Depression and loneliness end when ends meet at the end to reach joyous ends




L
ife maddens some, maims some, favors greed and greedy and the oppressive afflicting people like Santo.
His educational history dwindled to a halt when his old poor mother hardly paid his school fees.
Her farm could only produce groundnuts sold only to boost livelihood.
In spite of this evil, this boy developed energetic with a weighed determination majoring in whatever he had put his efforts into even stepping on sons of the wealthiest men in his country South Sudan.


He began boasting after his success in Secondary school where he scooped unexpected grade: “A” topping their school and district.
In the course of learning, he had bad attitude towards, “Ugali,” liked the most by his Kenyan mates.
His unproven deductions were: Ugali makes students dull not to pass their exams well.

“After eating Ugali you become tired and lazy, and fail to read,” he used to say.

Meanwhile, negativity was when he played with his age mates: they teased him.
His pointed hind head was compared with that of Kingfisher.

“Kingfisher, where is the road to Juba,” the boys used to say.

And when he turned to see who said and respond, it took him another that, “The Kingfisher has turned and shown the way.”

This was a belief in his Sudanese society that if you do so Kingfisher’s hind head will be the right direction to follow.

By then, it was a favorite head to boast for and in return admired by them who ignored and teased.

“This is the store of knowledge,” he blew his trumpet. “Those compact heads, stony heads give you failure.”

Indeed they failed and he didn’t.

Way to University was narrow. Santo was such an ignoramus fellow ignoring Universities in his nation, Sudan that one needs to study where they should get true education. Where corruption is trimmed and freedoms are all protected.
These deductions were from statements by his friend who said students in Southern Universities sleep on the floor and outside, army comrades studying occupy beds and houses. All to say about free Universities.

While he was told to join University in Kenya by a friend, he thought he would walk tall and aggravate hate and failures.
After the longest queue in the bank depositing money at the standard chartered, he successfully found himself in a University class.
His worries hoped to be bygone next on.

“When time comes for your success, fate frees you and follows you no more,” he quoted.

After all, the boy works as an engineer in Sudan currently financially stable having completed his course.
Origin and poverty, hatred and cruelty, depression and loneliness have ends when ends meet letting you meet ends in total joyous momentous ends.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Chapter Eight: Betrayed For Love