Audio By Carbonatix
I have a bad habit. I rub my eyes. I've done it since I was a child, and it's really not good. It all started because of hay fever and seasonal allergies that I usually suffer from even today. It makes my eyes itch terribly and I simply have to rub them.
Over the years, it developed from something I do to manage my allergies into something comfortable to do it when I'm tired or haven't had enough sleep.
Recently, I started having some problems with my sight, and I spoke to a specialist who reckoned my years of violent rubbing may have contributed to my problems.
Naturally, this got me thinking about bad habits. Many of us have one or two, and we're not proud of them. The problem is we've been doing them for so long that we've lost the ability to control them. They are now a part of us, and it will take a miracle to stop doing them.
It also made me think of a story about an old man who caught his grandson smoking. He took the boy out into the garden and pointed to a little weed growing in the grass. "Pull that out", he instructed.
The boy grabbed the little plant between his thumb and forefinger, and pulled it easily out of the ground.
The old man then pointed at a bush growing on the edge of the lawn. "Pull that out", he said to his teenage grandson.
The boy grabbed the shrub with both hands and tugged hard, several times, until it came out of the hard ground, trailing sods of earth in its roots.
Then the old man pointed to the old mango tree at the bottom of the garden. "Pull that out", he said quietly.
The teenager shook his head and said, "Grandpa, there's no way I could ever pull that out."
His grandfather put an arm around him and said, "This is how habits are. When you tackle them early, it's like pulling out a weed, but the longer you leave them, the harder they become to uproot, until, like the mango tree, they grow strong roots, and become impossible to pull out on your own".
Today's message is not just for us, but for our children - whether you have any now, or plan to in the future. Bad habits are so much easier to stop, the earlier they are tackled.
The problem with kids is that they can make bad habits look cute. Do not be fooled. Set them straight while you can, before their little weeds grow into a mango tree.
My name is Kojo Yankson, and I am the sum total of all my behaviours and habits. Not only must I add more good things to that total, I must also subtract the bad.
GOOD MORNING, GHANAFO!
Latest Stories
-
2026 FIFA World Cup: What African fans will pay to watch their teams
4 hours -
2026 World Cup: How FIFA priced Africa’s ordinary fan out of the tournament – and why the gap with the rest of the world is impossible to ignore
4 hours -
Creative industries ‘incredibly worried’ about OpenAI-Disney deal
5 hours -
Low condom use among young people in Volta Region disheartening – AIDS Commission
5 hours -
Prada to launch $930 ‘Made in India’ Kolhapuri sandals after backlash
5 hours -
Gov’t moves to fix Armed Forces housing crisis with 2000 new units and jets
5 hours -
Boy, 13, shot dead as youth torch mining vehicles in Adelekezu
6 hours -
‘Architects of AI’ named Time Magazine’s Person of the Year
6 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Berekum Chelsea edge Hohoe United to end winless run
6 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Mensah’s penalty helps Bechem United beat Eleven Wonders
6 hours -
Did Ghana need 110 brand new hospitals at once?
7 hours -
Benin: Ex-president’s son arrested after foiled coup attempt
7 hours -
Reconsidering Ghana’s presidential age limit: Why Article 62(b) of the 1992 Constitution deserves review
7 hours -
ECOWAS unanimously endorses President Mahama for African Union chairmanship
7 hours -
Douri-Naa predicts victory for ‘Second Dombo’ Bawumia in NPP primaries and 2028 election
8 hours
