Posts

Showing posts with the label Fulani proverb

Featured Post

The Lost Simba Syndrome: Stop Adding Garbage and Start Burning the Veil

Image
The Lost Simba Syndrome: Stop Adding Garbage and Start Burning the Veil We are drowning in synthetic noise, and most of you are calling it "progress." Every single day, the matrix hands you a new piece of digital malware: a new hustle to exhaust you, a new historical trauma to internalize, a new standard of comparison designed to keep you trapped in a loop of anxiety and shame. You’ve been trained to believe that growth means adding more—more commitments, more titles, more weight. That is a lie designed to smother your fire. In the rich tradition of Madagascar, the ancestors left us a profound truth: "Justice is like fire; even if one covers it with a veil, it still burns." Your true self, your ancestral blueprint, is that fire. But right now, it’s suffocating under a heavy veil of systemic conditioning and self-inflicted clutter. You are operating like Lost Little Simba from the Warrior Handbook for Life’s Journey —a king living among the herd, convinced he’s just...

Protect your Seed

Image
  Protect your Seed https://www.spreaker.com/episode/protect-your-seed--71106863 Have you ever stopped to realize that your need for right-now comfort might be the exact thing destroying your future? The Fulani people of the Sahel have a saying: "Mo nyaami aawdi mum, nyaami janngo mum" —He who eats his seed, eats his tomorrow. In our community, we are constantly pushed to consume our potential. We are bombarded by a society that tells us to numb the pain, buy the illusion, and seek the instant fix. But what if real Faith (Imani) isn't about blind hope or grinding harder? What if faith is simply what’s left when you scrape off the desperate need to control everything? The victory is already there, but you can't see it if your vision is blocked by the heavy baggage of immediate gratification. In today's podcast, we talk about shedding the illusions that make us eat our own seeds... Call to Inaction: “To hold the water, one must first empty the cup.” Stop trying to ...