Do you know someone who is very good at giving excuses—so good that, in most cases, they can get away with almost anything?
As someone who has experienced both hardship and abundance, I have given my fair share of excuses about why I couldn't get ahead or do the things I wanted to do. Looking back, I have learned that excuses often mask fear rather than actual limitations.
Your excuses will not put food on the table. They will not improve your life, and they will not make your country better. They may help you explain your situation, but they will never change it.
If you choose to explain every challenge that comes your way, you may also end up explaining away the very opportunities that could transform your life. Growth requires action, not explanations.
The reality is that every excuse carries a cost. While you are busy justifying why something cannot be done, someone else is figuring out how to get it done.
At the end of the day, life responds more to responsibility than to excuses. The question is not whether your reasons are valid. The question is whether they are helping you move forward.
I can never sit in a meeting to discuss items or money to be given to me for my daughter. That would be an insult to my daughter, and a display of greed on my part. My daughter is not like a cow that I’m breeding for the market, for me to earn from her marriage. All I would wish for is a sensible man who would treat her right, and that they love each other. The introduction ceremony should basically be about the two families meeting and getting to know each other.
Many young people in these hard times are no longer able to marry because of these retrogressive (primitive) practices that hardly ever get to be questioned. Today, Kukyala is a huge show-off function. Kwanjula is like a concert. Then a bigger religious wedding!
Culture can be improved as times change. Otherwise, things that were once meaningful can evolve into a nuisance protected under the banner of CULTURE.
Wezesha Impact's MD, Mr. James Katumba, pledged continued support to graduates, ensuring ongoing monitoring of their business progress. He urged them to persevere and pursue their aspirations.
#SIYBGraduation || #BRMMProject
PP James Katumba ~ Resilience: Develop the ability to bounce back from challenges by:
- Reflecting on setbacks
- Resetting your approach
- Rebuilding your strategy
- Planning for potential setbacks
#RYLAD9214
Recognizing your strengths, weaknesses, and passions is the first step toward success. Once you understand yourself, you can establish clear objectives that align with your values and aspirations. - PP James Katumba
#RYLAD9214
The WISE Model comprises four pillars:
1. Who Am I: Continuously discover and refine your self-awareness.
2. Invest: Invest early, even if it's a small start.
3. Self-Development: Become a master of your craft through continuous learning and growth.
4. Empowering Relationships: Nurture relationships that support your goals - PP James Katumba
#RYLAD9214
Dear P7 Parent:
Whatever the results, please let them know that you know they did everything they could. Celebrate them. Comfort them. Feel the emotions with them.
You can worry about secondary school cut-off points later. Today, let them know that their effort is appreciated.
@UmemeLtd and @UEDCLTD we in Namagoma have only had electricity for a few hours since 30th December! What has happened since the handover? Are long blackouts the new normal?
- We were told the prisons would be full of thieves stealing public funds🤔
- Instead the prisons are full of young people fighting the thieves 😏
- We were told a war had been declared against corruption 🤔
- Instead the guns are now turned on the young people waging that war
#StopAbuseofPowerUG
#March2Paliament