<p>Once upon a time, in a small town along the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, there was a boy named Tunde who sold sachet water to drivers stuck in traffic.</p><p><br/></p><p>Every morning, before the sun fully rose, Tunde would balance his cooler on his head and walk between cars, shouting "pure water, pure water" until his voice became hoarse. He was seventeen. He had just finished secondary school with results that brought tears of pride to his mother’s eyes, yet they weren’t enough to get him into university. His father had passed away three years earlier, leaving a small shop, a pile of unpaid debts, and four younger siblings who looked up to Tunde as if he were the sun.</p><p><br/></p><p>Tunde had a dream. He wanted to study Engineering. While waiting for traffic to build up, he often sketched bridges and buildings on the back of old newspapers. The other water sellers would laugh at him. "Oga Engineer," they teased, "when you go build bridge, no forget us o."</p><p><br/></p><p>He laughed with them, but inside, he felt a fire driving him.</p><p><br/></p><p>One evening, a black Toyota Camry pulled up and rolled down its window. An older man, perhaps in his sixties, dressed in simple clothes without any jewelry or flashy watches, asked for a sachet of water. Tunde handed it to him and reached for his change. The old man waved it away.</p><p><br/></p><p>"Keep it," he said. "But tell me, what is a boy like you doing selling water in this heat?"</p><p><br/></p><p>Tunde, tired and a little brave from exhaustion, shared everything with him. He talked about his father, his dream, and the newspapers filled with sketches of bridges that might never come to life.</p><p><br/></p><p>The old man listened quietly. When Tunde finished, he said, "Come and see me tomorrow at this address," handing him a card before the traffic cleared and the Camry drove away into the dusk.</p><p><br/></p><p>Tunde almost skipped the meeting. His mother had warned him about strangers and the dangers of Lagos, about people who exploit children for rituals. Yet something in the old man’s eyes reminded him of his father. So, he went.</p><p><br/></p><p>The address led him to a small, modest office above a printing shop. Inside sat the same old man, now surrounded by files and blueprints. He turned out to be a retired civil engineer who had built some of the very bridges Tunde used to draw. He had seen countless young hustlers on that same road over the years. However, something about Tunde's determination reminded him of himself from decades ago, before life had given him a chance.</p><p><br/></p><p>He didn’t give Tunde money. Instead, he offered something more risky: an opportunity. He offered a part-time job at his small consultancy and promised that if Tunde could keep his grades up in an evening program, he would fund his university education.</p><p><br/></p><p>The journey was not easy afterward. Tunde still sold water some mornings to support his family. He studied under a lantern many nights because NEPA liked to fail him at the worst times. There were days he wanted to quit, days he cried quietly so his younger siblings wouldn’t notice. But he remembered the old man’s eyes and his father’s hands, rough from years of work, and he kept going.</p><p><br/></p><p>Five years later, Tunde graduated with a degree in Civil Engineering. Now, he works on infrastructure projects across three West African countries. Every time he passes a sachet water seller on the road, he stops. He buys water he doesn’t need, asks their names, and listens to their dreams just as a stranger once listened to his.</p><p><br/></p><p>Tunde never forgot one truth: the world doesn't owe you a shortcut. But sometimes, it sends you an angel in the form of an old man in a black Camry.</p><p><br/></p><p>Somewhere in Africa today, there is a Tunde. Selling something small on a hot afternoon, carrying a dream too big for their circumstances, waiting for someone to stop and simply ask, "What are you doing here?"</p><p><br/></p><p>Maybe you were that Tunde once. Maybe you know one right now. Perhaps, somewhere along your journey, you were the old man in the Camry and didn’t even realize the impact you made.</p><p><br/></p><p>Tell me. Who was your "old man in the Camry"? The stranger, the teacher, the aunt, the friend who believed in you before you believed in yourself?</p><p><br/></p><p>Share their story in the comments. Let’s celebrate them today.</p>
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