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I lost my ten acre land in a bar
Surealligator
#1 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 10:02:50 AM
Rank: User

Joined: 6/27/2008
Posts: 709
Location: Velayat-e Faryab
Facing reality squire on the face before age catches up with us.

When I quit my previous job, my employer refused to part with his contribution of Sh390,000 towards my pension saying I had to wait till I became 55, wrinkled and frail before he paid me.

One and a half years ago, I asked him to transfer that withheld pension to my new boss. "I want to consolidate my savings in one basket," I lied. Truth is I was moving my money because I don't trust government pension schemes.

To my great surprise, they sent a cheque for Sh430,000 last week. In other words, my pension had not been 'eaten' as I had feared. It has actually been laying eggs and in three years, it has made me Sh40,000 richer.

Yet when I resigned in 2005, a quarter an acre of land in the neighbourhood of Ongata Rongai was going for half a million bob, payable in beer rounds at the local bar (BAR = Brotherhood of All Races) and small cash installments. Today, the same piece goes for Sh1.2 million, hard cash.

Thus, anyone who bought land is getting rich without lifting a finger while I and millions of other idiots whose savings are locked up in fancy pension schemes are only paying investment bankers and getting poorer.

In fact, when we retire, that pension won't even be worth a skinny he-goat.

When my father retired in 1977, I was in Standard Two. His pension was 700 bob a month. Last year, it had appreciated to Sh2,000 - the equivalent of an average beer bill for the evening.

To be honest, I still get shocked that the old man, aided by his cute wife who happened to be my mother, squeezed us through school. Don't forget that unlike these days when we have one spoilt brat, my parents practically raised a football team. Of course, they didn't achieve this feat on the old man's Sh700-a-month pension.

Foresight

Being a man of foresight, he had invested in two zebu heifers in 1959. The magic about zebus, what colonial farmers derisively called shenzi (stupid) cattle, is that they can literally survive through hell.

Unlike pampered hybrid cattle, zebus don't need veterinary doctors, artificial insemination, mineral water and luxurious foods like Napier grass and biscuits. They are tough. They practically live on sisal and boiled rags.

By the time the old man was fired in 1977, his two heifers had multiplied to 85, including Jomo, a champion bull that sired calves left, right and centre and held the village bullfight champion award for a record four years.

It is those zebus that took my siblings and I through school. Every beginning of term, he would sell a cow or two and shoe us - three pupils at any given time - off to school, while Jomo did his thing. Now contrast that with yours truly, my father's allegedly "educated and widely travelled" son, Austin.

I own neither land nor livestock. My puny savings are instead locked up in fancy unit trusts, risky insurance schemes, questionable stocks, leaky pension schemes and a second-hand car that guzzles fuel like a witch and depreciates in value each day.

While my father wakes every morning to his mooing assets and the comforting aroma of fresh cow dung, I could wake up to news that some crooked investment broker has tinkered with my stocks and rendered me destitute.

My father knew. Jomo could always sire another calf. But a task force won't bring back money that a government pension fund took from me by force and gleefully flushed down the urinal.

Previously unknown author, Jsanchiazh
Go overdrive in purchasing the goods when there's blood on the streets, expecially if the blood is your own
Stealth
#2 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 10:10:59 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 5/3/2010
Posts: 145
Location: East Africa
@ sure
'sisal n boiled rags' - ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. u've just made my morning.
KulaRaha
#3 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 10:17:04 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/26/2007
Posts: 6,514
well written!
Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
The Merchant
#4 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 10:28:56 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 5/24/2010
Posts: 846
Location: KENYA
Well, what do we say? Every period with its different piece of wisdom. However the basics remain the same ie accumulating assets not liabilities. All assets have a level of risk. Imagine if some disease wiped out that herd of cattle. Would you even be speaking english let alone typing? Your old man was simply smart, period. If he knew how to play the markets, he'd probably be swimming in money. Its the wit not the environment. If you think you are smarter speculating on land then by all means go ahead. Some stocks in the market right now will double in what 2 yrs? Where will yours truly be?
Wine
#5 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 10:48:41 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 3/4/2008
Posts: 11
well said and very hilarious
2012
#6 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 10:52:34 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/9/2009
Posts: 6,592
Location: Nairobi
Brilliant article. Really got me thinking. There's more wisdom there than you would get from a financial guru. Simplicity is clearly the way to wealth and wealth management.

BBI will solve it
:)
selah
#7 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 10:59:14 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 10/13/2009
Posts: 1,950
Location: in kenya
Even if I dont read anything else today, that piece is really informative and well written.
'......to the acknowledgment of the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ; 3 In whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.' Colossians 2:2-3
2012
#8 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 11:02:11 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/9/2009
Posts: 6,592
Location: Nairobi
Now, about the 10 acres you lost in some bar.....

BBI will solve it
:)
Njung'e
#9 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 11:03:41 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 2/7/2007
Posts: 11,935
Location: Nairobi
An applause!!....Great article.
Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.
My 2 cents
#10 Posted : Tuesday, November 09, 2010 11:04:25 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 6/2/2010
Posts: 1,091
Fantastic. May be you can pray to one day inherit the mooing assets. I wouldn't bank on it though, if I were you.

The post is truly fantastic.
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