Le congo c'est :
- génocide à l'est qui n'est toujours pas maitrisé
- des millions de déplacés sans logement ni aide d'état
- une femme violée toutes les quatre minutes à l'est du pays
- des embouteillages chroniques dans la capitale
- banditisme/kidnapping à gogo
- pas d'eau chaude ni d'électricité pour tous
- problème d'inondation important
- pas de travail
- les fonctionnaires pas/peu payés
- pas d'argent = pas de soin à l'hôpital
ETC... Fatshi tu as au moins 1000 problèmes qui auraient du attirer ton attention depuis ton 1ER MANDAT mais ta priorité c'est de récompenser le top 1% ? 😀
sorry i can’t hang, i need to watch my shows and then go on a walk listening to podcasts recapping my shows and then go on reddit and read about my shows. booked and busy!
When he died eight days ago, his face was everywhere. Every platform carried his photo. Everyone had something to say. The timelines were heavy with grief. For two days, it felt as though the whole country paused.
But eight days later, the noise has faded. His name is no longer on people’s lips. His image has been swept aside like dust in harmattan wind. Life has continued, as it always does. Only his family still sits with the real weight of it. Only they feel the ache that does not trend and does not expire.
Are we meant to mourn forever? But there is something sobering about how quickly the world moves on when a person dies. It reminds you that applause is brief, attention is fleeting, and the crowd does not stay long.
So laugh while your lungs are strong enough to carry it. Cry when you must. Love deeply and allow yourself to be loved in return. Travel if you can. Eat good food. Sit with friends and merry. Forgive quickly. Carry no hatred in your chest; it is too heavy for such a short journey.
Do that thing you have been postponing. Stop telling yourself “one day.” Help someone. Share what you have. Give, even if it is small.
All we truly have is now. The present hour. Make every second, minute, and hour count. Live your best life.