The Prisoner's Praise: How Your Midnight Hymn Becomes a Weapon There’s a sound that shatters chains. It’s not the clang of a hammer or the crack of a whip. It’s a hymn, sung off-key in the dark. It’s the sound of praise that precedes victory. Here in Akasia, as the Highveld summer rains finally ease after weeks of flooding that closed our Kruger National Park and left a nation grieving, I’ve been thinking about prisons. Not just the ones made of concrete and steel that our Correctional Services manage, but the inner ones—the prisons of anxiety, of despair, of waiting for a break that seems perpetually delayed. We’ve all felt the walls close in. Maybe it’s watching the news—another political leader stepping down, another complex land claim filed, another grim road accident statistic. Maybe it’s a personal flood: a diagnosis, a broken relationship, a dream that feels washed away. Your circumstance becomes your cell, and the darkness feels total. But I want to speak a law of the spiri...
The Law of the True Name: Why You Walk Like a Pauper When the King Calls You His Child Let me tell you a story of two names. Last Tuesday, in the grinding gridlock of the N1, my fuel light glared like an accusing eye. Load-shedding had stolen my chance to charge, and the anxiety was a physical weight. I pulled into a garage in Akasia, my spirit as empty as my tank. The attendant, his face etched with the weariness of our times, moved with a slow, defeated shuffle. As I handed him cash, our eyes met. I saw it—not just fatigue, but a deep, settled resignation. He was not just a man doing a job; he was a man defined by the job, by the struggle, by the relentless kaffir of South African life. The world had written a name on his forehead: Invisible. Struggling. Not Enough. Is that not the air we breathe? A culture that names you by your credit score, your social media likes, your clan name, your past failures, or the political party you despise the least. We are baptized in a river of other...