The Gravity of Mastery: Why Depth Determines Destiny By Harold Mawela From my study in Akasia, Pretoria I. A Morning in Akasia: The Boy and the Borehole I write these words from my study in Akasia, where the morning sun is burning through the Highveld haze like a promise struggling to be kept. Just yesterday, I stood at the edge of a neighbour's property watching a man drill for water. The borehole machine groaned and shuddered, its metal teeth chewing through layer after layer of rock. The dust was thick, the noise was relentless, and for hours nothing. Just dry, crumbling stone. Then, at forty metres, the water came. Not a trickle. A gush. As I walked back home past the jacarandas shedding their purple blossoms onto the pavement, the Spirit pressed a question into my heart: Harold, how deep are you willing to drill? This is the question for every believer in South Africa today. We are a nation of surface-level Christians living in a kilometre-wide, inch-deep world. We scroll end...
The Art of Subtraction Scripture: "He must become greater; I must become less." (John 3:30) I was standing in the queue at the SASSA pay point in Akasia last month R2,400 for the old age grant, enough to keep body and soul together but not nearly enough to silence the anxiety that gnaws at the gut of every South African watching the cost of living climb like a thief in the night. Behind me, a young man—maybe twenty-two, maybe twenty-five was scrolling through TikTok, Amapiano beats bleeding from his earbuds, his oversized T-shirt and baggy cargos signalling allegiance to a culture that promises everything and delivers nothing. He was watching a dance challenge. A thousand rand phone. Zero rand in his pocket. And I thought: We are all adding. Adding followers. Adding expenses. Adding worries. Adding grudges. Adding dreams that were never ours to dream. And we are suffocating. Let me define my terms clearly. Subtraction is not deprivation. Subtraction is liberation. It is the ...