🤔🤔 Este es el PENALTI que ha pedido Egipto justo en el inicio de la jugada del 3-2 de Enzo Fernández.
No sé si os parece claro o no, pero yo lo que sé es que si es al revés SE PITA SEGURO.
https://t.co/T2eTjampx7
If you think Uganda’s high cost of living is exaggerated, try being a man in Kampala who has to meet the aesthetic, cosmetic, and financial standards of the modern woman.
The average Kampala man feels under constant pressure, running a race where the finish line keeps moving. It does not matter if he is a corporate executive in Kololo or a hustler in Kasokoso. It also does not matter if she is a live-in partner or a girlfriend he met three months ago at a nightclub in Industrial Area.
Visit any pork joint on a Tuesday evening, sit at an upscale rooftop bar, or ride a taxi to Mukono, and you will hear the same complaint. Kampala men are exhausted. The main cause of their stress is the realization that in this city, a woman’s satisfaction feels almost impossible to achieve.
To understand the Kampala woman, from a university student to a long-term partner, you must accept that her financial expectations grow faster than normal economic logic. She often sees a man’s honest budget as an insult.
If a man rents a decent two-bedroom in Kisaasi, his girlfriend will spend the weekend watching TikTok videos of houses in Kira and make him feel inadequate. If he buys a Toyota Wish to save her from public transport, she will not see it as love. She will ask why he did not get a Subaru Forester or a Mercedes to match her image.
Dissatisfaction has moved beyond cars and houses. Many women now demand a new physical identity, and this puts huge financial strain on men. A man can leave home in the morning with a dark-skinned partner and return to find she has lightened her skin with expensive creams and drips bought during his lunch break.
For men with deeper pockets, the demand escalates to medical tourism. A trip to Turkey or Egypt for a Brazilian Butt Lift has become a status symbol. The irony is painful. He funds surgery to reshape her body for TikTok views while he is still trying to pay the balance on his plot in Sonde. Worse, he is paying to upgrade an asset she intends to use to attract a wealthier man.
In Kampala’s relationship rules, running broke is treated as a moral failure. When a man’s income drops, the mood at home changes overnight. Chicken and fish are replaced by plain greens served with hostility. If the hardship lasts, the exit plan begins. Girlfriends become busy with church, meetings, or sick relatives while looking for a new sponsor online. Live-in partners withhold affection and hint to friends that they are wasting their best years.
Social media has made this worse through what locals call “plot culture.” Women compare their lives to influencers’ filtered posts and demand similar weekends at Lake Victoria resorts, regardless of the economy. The corporate woman often earns well but insists the man cover all rent, bills, and groceries while her own money funds hair, travel, and personal investments. If he asks for help during a bad month, he is labeled weak.
In poorer areas like Kasokoso, women use constant complaints as a survival tactic. They believe praise will make a man lazy or unfaithful, so they keep him in financial panic. Even young girlfriends request urgent transport or data money, then disappear and reappear with new nails and wigs.
The result is predictable. Bars fill up at 4 p.m. on weekdays. They are not just places for drinking. They are refuges where men escape sighs, ultimatums, and unappreciated effort at home. They find comfort knowing every man at the table is facing the same pressure.
The big question is when “a good man” changed from being responsible and present to being a magician who creates miracles in a struggling economy. Women say the cost of living demands ambition. Men reply that ambition dies in a home without gratitude.
Until women balance high expectations with appreciation, bars will stay full. If you are a Kampala man, what is your survival strategy? If you are a woman, is it wrong to expect your man to level up, or are men just making excuses for being broke?
✍🏼: Deox T