EnockTheeFirst
Lister
It has been a year since "musician" Papa Denis died. This is what was in our mind then
"Musician" Papa Dennis was pushed from the seventh floor of the Ngara building, by depression, arising from his dwindling fortunes, after his pockets ran dry, crippling his efforts to maintain a flamboyant and snazzy celebrity lifestyle
He is a victim of his own success
Quite reminiscent of marathon wonderboy Samuel Wanjiru who leaped from the first floor of his Nyahururu home balcony in the wee hours of 11th May 2011
Wanjiru couldn't manage his fame. He went around kicking mama mboga's tomatoes in the market and paying them tenfold
By the time of his death, he had ran into debts, after his fortunes spiralled southwards
Papa Dennis is quoted to have said in some radio station that he had some 50 millions in his bank accounts
When the rise is so rapid and expeditiously pell-mell, the thud of the imminent fall is certain to be spectacular. Hubris is oftentimes succeeded by a breathtaking plunge
Key, could be the humility of Eliud Kipchoge, who seems unchanged by the surplus of fame and money going his way.
"Musician" Papa Dennis was pushed from the seventh floor of the Ngara building, by depression, arising from his dwindling fortunes, after his pockets ran dry, crippling his efforts to maintain a flamboyant and snazzy celebrity lifestyle
He is a victim of his own success
Quite reminiscent of marathon wonderboy Samuel Wanjiru who leaped from the first floor of his Nyahururu home balcony in the wee hours of 11th May 2011
Wanjiru couldn't manage his fame. He went around kicking mama mboga's tomatoes in the market and paying them tenfold
By the time of his death, he had ran into debts, after his fortunes spiralled southwards
Papa Dennis is quoted to have said in some radio station that he had some 50 millions in his bank accounts
When the rise is so rapid and expeditiously pell-mell, the thud of the imminent fall is certain to be spectacular. Hubris is oftentimes succeeded by a breathtaking plunge
Key, could be the humility of Eliud Kipchoge, who seems unchanged by the surplus of fame and money going his way.