Peugeot 3008 2.0 HDI diesel in for service. This is a perfect alternative If you want to avoid the Kenya uniform CX-5. It pulls really well & has the 8 speed gearbox. Also very reliable.
Nipatiwe idea ya kufanyisha hii kitu mboka ama itoshee kwa mfuko 😄
Ordered it from the UK in Feb to use it for event gear transportation. After the robbery incident at my residence in March this year, I've gotten less invested in purchasing more event gear that will require such a transportation van.
It's a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter 314 long wheel base, YOM 2019, Diesel, Manual transmission
@amerix 16 bodies in a morgue, dead. But the only thing that concerns them is CCTV inside a dormitory. Mpaka nikajiuliza 'tulikosea wapi, to have such learned useless people in our society.'
Today my car key broke at ABC Parking. I googled and found a company that repairs car keys and they come to where you are in minutes and do the work right next to you. It was a Gen Z who showed up and sorted me out all within 30 minutes. We are the ones failing these young people as a Country. They are ready to take off!
I asked my dad about this quote from Maharajji:
“When you do not want a thing, it comes to you. But when you ask for it, it runs away.”
i asked him why life tends to work like that sometimes. and that it contradicts one of my favorite quotes from The Alchemist, which says “when you want something, the universe conspires to help you achieve it.”
he told me it might be the difference between ego and surrender. that sometimes, when things run from us, it’s because there’s something we’re meant to learn by not having it.
in his words:
“sometimes it’s the separation between our personal ego-driven desires and God’s will. the alchemist is still true, it plants a seed. but sometimes when something runs from you, it’s because there’s a deeper lesson in not having it. it’s feeding something spiritual. and when you finally let go of the need, it usually comes….if it’s meant to.”
sometimes letting go is the doorway to receiving.
Senegal is becoming a perfect case study of what happens when revolutionary politics finally meets the realities of governing.
It’s easy to unite people against a system.
It’s much harder to run the economy, negotiate debt, satisfy voters and still maintain the purity of the movement.
A lot of liberation-style movements in Africa struggle once they transition from opposition to government because charisma and slogans eventually collide with budgets, IMF pressure and state institutions.
That’s exactly what we’re watching in Senegal right now.