired. They raise their hands and parents pick them up. The head is like a clearing house, like Canada Post sorting out parcels from Amazon.
I need a vacation to clear my head. Vacation?
Nonqaba waka Msimang
Executive Blogger
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