"I learned I was not Cheap Nick Young Jersey , as most Africans believed, the victim of my circumstances but the master of them." - Legson Kayira
One of the things my Christian faith has taught me is that with God nothing is impossible. I live by 4 Ps - Prayers, Planning, Perseverance and Persistence. Hence one of the words that are not in my dictionary is 'impossible'. I seldom use it. Ditto words like providence, destiny and fate. Anything I want to do, I do it irrespective of any obstacles by using the 4 Ps.
To me, nothing is impossible if you have a clear goal and vision. The legendary boxer, Muhammad Ali Cheap Klay Thompson Jersey , once said "Champions aren't made in the gyms. Champions are made from something they have deep inside them - a desire, a dream, a vision."
Anytime I remember the story of the award-winning Malawian Writer, Legson Kayira, I am inspired. The facts of Kayira's early life are legendary: a Tumbuka born and educated in Nyasaland (now Malawi), he walked 3,200 kilometres to North Africa seeking opportunities for further education.
Like Martin Luther King Jnr., Legson had a dream. He wanted to be like his hero Cheap Matt Barnes Jersey , Abraham Lincoln, the 16th American President, who had risen from poverty to become President, then fought tirelessly to help end slavery. He wanted to be like Booker T. Washington, the foremost black educator of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who cast off the shackles of slavery to become a great American reformer and educator, giving hope and dignity to himself and to his race. Legson's dream spurred him on a journey fuelled by his determination to get an education.
Like these great role models, he wanted to serve mankind Cheap Kevin Durant Jersey , to make a difference in the world. And to realise his goal, he needed a first-rate education. Legson knew the best place to get it was in America.
When he was 17 years old, he sought his parents' blessing to go and study in America. His illiterate parents didn't know where America was but reluctantly gave their blessings.
His possessions were meagre: five-day supply of food, a Bible and Pilgrim's Progress, small axe for protection, and a blanket. Legson eagerly set out on the journey of his life. He was going to walk from his tribal village in Nyasaland, north across the wilderness of East Africa to Cairo, where he would board a ship to America to get a college education.