Read my latest story "David Learns--The watch on his wrist had stopped working two years earlier, but he still wore it because clients looked" via link below⬇️
@ihtesham2005 I wish this tweet was written like a research paper, abstract at the top; the research + findings; finally summary. Pretty sure your message hasn't been efficious.
I can swear 80% of black-british content has a Nigerian protagonist nowadays; movies & tv-shows from the past 2 years too...https://t.co/wY0T4EQzgj
@ChamberofFit Most of the western world is concerned they're eating too much, while where I come from its psychological pain not hitting a calorie surplus because it's expensive
The watch on his wrist had stopped working two years earlier, but he still wore it because clients looked at watches before they looked at proposals.
Read the full-story of growth; power; and ambition. Here for $1- https://t.co/SScKGWZHos
That calmness made people think...
The first thing people noticed about David Mwangi was that he never raised his voice.
Not in meetings.
Not when suppliers lied.
Not when employees quit.
Not even when banks threatened to freeze his accounts.
He would just sit there — calm, hands folded, watching.
That calmness made people think he was powerful. The truth was less glamorous. At twenty-eight, David lived in a one-room apartment above a hardware store in Nairobi. The suit he wore to client meetings belonged to his older cousin.