Friday, March 20, 2026

HOW DO I KNOW WHAT IS TRULY RIGHT FOR ME?

We are living in an age of overwhelming noise. Opinions fly at us from every direction. Social media dictates trends. Influencers prescribe lifestyles. Society subtly insists on what success should look like. Even inherited dogmas and popular creeds, often accepted without question, add their own weight, shaping thought and narrowing perception. Yet beneath all this noise lies a troubling reality. Many people no longer trust their own judgment.

They are informed, but not clear. Connected, but not grounded. Guided by everything and everyone except the one voice that matters most, the voice within.

So the question persists, quietly but persistently: How do I know what is truly right for me?

The answer, surprisingly, is not complicated. It is simple, but not easy. Do only that which is good.

Not what is convenient. Not what is popular. Not what is profitable at all costs. But what is good.

There is within every human being a quiet but firm capacity to recognise goodness. It does not shout. It does not argue endlessly. It simply knows. The one who holds firmly to the will to do what is good, and who strives to keep their thoughts pure, has already found the path that leads upward. Such a person may not have all the answers, but they are not lost.

Clarity does not come from excessive analysis. It does not come from intellectual strain or from running from one book to another in search of certainty. Neither does it require withdrawal from life. In fact, the more we complicate the search, the more we lose sight of what has always been near.

Life begins to align when the inner compass is set correctly.

When a person commits to goodness in thought and action, something remarkable happens. There is a quiet restoration. The mind becomes less burdened. The body feels less strained. The endless cycle of overthinking begins to lose its grip. Balance returns, not by force, but by alignment.

What, then, disturbs this alignment?

It is often the weight of imposed ideas. Popular creeds, rigid expectations, and inherited beliefs that demand conformity rather than understanding. These systems, though sometimes well-intentioned, can become chains that bind the human spirit. They attempt to compress the vastness of truth into narrow definitions shaped by human limitations.

The sincere seeker feels this tension. Deep within, there is resistance. Not rebellion for its own sake, but a refusal of the soul to be confined. When this inner conflict is ignored for too long, it leads to frustration, then doubt, and eventually despair.

But there is another way.

Awaken. Look around you with fresh eyes. Question what you have accepted without understanding. More importantly, listen. Not to the loudest voices outside, but to the steady, unwavering voice within you. That voice does not deceive. It consistently points toward what is honest, just, and good.

Do not allow your inner clarity to be drowned by external noise. Do not surrender your judgment to systems that demand obedience without truth. Break free from whatever dulls your perception.

The way is not hidden. It has never been.

Choose what is good. Hold to it firmly. Let it guide your thoughts, your decisions, and your actions.

And then, without unnecessary mental strain or forced effort, you will know.


Friday, March 13, 2026

CHERISH YOUR BODY


There is a quiet tragedy in the careless way we inhabit our physical bodies. We live inside them daily, rely on them absolutely, and yet treat them as incidental to our purpose on earth. Only when pain intrudes do we awaken to the truth that the body is not a burden but an instrument entrusted to us, a sacred trust.

The physical body is not a decorative accessory. It is the very garment through which the spirit matures. Without it, nothing can be learned, corrected, or fulfilled. Still, man wears this garment with astonishing indifference; feeding it without reflection, straining it without restraint, and neglecting it until it protests. Health is squandered precisely because it is quiet; pain commands attention only because it interrupts comfort.

Over centuries, mankind has come to admire the idea that the highest expression of love is the voluntary destruction of one’s body for the sake of another. Dickens’ Sydney Carton steps calmly to the guillotine so another might live. Camus shows men risking death for others, expecting no reward. Across these works, the message is clear: one life freely given can cleanse the failures of another.

This is precisely where the error lies. Such acts do not appreciate or cherish the body but diminish it. When sacrificial suffering is portrayed as morally or spiritually redemptive, the lawfulness of creation is displaced by sentiment. The sense of justice is replaced with drama. The body ceases to be a sacred trust and becomes a negotiable token. Divine justice cannot be bargained with, and presuming that one human life can cancel another’s moral account only burdens the sacrificer with guilt.

True love and responsibility do not shorten life to appear noble. They work within the laws of creation, not against them. To destroy the body in the name of virtue is not gratitude; it is disregard. The body is the most precious possession for our time on earth, the indispensable implement through which growth occurs. It must be kept strong, pure, and ready for service. Man is not asked to discard his body to prove love; he is asked to use it rightly.

The glorification of sacrificial death has subtly taught generations to despise the physical form, to see it as expendable or even virtuous to destroy. Art and literature, in celebrating this notion, flatter pride and create the illusion of heroic significance. Yet a sensitive artist, or a thoughtful person, ought to recoil. It violates intuitive justice and diminishes the true magnitude of God by implying He could be swayed by theatrical suffering.

The higher path is quieter and far more demanding. It is to live fully in the body we are given; to preserve it, discipline it, respect its limits, and keep it fit for service. Wasting the body is not spirituality but negligence. Redemption is not achieved by shortening one’s earthly task; it is achieved by fulfilling it. Gratitude for the body expresses itself in care, cleanliness, moderation, conscious living, and the refusal to romanticize destruction. The body is not an obstacle to spiritual growth, it is the field in which it must occur.

When this truth is grasped, man begins to honor the gift that makes all earthly striving possible.


Sunday, March 08, 2026

THE QUIET TRAP OF COMPARISON


Comparison is a quiet thief. It rarely knocks loudly. It slips into our thoughts in ordinary moments and begins its subtle work.

You scroll through a photo. You hear someone’s promotion announced. You see a friend launch a new business, publish a book, build a house, travel the world. And almost without noticing, a small voice begins to whisper.

“Everyone else seems to be moving ahead.”

The difficulty with comparison is that it is almost always based on incomplete information. We see the visible parts of other people’s lives, but we rarely see the hidden parts.

We see the applause. We do not see the sleepless nights.
We see the achievement. We do not see the uncertainty that preceded it.
We see the polished outcome. We do not see the quiet struggles that shaped it.

Because of this, we often reach a wrong conclusion. We begin to believe that we are the only ones navigating multiple problems while our contemporaries have their lives neatly ordered and fully figured out.

In reality, every life carries its own private negotiations. Behind many visible successes are moments of doubt, setbacks, delayed plans, and personal battles that never make it to public view.

Comparison therefore creates a distorted mirror. It magnifies our perceived shortcomings while shrinking the complex reality of other people’s journeys.

A healthier path is to return our attention to our own lane.

Each of us stands where we stand today as the culmination of all we have done, all we have learned, all we have attempted, and all we have endured up to this point. Our present position is not random. It is the result of a long chain of choices, experiences, opportunities, and lessons.

There is wisdom in accepting that truth without harsh self-judgment.

Instead of measuring our lives against carefully edited glimpses of others, we can choose a more constructive approach. We can make the best of what we already have and the circumstances we are presently in.

Gratitude becomes a stabilising force. Progress becomes the focus.

Life is rarely a straight line. It is a long road shaped by patience, effort, learning, and quiet persistence. The important question is not whether someone else seems ahead today. The important question is whether we are still moving forward.

When comparison loses its grip, clarity returns.

And with clarity comes the steady courage to continue the work of progress.


Friday, March 06, 2026

OJORO CANCEL: A CHILDHOOD LESSON IN INNER HONESTY

 


When we were children playing table tennis, the game was never just about the bat and the ball. It was about the score.

As each rally ended, the counting would begin. Convenient counting. Creative counting. Strategic counting.

If I won the point, the score sounded clear and confident. If I lost it, memory suddenly became flexible. My opponent did the same. We both knew what was happening. Each of us tilted reality slightly in our favour.

Then came the arguments.

“You missed.”
“No, it touched the edge.”
“That was my point.”
“No, it wasn’t.”

Of course only one person could win a rally. But ego has a way of multiplying winners.

After enough back and forth, exhaustion would set in. And someone would finally say it.

“Ojoro cancel.”

Cheating cancelled. Pretence suspended. Let us count properly now.

It was a truce. A reset. A return to fairness.

Looking back, I realise that childhood table tennis was rehearsal for adult life.

Many of us continue to count our wins and losses just as we did back in our childhood games.

We adjust narratives to protect our pride. We reinterpret facts to suit our self-image. We present versions of ourselves that earn applause while hiding the parts that need work. We subtly inflate our victories and quietly bury our defeats.

But life keeps score accurately.

Reality does not bend because we argue with it.

There comes a point in every serious life when a person must stand still and say to himself, with complete honesty, “Ojoro cancel.”

No more self-deception.
No more curated morality.
No more outward performance that does not match inward conviction.

Let the inside and the outside agree.

When our inward ideals genuinely shape our outward conduct, something shifts. Integrity is not merely ethical decoration. It is alignment. And alignment connects us to something larger than social approval or material success.

We must develop ourselves into inwardly upright, genuine human beings. Not performatively decent. Not situationally honest. But fundamentally true.

The moment a human being becomes real within, he establishes an intimate connection with the whole of Creation. Life begins to respond differently. Clarity increases. Direction sharpens. Strength grows quietly from within.

This cannot be achieved or forced by ambition. No amount of striving or effort compensates for inner disorder.

Everything we truly need, peace, joy, stability, right opportunities, flows naturally when we are aligned with the higher laws that sustain life itself. Not before. Never before.

The time always comes when a person must open himself to the Word of God. That is not a religious slogan. It is an adjustment. It is the decision to align with the Laws of His Will that uphold Creation. It is choosing truth over image. Substance over display. Obedience over ego.

Without that inward correction, we keep arguing over the score. We keep living slightly tilted. We keep wondering why fulfilment feels delayed.

So today, pause.

Where are you still negotiating with truth?
Where are you counting in your own favour?
Where does your outward image exceed your inward reality?

Say it quietly if you must. But say it decisively.

Ojoro cancel.

Then turn inward. Seek help from above. Ask for the courage to see yourself as you are, and the strength to become what you ought to be.

Because when the inside becomes clean and true, life begins to count in your favour without argument.

And that victory is real.

Monday, March 02, 2026

WHEN SACRED TIME MEETS HUMAN VIOLENCE

There is something deeply jarring about the sound of bombs during a season of fasting.

When war drums rise at the very moment millions bow their heads in prayer, civilisation is forced to look at itself in an unflattering mirror. Lent and Ramadan are not minor observances. They are structured interruptions in ordinary life. They slow appetite. They restrain impulse. They summon the soul to examination. And yet, even in such a season, humanity still reaches for the sword.

This is not merely geopolitical irony. It is civilisational revelation.

Civilisation is not measured by skyscrapers, weapons systems, or GDP. It is measured by restraint. It is measured by whether power can submit itself to moral law. Sacred seasons such as Lent and Ramadan were built into religious traditions precisely to cultivate this restraint. They are annual reminders that the human being must govern the self before attempting to govern others.

When conflict erupts during these months, it exposes a gap between spiritual ritual and spiritual formation. Fasting without transformation is performance. Prayer without purification is noise. If sacred time does not temper public conduct, then we must ask what we have truly internalised.

From a civilisational lens, this moment is instructive. History shows that societies endure not because they are strong, but because they are morally coherent. Violence as policy may secure short-term advantage, but it erodes the moral architecture that sustains long-term stability. Every civilisation that normalized brutality eventually weakened itself from within.

From a spiritual lens, the matter is even clearer.

There is a law woven into existence that predates politics and outlives empires. Like produces like. Violence multiplies violence. Contempt reproduces contempt. Hatred generates its own offspring. This is not mysticism. It is moral causality, the law of reciprocal action. The inner state of a people eventually becomes the outer structure of their world.

Conversely, dignified conduct produces peace. Measured speech produces clarity. Mercy begets mercy. When individuals and nations act with composure and restraint, they create conditions in which reconciliation becomes possible. Peace is not accidental. It is cultivated.

Lent calls the Christian to examine pride, anger, and appetite. Ramadan calls the Muslim to discipline desire and extend charity. Both seasons insist on self-mastery. And self-mastery is the first pillar of any enduring civilisation.

The tragedy of war during sacred months is therefore not only the loss of life. It is the evidence that humanity still struggles to subordinate impulse to conscience. It shows how easily strategic calculations override spiritual commitments.

Yet this same convergence of sacred time and conflict can awaken us. It confronts believers with a question that cannot be outsourced to politicians: what is the state of my own heart?

Civilisation does not collapse first at the borders. It frays in the mind. It decays in speech. It deteriorates in the home. If we accept the spiritual law that like produces like, then the work of peace begins long before ceasefires and treaties. It begins in thought.

What occupies the mind shapes the tone of the voice. The tone of the voice shapes the culture of the home. The culture of the home shapes the character of the nation. And the character of nations shapes the destiny of the world.

If we dwell constantly on outrage, we amplify it. If we rehearse grievance, we deepen division. But when our thoughts are disciplined toward what is good, pure, and constructive, we become quiet architects of peace. Interior order precedes external harmony.

This is not naïve idealism. It is strategic realism at the deepest level. No durable international order can be built on unrestrained hostility. No local community thrives where suspicion is the norm. No family flourishes where pride rules. No individual finds happiness while nurturing resentment.

So the call is clear.

Let international actors choose dignity over domination. Let local communities resist the contagion of hatred. Let families become schools of restraint and kindness. And let each of us begin where we have full jurisdiction, in the heart.

Peace at the global level requires courage. Peace at the local level requires discipline. Peace in the family requires humility. Peace in the heart requires attention.

If like produces like, then let us produce peace.

Let our thoughts dwell on what is good and pure. Let our speech be measured. Let our conduct be dignified. In doing so, we do not merely hope for peace. We generate it. And in generating it, we discover that happiness is not the reward of peace. It is its companion.


Friday, February 27, 2026

THE DANGER OF OVER-FAMILIARITY

 


Familiarity rarely announces itself as a risk. It comes quietly. It often begins the moment we drop titles and say, “Please, call me by my first name.” That small sentence sounds harmless, even warm. Yet in many professional and cultural settings, it is not casual at all. It requires permission. It signals that something has shifted. A boundary has been lowered. A certain distance has been deliberately reduced.

Some cultures formalise this transition. In Germany, the move from the formal “Sie” to the intimate “Du” is not casually made. “Du” carries more than convenience. It signals closeness, equality and a subtle bond. One does not simply assume it. It is offered. And when it is offered, both parties understand that the relationship has entered a different level.

Familiarity is not merely linguistic. It is relational. It creates a bond. Not just social. Not just emotional. A bond of influence. A bond of shared movement. A bond that carries responsibility, sometimes even beyond this earth life.

On earth, we live side by side despite vast differences in maturity, character, discipline and spiritual development. The physical world allows this mixture. But inwardly, we do not all stand on the same step of spiritual maturity.

When two unequal persons form a close bond, something predictable happens. The stronger can descend. The weaker does not automatically rise. Growth does not occur through proximity. It occurs through individual effort. Where there is imbalance, the higher may be slowed, entangled or burdened. Rarely does the less mature ascend simply because intimacy was granted.

This is the real reason we should warn ourselves.

Over-familiarity dissolves healthy distance. It removes protective boundaries that were quietly serving us. It creates obligations we did not consciously choose. Later, these unseen ties become sources of tension, disappointment or spiritual stagnation.

This is not an argument for coldness. It is an argument for order.

Mature cultures understand this instinctively. Among the Yoruba of Western Nigeria, when an adult child has children, even parents often shift their mode of address. The son or daughter is no longer called simply by first name but as “Ade’s father” or “Moji’s mother.” The individual is addressed through the dignity of their new role. The relationship does not drift into casual familiarity. It is deliberately restructured around responsibility and honour. A new boundary is drawn, not to create distance, but to preserve order. Respect is formally established, and with it, the limits that protect both parties.

There is a profound difference between kindness and intimacy. Between goodwill and binding one another. Between respect and fusion.

When familiarity is offered too quickly, it often springs from emotional need, vanity or impatience. True strength does not rush toward closeness. It moves with clarity. It discerns character. It respects differences in depth and direction.

There is also a harder truth. Never live closely with someone you cannot respect. Respect is the foundation of every healthy union. Without it, familiarity degrades both parties. What began as warmth becomes irritation. What began as ease becomes entanglement.

That is why intimate forms of address and deep familiarity should be reserved for serious, committed relationships. Marriage is one such bond. There, closeness is intentional. It is binding. And what is binding must never be entered into lightly, because it carries weight, consequence and permanence.

We should not be eager to dissolve boundaries. We should not even be eager to ask for that dissolution. Let titles stand. Let space remain. Let respect breathe. If a deeper union is meant to form, it will do so deliberately, not impulsively.

In simple terms, guard your inner space. Do not bind yourself unnecessarily. Build relationships with intention, not haste.

Where there is order, there is harmony. Where there are boundaries, there is freedom. And where there is mutual respect and harmony, there is ascent.


Friday, February 20, 2026

LIVING EACH DAY AS IF IT WERE THE LAST: A BALANCED REFLECTION

 


Human life is framed by a certainty we often push to the edges of our thinking: it will end. Death is not an interruption to life’s story. It is the boundary that gives the story its shape, earnestness, and meaning. We live on a rock spinning through space at astonishing speed, in a universe so vast that our planet is barely a speck among trillions of galaxies. Yet, in the middle of all this, we spend our days worrying about opinions, small failures, social comparisons, and imagined embarrassments.

It is a sobering thought. If we knew with certainty that tonight would be our last night on earth, how would we spend this day? Would we still be anxious about the meeting we stumbled through, the comment someone made, or the risk of trying something new? Or would our attention shift instantly to the people we love, the words we have not said, and the dreams we have postponed?

This is where the popular advice comes in: live each day as if it were your last. At first glance, it sounds liberating. It invites courage. It cuts through fear. It pushes us to act, to forgive, to start, to speak, and to love without hesitation. Many people have found strength in this idea. It reminds us that time is not guaranteed, and that procrastination is often just fear wearing a polite face.

But taken literally, this philosophy can also be misleading.

If every day were truly our last, long-term thinking would lose its meaning. We would not bother saving money, building institutions, raising children, or planting trees whose shade we might never sit under. Civilizations are built on the assumption that tomorrow matters. Laws, schools, research, infrastructure, and families all depend on a future-oriented mindset.

There is also a risk of confusing urgency with recklessness. Some people interpret the “last day” idea as permission to abandon discipline, indulge every impulse, or ignore responsibilities. That is not wisdom. It is short-termism disguised as courage.

So perhaps the idea is not meant to be taken literally, but morally.

The deeper lesson is about focus. If death is certain, then the real question becomes: what deserves our attention while we are here? Many of the things that dominate our thoughts will not matter at the end of our lives. The fear of embarrassment, the anxiety of comparison, the small grudges, the hesitation to try. These are often the chains that keep people from living meaningfully.

Thinking about mortality does not have to lead to panic. It can lead to clarity. It can help us distinguish between what is urgent and what is important, between what is noisy and what is meaningful.

A balanced approach might be this: live in such a way that if today were your last, you would not feel ashamed of how you spent it. But also live in such a way that if you wake up tomorrow, you are grateful for the seeds you planted today.

This means holding two truths at the same time. Life is fragile, and the future is uncertain. Yet life is also long enough to require planning, discipline, and patience. Wisdom lies in honoring both realities.

So instead of asking, “What would I do if this were my last day?” a better question might be, “What kind of life would make any day, even the last one, feel complete?”

That question shifts the focus from drama to character, from impulse to purpose. It encourages us to love people well, do our work with integrity, pursue our callings, and release the trivial anxieties that consume so much of our mental space.

Yes, we are on a small rock spinning through a vast universe. Yes, our time here is limited. But that is not a reason to live carelessly. It is a reason to live deliberately.

When we accept our mortality, fear loses some of its power. Opinions matter less. Failure becomes less frightening. What remains is the discipline of living a life that counts, measured not in noise or acclaim, but in integrity and consequence.