Life has a mischievous way of exposing us. You can hand someone a scholarship, a motivational playlist on Spotify and even a Bible, a Quran, yet they still walk around convinced they were born to fail—as if destiny itself tattooed across their forehead: “ERROR 404: SUCCESS NOT FOUND.”
I have met many such souls. Brilliant minds, opportunities knocking so loudly the neighbours complain—yet nothing changes. They keep dreaming all the finest things in the world but have no dignity in labour. They attend courses like Pokémon cards, but the only thing evolving is the paper pile of certificates, and big titles. Their minds? Cast in stone. And not the elegant marble of monuments, but the stubborn concrete that refuses to crack even when life’s hammer keeps pounding.
Some turn to religion, and for a moment hope flickers—because true worship renews the mind. Sadly, for many, faith becomes more like opium: numbing the pain but deepening the mental slavery. And don’t get me wrong—faith is powerful. But if we pray for transformation while clutching tightly to our old mindset, it’s like asking God to fill our cup while we keep the lid screwed on. Even heaven respects physics.
Fixed Mindset: Comfortable Captivity
A fixed mindset whispers: “This is who I am. I can’t change. I was programmed to fail.”
It is mental slavery disguised as humility, as victimhood, as helplessness. People sit in their cages, polish the bars, and even hang curtains—because captivity feels familiar. And when you try to help, they resist, because freedom requires responsibility and accountability, and these feel heavier than chains.
It’s like handing someone the key to their prison cell to escape from, and they reply: “No thanks, I’ve already decorated the place.”
Growth Mindset: The Great Escape
A growth mindset, on the other hand, declares: “I can learn. I can improve. Mistakes are not proof of failure—they are tuition fees for wisdom.”
This is the difference between a nation that sees lack everywhere and one that sees possibility in every challenge.
Think carefully: how can a country build wealth when its citizens believe poverty is their permanent roommate? How can we prosper when we devalue ourselves, measuring our worth only by what others say? A growth mindset is not just personal—it is national. It is the fuel of innovation, entrepreneurship, resilience and creating quality products devoid of abnormal profits. Without it, we remain beggars at the banquet of progress.
The Humour in Our Seriousness
Let’s be honest: sometimes we treat life like a badly written soap opera. We cry, complain, and rehearse our tragedies until even the angels roll their eyes. Most especially when the environment is corrupt, helplessness can set in and leaving becomes the only solution. Meanwhile, the script could have been rewritten if we simply believed we could grow. Growth mindset says: “Dream it, water it, nurture it, and watch it surprise you.”
The Urgent Call
So how do you change someone comfortable in captivity? You don’t drag them out—you show them what freedom looks like. You stop emailing their manipulation. You live growth so loudly that their excuses sound ridiculous in comparison. You model possibility until they realise their stone-cast mind is just clay waiting for fire.
And for a nation like Ghana? We must teach our people to think abundance, to value themselves, to see wealth not as foreign aid but as the fruit of creativity and courage. True independence is not declared on paper—it is declared in the mind.
Final Word
Fixed mindset builds prisons. Growth mindset builds nations.
One says: “I can’t.”
The other says: “Not yet.”
And that tiny difference is the bridge between poverty and prosperity, between captivity and freedom, between a life wasted and a life well-lived.
So, if your mind feels cast in stone, remember: even stones can be carved into monuments.




