With the above in mind, you start wondering what you can contribute to your community while you are still struggling financially. You are still waiting for your break when you can sit back and enjoy some abundance.
As you ponder how your break is ever coming, your local politician who lives in an upscale neighborhood in Nairobi leaves you in a cloud of dust or splashes you with mud as he drives past you in a hurry to get to some appointment. You cannot even see inside his SUV because the windows are tinted, letting you know he does not want any interaction with you or anyone in your neighborhood. That incident alone makes it clear to you that the break you are waiting for is not coming through this elected official or others in his league.
Then you think of the local wealthy people who own buildings and businesses in your local town. They are probably the answer to your problems, you think. The best they can do is hire your children to work for them in their businesses, if there is a job opening. It is the same job opening that the entire locality is hoping to have their children fill, narrowing your chances even further.
So, you wonder, how is your break ever coming?