Bukola Oriola

Author| Advocate| Mentor| Entrepreneur

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Common Roots Cafe Scope

October 12, 2015 By Bukola Oriola

Common Roots Cafe Scope At the Common Roots Cafe in Minneapolis meeting with a faculty staff member of Metropolitan State University, Saby Labor.
The meeting was to give an update about Bringing the Story Back Home (BTSBH), the just concluded human trafficking awareness tour to Nigeria’s higher institutions in which Metropolitan State University was one of the sponsors.
I received a study abroad grant with another student, Brandt Schubbe to embark on this human trafficking prevention project through awareness among the Nigerian youths.
It was a success.
Thanks to all our Nigerian and U.S. sponsors and partners. Together, we can combat human trafficking and prevent others from becoming victims through awareness.
Thanks to my Periscope viewers…. Today, my special thanks goes to my viewer from Turkey.

 

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Filed Under: Blog, Videos Tagged With: Bringing the Story Back Home, Common Roots Cafe Scope

Let’s chat and write on Periscope

October 12, 2015 By Bukola Oriola

In this broadcast, I showed my Periscope viewers the steps I took to rebranding my website and work. I shared some of the information that anyone into online business can use. Some of the people or products you will here about here are:

  1. Arvin the Perihacker
  2. MailerLite
  3. Copyblogger
  4. Parallax pro theme by Genesis

These are just tips that helped me with rebranding my work. My work here focuses on human trafficking and domestic abuse and how to better serve the immigrant community through culturally competent services.
Join the conversation on Periscope follow me today: https://www.periscope.tv/bukolaoriola/1yoKMNlkeQRGQ
Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/BukolaL.Oriola
Twitter: https://twitter.com/bukolaoriola
Website: www.bukolaoriola.com

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It’s world day against trafficking in persons: A personal reflection

July 30, 2015 By Bukola Oriola

World day against trafficking This was an essay entitled, It Feels Like Yesterday,  that I wrote two years ago. It was in my nonfiction writing class with Professor Kate Kysar at Anoka Ramsey Community College. I decided to share it as a personal reflection since it’s World Day Against Trafficking in Persons.


It feels like yesterday. It’s been six years already. How time flies! Where has the time gone to? On October 16, 2013, it will be exactly six years since I began a journey into freedom with my son as a survivor. We are indeed, both survivors. I am a survivor of domestic abuse; I am a survivor of human trafficking. You have no idea what it feels like to be imprisoned until you lose your power to freedom for a moment. You have no clue what it means to crave for food as a pregnant woman but not able to eat, not because there is no food, but because you are being tortured for a crime being committed against you. You cannot phantom working while someone else is collecting the money. I have lived it. I have survived it. I am a survivor.
According to various sources, one in four women experience domestic abuse in their life time. Eighty-five percent of abuse occurs by an intimate partner. The rate of domestic abuse is high where “Estimates range from 960,000 incidents of violence against a current or former spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend to three million women who are physically abused by their husband or boyfriend per year,” (Domestic Violence Resource Center). Human trafficking, on the other hand, is higher where it is described as the third largest crime in the world, next to trafficking of firearms and drugs. Human trafficking can happen as a result of fraud, force, or coercion. More so, human trafficking can occur, not only among strangers, but also among family members. It is the modern day slavery. It is interesting to find out that sometimes, human trafficking can be hiding under domestic abuse. It takes further investigation to reach this conclusion.
Since 2009 when I decided to go public by putting my face to my story, it has been both rewarding and fulfilling for me – some victims are now able to identify themselves, others who come in contact with victims are helping victims to reach out for help. The first person who reached out for help was one of my hair braiding customers – Hope (name withheld). It was about six o’clock in the morning. I was in the kitchen getting ready to prepare breakfast for my son and before heading out to church for the Sunday morning service, I went to the kitchen and opened the fridge thinking “what am I going to prepare this morning?” As usual, I bent down a little bit with my right hand holding the door to the fridge; and my eyes scanning through the three layers in the fridge holding pots of soup, plastic containers of cooked food, vegetables, eggs, left over foods, and just about some of the little item a fridge can hold to get an idea of what to prepare that morning.
I was yet to decide when my cell phone rang. “It’s early! Who could be calling at this time of the morning?” I thought. I closed the fridge and went for the phone to unplug it from the socket where I left it to charge overnight. When I reached the phone and saw the caller ID, I was happy that my prayer had been answered. I had just barely finished praying and went into the kitchen to get ready for church; and, a customer is calling already? Every day, I pray for my customers; more so, I pray that they call to make hair braiding appointments. Well, not so fast. It was a prayer answered but not for hair braiding.

A victim of human trafficking needed help. When I answered the phone, “hello, good morning Hope,” the response I received was, “Bukola, those people that helped you, can they help me?” with a dejected voice. For a minute, I forgot that I was looking for food in the fridge; I concentrated on the telephone conversation. Meanwhile, all kinds of thoughts flashed through my mind simultaneously – so, some of my customers are victims of domestic abuse; some are victims of human trafficking; some are not safe at home. It was a good idea that they read my book for free or bought it at the shop. I controlled my thoughts to come back to the present conversation and said, “Yes, they can help you. The help is not only for Bukola, but for everyone who needs help.” I told her, “hang on, let me look for the number.”
While she was waiting on the other side of the phone, I reached into my contact list to look for the number of the host of the support group for Immigrant Women and Refugee where I had been helped as a foreign-born victim. I knew she would be the best first contact for Hope. She worked at the Home Free shelter for battered women in Plymouth, the same city where Hope resided. “Hello” I said. Hope said, “hello.” “Okay, take down this number and call now,” I said. After dictating the number to her, I assured her that she would be fine. When the call ended, I felt like I had just won a battle. The reason I published my book has come to fruition. Apparently, Hope was one of my customers who had bought and read my book when it was published in 2009. She never said anything to me other than, once, she recommended that I should have my book in book clubs and book shops around the Twin Cities.
Hope called the number I had given to her and she moved to the shelter with her twins. Her husband who was the culprit had run back to their home country in the southern part of Africa. I did not ask for the details of her story other than sending her to the right place; however, I continued to follow-up with her by calling and checking to see how she and her kids were doing. I support her in little ways that I could like braiding her hair for less and one time, I braided her daughter’s hair for free. I offered words of encouragement as she went through the process of restoration. For a foreign-born victim of human trafficking, it is a very long process because some of the needs are getting a status to remain and work in the United States legally. It is therefore very challenging for someone with two kids when there is barely any means of income for survival. Thank God for the shelter where basic needs are provided, but there is a distinct difference between earning an income to keep yourself and children and surviving with the help of a shelter.

However, human trafficking is becoming a prevalent crime around the world. The United Nation estimates that over two million people are being trafficked around the world. In fact, President Barack Obama declared the month of January human trafficking awareness month two years ago to create awareness and prevent the crime in the United States. In the past few years, many non-profits organizations have sprang up to advocate, rescue, or restore victims of human trafficking. The media are also paying attention to the issues of human trafficking with reports flooding the various media from print to online, sensitizing the community of the heinous crime. Hope is just one of many who have reached out to me for help since 2009. I have recorded victims reaching out for help from outside of Minnesota. I have seen victims reaching out for help among students at Anoka Ramsey. A victim reached out at Scholastic University in St. Paul after sharing my story.

It’s only been six years and I am happy at how far I have gone with my advocacy efforts. I am happy to see others reach out for help. Currently, a victim of domestic abuse all the way in Georgia is getting help because he was referred to me. Right now, I feel like no matter how dark the night might be, the sky will show it’s brightness in the morning with or without the sun.

Works Cited:
Domestic Violence Resource Center. Domestic Violence Resource Center. n.d. Web. 6 Oct. 2013

Thanks for reading. I hope to talk to you again through my blogs. If you have questions, comments or suggestions, please, send me a note – fill out the contact form. I want to hear from you.  You can also get my recent posts by signing up to receive updates.

Bye for now, until next time.

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PS: Have you checked out my blogger page yet? If you have not, you can check it out here. There I share everything that I am connected with in one place; hence, the name of the page, All Things Bukola Oriola.

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Filed Under: Human Trafficking & Domestic Abuse Tagged With: It's world day against trafficking in persons: A personal reflection

 Bukola Museum of Entertainment: The Bonus Story

July 2, 2015 By Bukola Oriola

2015-06-22 15.28.44 This is the bonus article that I promised to write, in addition to a four-part article, about my experience with oral surgery. In case you missed the four-part article, you can read them first,  Dental Death Sentence,  The teeth cleaning, chopping, sharpening tools, scary experience,  The consultation, cry baby, I want my teeth and The Surgery: Wasn’t as bad as I thought.

Now that the trauma is all over, I can smile with relief again. I am eating corn on the cob. I feel some of it getting lost in my well of toothless ‘holey’ gum. Give me a minute. I will be right back. “Why?” You must be thinking. Yes, give me a minute. I need to go gaggle. Thanks for your patience. I had just gone to gaggle. You know, it can be a little difficult to get used to a new routine. Gaggling after everything that goes into my mouth is a routine that I have to endure for now. Frankly speaking, I have tried to skip it but the open wound in my gum was not thankful, so, I had no choice but to comply.

Funny enough, I don’t know how long I have to continue to gaggle. I just thought about it this morning too. I was not asked to go to my dentist for a follow up on the wound. Perhaps, I just have to believe that I will fully recover and there will be no complications. Although, I was given a pamphlet that talked about what to do after oral surgery and it only required going back to the clinic when you have complications. So far, there are no complications and I hope to stay that way. I don’t want to go back.

Now, I am smiling. Did I tell you that I got my teeth back? Yes, I did. And, guess what I told my family and friends? I told them that I can now open Bukola Museum of Entertainment to display my teeth for public viewing. Wait a minute…. It’s not going to be free. However, I will have family and friends’ price, special day price, and fan’s day price. That way, I could add more items to the museum. While I was telling Grandma Annette and Grandpa Jim (you met them in my last article, The Surgery: Wasn’t as bad as I thought), Grandpa Jim said, “Maybe, you should take out all your teeth so that the museum will have everything in it.” And I screamed, “Noooooooooooooo.” Instead, I said, “I will add some of my clothes, and other stuff.”

To cut the long story short, I am just happy now. I already have someone shared her tooth extraction story with me on Facebook for sharing mine. It may feel overwhelming, especially, if it’s the first time, but I assure you that it is not as bad as you may think. The uncomfortable feelings on one side of my head had disappeared and I just need to have my ‘holey’ gum heal so that I don’t keep poking on it whenever I am brushing my teeth.

So, can you see the big hole in one of the tooth?(See post featured picture). That is my tooth number 31. To avoid such happening to you or your loved one, go for dental examination. It is easier with kids. In addition, you will not need to have two teeth vacate your mouth, or that of your loved one to a point of no return.

Thanks for reading. I hope to talk to you again through my blogs. If you have questions, comments or suggestions, please, send me a note – fill out the contact form. I want to hear from you.  You can also get my recent posts by signing up to receive updates.

Bye for now, until next time.

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PS: Have you checked out my blogger page yet? If you have not, you can check it out here. There I share everything that I am connected with in one place; hence, the name of the page, All Things Bukola Oriola.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Bukola Museum of Entertainment: The Bonus Story

The Surgery: Wasn’t as bad as I thought

July 1, 2015 By Bukola Oriola

2015-06-22 15.05.58 This is the last of a four-part article about my experience with oral surgery. In case you missed the first, second, and third parts, you can read them first,  Dental Death Sentence,  The teeth cleaning, chopping, sharpening tools, scary experience, and The consultation, cry baby, I want my teeth.

When I was making the appointment with the urgent care clinic, I was asked to come in early because it was on a first come, first serve basis. Grandma Annette and Grandpa Jim picked me up one hour early for a thirty minutes’ drive. We arrived at the clinic on time and I checked in. I was called in and was given a pair of safety glasses to put on. The nurse, Christy (I think) examined my mouth and said, “I think you have to go to the other side of the hall to do a procedure. We can’t take out the tooth.” I told her that I was supposed to have two teeth extracted – number 31 and 32.

She said well, “Let the doctor come and take a look, then we will decide.” I told her my ordeal and the miserable journey I had embarked upon as a result of my dental dilemma. She said, “We will figure something out, but I don’t think we can do it.” She added, “You don’t have to be in pain. I will follow you to the other side to talk to them.” Christy was really nice. It was like holding my hands all the way. When the doctor came in, they both decided that I had to go to the Oral and Maxillofacial section. Christy took me across the hallway. I signaled to grandma and grandpa in the waiting room that I would be back as Christy took me across the hall to the Oral and Maxillofacial section of the clinic.

The front desk staff said, “We have an appointment for you in August,” but I said, “I am in pain and one part of my head seemed like it does not belong to me.” Then she turned to Christy to ask, “Is there swelling around the gum?” And, Christy said, “Yes, it is really looking bad.” Then the front desk staff said, “Let me see if there is something available for you this afternoon. Go have a sit.” I was a little relieved that the teeth will finally be vacating my mouth and never to return like a lost ship in the deep sea. I thanked Christy as she went back to the urgent care section of the clinic.

I sat for a few minutes, then, I quickly ran to the urgent care section to beckon grandma and grandpa to come with me. They came and sat with me. I told them the new development. Grandma was pretty vocal about her happiness that I would be free from pain.

I had been told that I was not going to go through the procedure asleep and that I was going to feel when they were working on me. I consoled myself with my C-section experience almost nine years ago when I had my son. I was not put to sleep, I could feel the pressure but not pain during the procedure. So, I thought to myself, “It is going to be like that. I will not feel the pain but the pressure.”

When my name was called out by the nurse, I followed her to the back room, filled paperwork, and was made to watch the video that I had seen during my consultation a few months ago again. According to her, it was compulsory for a patient to watch the video. I had to also append my signature that I watched the video. Afterwards, she was going to take me to another room for Panoramic X-ray. But I quickly said that I had given them a disc. She was surprised because she had not seen it. The doctor that was going to the procedure, Dr. Harold, came in. She told him that I said that I had brought a disc.  Dr. Harold said, “Okay, let me go upstairs and check.” Then, the nurse asked if she could go ahead or standby, he said, “Standby.”

She took me back to the room where I laid on the dental bed. Another nurse joined her and while she was taking my vital signs, Dr. Harold came in with the disc. He popped it in the CPU and a picture of my entire mouth appeared on the screen. Turning to me, he said, “I will give you local anesthesia, so you will not sleep, but you will be fine.” I said, “Okay.”  He brought out a very long syringe. I have never seen such a long syringe before. He injected around the teeth and went into my jaw. He said, “You will feel a pinch.” I think that statement was right for the injection by the teeth but not for the jaw. After administering the anesthesia in the jaw area, I felt my mouth moving to one side of my ear. Dr. Harold stepped out saying, “I will be right back.” Then, one of the nurses asked, “How do you feel?” With my now babble speech, “I said, I feel that my mouth is moving to this side” using my hand to show the side with which my mouth was moving. She smiled and said, “That is how you should feel.”

Shortly after, Dr. Harold came in and said, “Open your mouth. You will be fine.” As I opened, something was put in my mouth to keep it ajar while the procedure was on. I closed my eyes praying in my mind and calling Jesus with my inner voice and I felt the hard pressure on my gum. When I felt the pull or hard shaking, I held on tightly to my cell phone and screamed Jesus with my inner voice.

All of a sudden, Dr. Harold said, “Bite hard.” I was like, “Is it done.” He and the nurses chorused, “Yes.” With my mouth still on one side, I said,“Thank you so much. That didn’t take that long.” They said, “Yes.” After watching the video before the procedure, Dr. Harold had asked if I had any question and my question was about the length of the procedure. The video said about an hour but Dr. Harold assured me that it was not going to be that long. He was right. It took half the time – only about thirty minutes and it was done.

I had made a special request. I wanted my teeth. He agreed to give me my teeth but the nurses warned me against exposing it publicly because of germs, I promised that if she put it in a ziplock bag, I was going to keep it in my bra until I left the premises. I wanted them because, they belonged to me, plus, I wanted to use it to encourage my eight year-old son to brush his teeth regularly. Dr. Harold thought it was a good idea to use it to encourage my young son to keep good dental hygiene.

When I took the teeth out of the zip lock, it was stinking like a decomposed corpse. Well, I cleaned it and dipped in rubbing alcohol. I showed it to my son and friends. Indeed, the wisdom tooth did great damage to the tooth beside it. It had dug a big hole underneath the tooth and I felt relieved that my dental nightmare was over.

At the end of the whole process, I assessed my experience and thought; it wasn’t a bad procedure after all. I was just been paranoid for nothing. I will like to use my experience to encourage anyone out there to go for regular dental examination, because, I was told that if it had been examined earlier, the wisdom tooth would have been taken out before it damaged the tooth beside it. More so, it wasn’t a death sentence as I had felt. It was for my own good and total health. I was happy to get my smile back, plus, the holes are not even visible because they were way in the back of my mouth. The local anesthesia was not a bad idea too. In fact, I was glad that I was not made to sleep. I didn’t feel too weak at the end of the surgery. Most of all, I did not feel pain. The analgesics that I was given were really helpful. I just felt loopy and sleepy. Plus, I am up during weird hours of the night but I was grateful that pain was not in the equation. However, I must say that I didn’t like the gaggle part of my recovery. The salt water just makes my stomach upset for a little bit and I don’t like the taste in my mouth after every meal. But still, I will take that for pain any day, any time.

This is the concluding part of the four-part article. However, I have a surprise for you – a bonus article to show you my extracted teeth. You don’t want to miss it. It is entitled, Bukola Museum of Entertainment: The Bonus Story

Thanks for reading. I hope to talk to you again through my blogs. If you have questions, comments or suggestions, please, send me a note – fill out the contact form. I want to hear from you.  You can also get my recent posts by signing up to receive updates.

Bye for now, until next time.

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PS: Have you checked out my blogger page yet? If you have not, you can check it out here. There I share everything that I am connected with in one place; hence, the name of the page, All Things Bukola Oriola.

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Get a copy of the international best selling book by Bukola Oriola, A Living Label: An Inspirational Memoir and Guide.   Book Description: A Living Label is a memoir that documents some of the struggles and triumphs of the author as a survivor of labor trafficking and domestic violence in the U.S. Bukola Oriola’s goal is to inspire hope in other survivors that they can turn their lives around positively, regardless of what difficulty they might have passed through. She also provides practical solutions to the government, service providers, NGOs, and the general public on how to effectively engage with survivors, to value them as the subject matter experts they are. As someone who has dedicated her life to empowering other survivors, she has decided to contribute the proceeds from the book sales to survivors’ education or their businesses, starting with 100 survivors in the United States, Nigeria and Kenya. She believes that survivors want to be independent and contribute to their communities, and she wants to help survivors achieve this dream. Learn more from the inspiring author, Book Bukola now!
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