Poverty is one dreadful thing that no one would
want to have anything to do with. But there is something about poverty that
drives slumber from the eyes of its victim, propelling them to keep wake and
strive while all else lay fast asleep.
Like a leech it would stick unrepentantly to its
victim hoping death alone would do them part. So long is its tentacle and
domineering that once it takes holds of an individual, its ugly influence would
be seen and felt in all facets of the individual’s life, including his thinking
processes.
As ugly and heartless poverty may be, there is
something interesting about it. Like a large billyclub positioned somewhat
above the individual’s head, hitting it with all its might, with a stinging but
mild touch, nudging him to act. With hunger, want and untold reproach, poverty
will send its victim to bed many a sleepless nights, nudging them to abandon
sleep and act.
Many a days of untold hardship and helplessness
has propelled many invalids
Ouida was not the least wrong when he submitted
that Poverty is very terrible, and sometimes kills the very soul within us, but
it is the north wind that lashes men into Vikings; it is the soft, luscious
south wind which lulls them to lotus dreams.
Little Peter had thought that the world had ended
when he learnt that his father had passed away. The seven-year-old, being the
first child, soon finds himself in a position where he had to drop out of
school to hawk akara to support his poor mother and help pay his siblings’
school fees. Life was rough and painful but he had no much trouble coping until
his former schoolmates came around, taunting and calling him all sorts of
derogatory names. It was at this point that something in him was triggered and
he promised himself that no matter how rough the road may be that his riches
would transcend that of them all. His path was laden with seemingly
insurmountable obstacles; for he had to leave for Lagos to become an apprentice
who would eventually serve his master dutifully for years and would be rudely
dismissed for no cogent reason. Times and times again he started out with
nothing, trying his hands on all manner of businesses until he began to
diligently grow in wealth and today you may not count five top businessmen in our
country before Dr. Peter’s name would surface.
Olaudah Equiano was about twelve years old when
he was kidnapped and sold to slave traders. As with other slaves in those days
the day eventually came when he was to meet the white man chained like a
captured animal to other slaves on the coast for examination and eventual
transportation across the Atlantic. A broken Equiano watched in indescribable
horror, pain and agony as they were bundled into their various cells in a
manner not much different how soft drink bottles are packed into crates. These
alone were enough to make a man go through life with his head buried somewhere
in his stomach beaten and left for dead by the billy club of cruelty and
blaming all on some fate he had no control over but Olaudah began to master his
circumstances. As the days went by, the little Nigerian slave had his name
changed over and again as owners came and went but he would not give up. He
told himself that those that are free are not better than he is and with great
determination he worked hard till he began to earn allowances, saving all he
could lay his hands on until he was able to procure back his freedom. Not only
did he work hard till he became free, he taught himself until he gave England
and the wider world his autobiography, one of the earliest by not just a black
man but a one-time slave and fought to see the abolition of slave trade.
Scarcely would anyone read these lines who would ever be poorer than Olaudah, but he allowed his condition to inspire him to take action. You can either choose to blame everybody else for your poverty, play the denial game or be inspired to work hard until you have something to show for all the trouble.
Scarcely would anyone read these lines who would ever be poorer than Olaudah, but he allowed his condition to inspire him to take action. You can either choose to blame everybody else for your poverty, play the denial game or be inspired to work hard until you have something to show for all the trouble.


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