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Henry Nasilele

Henry Nasilele
This is Me !

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

NEVER THROW THAT BUNCH OF DISUSED LOCKS AND KEYS EVER AGAIN!


As one moves from one place to another in one's life, it is amazing how one leaves behind "debris" that was, at one time, very useful to them.

This bunch of keys that I went through recently, in order to find any keys that I could use again for some locks that I have repaired, revealed quite a number of things that one can relate to in one’s life!

Those keys have been kept for a period of many years that I have spent living in nine residential houses in four different towns and cities in Zambia from around 1980 to 2018 (A total of 38 years!).

Some of the keys are brand new because they were kept as spares and have never been used because their locks got damaged before they could be used.

From this experience, I can relate the following to our situations in life: -

1. The very person that one is very used to today and is very valuable to them, will not always be of useful to them all the time of their lives.

The locks and keys are always changed for various reasons and circumstances.

2. Where you are “locked away” from the rest of society in, an apparent, secure position, it will not always be that way throughout your life.

You need to change the lock and key from time to time. There no situation than is permanent in one’s life. Remember Joseph and his brothers (Genesis 27–36)

3. Not all the people who you see nearby you now, will open doors for you today but may be of use to you later in life.

Never throw away a disused key or lock when you think you will never need it later.

Do not disregard anybody you think is of no consequence to your life now. He or she will probably the one who will bury you in future.

4. Every person you think will be of value to you in future because they have the same character as your close friends will not necessarily be useful to you later.

The locks and keys may be of the same model and type but they will never be exchangeable for use.

5. Some people who may seem to be very difficult to approach now may just need a bit of persuasion for them to help you. Later on you will find that they are really valuable to you than others that you have been associated with before.

Some keys just need a bit of modification for them to work on other locks and may sometimes prove to be more robust than the original keys that you have used before.

6. It is not how useful and reliable a person maybe to you now that they will always be so. Some locks look so good and reliable at purchase but only work for a very short time.

7. When relating to others do not look at the size of their income or where they come from. They will not always be there for you.

Locks get lost or stolen as you move from one place to another. People come and go on this world trough death, loss of status or being relocated to far off places where you will not have access to them.

8. No matter whether you like it or not you will always live in a society with people of different characters and traits from yours. You will never find anyone, even if you belong to the same race, tribe or political party, that is exactly the same like you. Being a demagogue does not assure you of a secure future.

Locks and keys are of different makes and types but they all perform the same function in one way or another.

9. Avoid association with people of cheap value because they will never improve your life in any way. This will be costly to you in the long run.

If your close friends are, for example, drunkards, lazy-abouts, satanists and false prophets, etc, this will greatly affect the quality of your life.

Associate with powerful people such as men of God, successful businessmen and women, economists, engineers and other professionals who will inspire you to be of the same class with them.

Buying locks and keys that are cheap and not durable has cost me more money before I learned to purchase quality ones recently.


10. It is always good to have as many people as possible that you associate with because even if they are may not be of use to you for now, one day you may find them useful for something that you will need urgently.

I keep thousands of contacts on my phone book (2,600 plus) and a similar number on Social media (some 5,000 on Facebook).

Out of these thousands, I only relate to a few of them on a regular basis.

However, from time to time I get in touch with those I rarely communicate with.

The fact that you got their details, in the first place, means that you have dealt with them in one way or another.

There are some people I rarely communicate with nowadays, but from time to time I get in touch with them.

For example, a friend of mine recently requested me to find him someone who is a very good machinist to be employed. There was a very good one that I knew when I was working in Nampundwe, around the 1990s. Since I did not delete him from my contacts list in my phone, the man was engaged.

I always backup my contacts list on the Computer and the Internet, so that even if I lose a cell phone, I am able to quickly put them on another phone.

There is a current tendency amongst graduating students, from higher learning institutions once they get their diploma and degree certificates, to sell their textbooks or to tear up their study notebooks

They erroneously believe that they will never refer to them again and their knowledge will be from their own brains.

This has proved costly to them because reading to acquire knowledge is a continuous process until death and it does not stop at college or university.

Those who stop reading in the long run, become illiterate educated people through “loss by osmosis” to the environment.

Never throw that bunch of disused locks and keys ever again because you will need it in future!