The Wrong Turns That Led to the Right Path

Photo Credit: SHE 'n' MORE
Myself in Olumo Rock, a tourist centre in Abeokuta, Ogun State Nigeria
I received the laptop. For weeks, it sat there. I did not know what to do with it. I began to feel I had asked for the wrong thing.
I went back to my helper and told her I wanted to start selling fruit salad instead. I needed ₦50,000 for a freezer. She sent the money. I started — only to discover that maintaining freshness, packaging, and sustainability with small capital was harder than I imagined.
When I went back again, she did not give me audience. Perhaps she thought I wanted to turn her into an ATM.
I had no choice but to return to the laptop.
I sat in my small room and began downloading e-books. I started reading.
And then something happened.
Reading transformed my mind. It built my confidence, boldness, and resilience. It expanded my thinking. I realized I was thinking too small.
With renewed courage, I rented a small shop in a remote area. Three of us shared the space to reduce costs. I stayed there for a while, but deep inside me, a voice kept whispering:
“You are more than this.”
Not every wrong turn is a mistake. Some failures are redirections. Growth often begins in quiet rooms where nobody sees your effort.
Quote:
"Sometimes what looks like a delay is actually preparation."