Kennedy had his life
snuffed out by an assassin before his potential was maximised, Obama realised
coming too early meant leaving too early but is doing admirably well living
quietly outside the presidency, Blair quit over Brexit but the cold out there
has tempted him into trying to bounce back, while Museveni has overstayed his
welcome and blown out the spark of inspiration he lit in many hearts when he
stood outside the precincts of parliament in 1986 and diagnosed the problem of
Africa as leaders who overstay in power, declaring that he was not a custodian
of a mere change of guards but of a fundamental change.
What we learn from all this is that what matters is not the
quickness with which we achieve and the enormity of what we achieve but the
foresight of quitting at the right time and the humility to live simply.
We also learn that the ascendency to the peak at a young age
does not mean we are smarter and better than others but simply means we were
just destined to achieve early. Jesus was destined to launch his three-year
ministry at 30 while Donald Trump was fated to become the president of the most
powerful nation at 70.
So whatever we achieve, let's avoid the arrivalism syndrome
that often infects Ugandans; filling them with pride and stopping them from
trying harder after attaining the "1234" which stands for one wife,
two children, a three-bedroom house and a four-wheel-drive. One thing for sure,
there's no better achievement than loving more and staying humble.
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