Close Menu
Ikenga Online
    What's Hot

    Mr. President Was in Turkey. So Was I, by Osmund Agbo

    January 29, 2026

    Re: Russian embassy’s fuss over Azu’s article on Putin by Richard Akinnola 

    January 29, 2026

    Yusuf’s red cap on Tinubu’s red carpet by Azu Ishiekwene 

    January 29, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Ikenga Online
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Donate
    • Home
      • Igboezue
      • Hall of Fame
      • Hall of Shame
    • News
      1. Other States
      2. National
      3. International
      4. Interviews
      5. Personalities
      6. View All

      Kole Shettima, others to be turbaned by Machina Emirate

      January 26, 2026

      APC makes it 29 governors as Yusuf defects with 22 Kano lawmakers

      January 26, 2026

      Abduction of 172: Soldiers blocking access to Kaduna community, rights group alleges

      January 20, 2026

      RULAAC petitions Lagos CP over alleged unlawful detention, abuse of police powers

      January 18, 2026

      MRA releases 2025 free expression report, decries ‘reign of impunity’ in Nigeria

      January 29, 2026

      Whistleblower award board endorses Yisa Usman, urges Nigeria to strengthen whistleblower protections

      January 29, 2026

      Igbos play important role in Lagos development, should not be alienated – Nnaemeka Obiaraeri 

      January 27, 2026

      Presidency reacts to Tinubu’s stumble in Turkey, says no cause for alarm

      January 27, 2026

      Nnamdi Kanu conferred honorary citizenship of Georgia, USA

      January 24, 2026

      US delivers military supplies to Nigeria

      January 13, 2026

      Trump vows more strikes in Nigeria if attacks on Christians persist

      January 9, 2026

      Trump signs order withdrawing US from 66 global bodies

      January 8, 2026

      Slash jumbo salaries to pay minimum wage, Bishop tells Tinubu

      June 19, 2024

      Nigeria remains a country in crisis that needs to heal – Chido Onumah

      January 24, 2024

      The Ekweremadus: Obasanjo writes UK court, seeks pardon for them

      April 5, 2023

      I’m coming with loads of experience to re-set Abia – Greg Ibe

      February 1, 2023

      Anambra-born Ugochi Nwizu shines as UNN best graduating doctor with multiple distinctions

      September 29, 2023

      Bulwark for women, girls: Meet Ikengaonline September town-hall guest speaker, Prof Joy Ezeilo

      September 27, 2023

      Rufai Oseni, the most dangerous man on Nigerian TV by Okey Ndibe

      February 13, 2023

      Stanley Macebuh: Unforgettable pathfinder of modern Nigerian journalism by Uzor Maxim Uzoatu

      February 7, 2023

      Police detain officers over alleged killing of motorcycle rider in Ebonyi

      January 29, 2026

      Ebonyi community Protests Alleged Abductions, Killings by suspected Amasiri warlords

      January 29, 2026

      Ebonyi community, mining company sign ₦2bn five-year agreement

      January 29, 2026

      MRA releases 2025 free expression report, decries ‘reign of impunity’ in Nigeria

      January 29, 2026
    • Abia

      Otti urges Abians to bring investments home, tasks Abiriba people on star paper mill revival 

      January 29, 2026

      AIG steps into Abia community transformer theft

      January 29, 2026

      Abia to roll out industrial policy, begins fresh urban renewal drive

      January 27, 2026

      Enyimba FC gets new head coach

      January 27, 2026

      ASEPA distances itself from machete attack, restates ban on cattle roaming in Umuahia

      January 26, 2026
    • Anambra

      Security deployment to Onitsha a recipe for violence — IPOB

      January 27, 2026

      Anambra community rejects Igwe-elect over exclusion of women from voting

      January 26, 2026

      Sit-at-home: Soludo orders closure of Onitsha main market

      January 26, 2026

      Anambra ALGAF fellows urged to intensify advocacy for inclusive local governance

      January 24, 2026

      Obi decries emergency esponse failures as three siblings laid to rest after Lagos fire

      January 15, 2026
    • Ebonyi

      Police detain officers over alleged killing of motorcycle rider in Ebonyi

      January 29, 2026

      Ebonyi community Protests Alleged Abductions, Killings by suspected Amasiri warlords

      January 29, 2026

      Ebonyi community, mining company sign ₦2bn five-year agreement

      January 29, 2026

      Umahi’s son, Osborne secures Ebonyi APC council ticket, salutes Tinubu, Nwifuru

      January 26, 2026

      Political shake-up in Ebonyi as PDP zonal vice chairman defects to ADC with 10,000 supporters

      January 26, 2026
    • Delta
    • Enugu

      Pope honours philanthropist for building Catholic church in Enugu community

      January 26, 2026

      Commissioner reiterates govt’s commitment to peace across Enugu

      January 22, 2026

      Smart schools fraud: EFCC hands over N1.28bn recovered from Sujimoto to Enugu govt

      January 22, 2026

      Ezea’s replacement: Enugu North needs young, vibrant senator – Agbo

      January 20, 2026

      UNN bows to popular demand, reduces sundry fees

      January 20, 2026
    • Imo

      RULAAC petitions Imo attorney-general over alleged torture, sexual abuse of trainee nurse

      January 25, 2026

      Reporters’ diaries: S-East governors earn praise for rural road improvements

      January 6, 2026

      Rights advocates warn of threats over tiger base accountability campaign

      December 22, 2025

      Four cheat death as Port Harcourt-bound plane crashes at Owerri airport

      December 17, 2025

      RULAAC warns of renewed #EndSARS as police abuses persist, cites Imo ‘tiger base’

      December 16, 2025
    • Rivers

      Rivers assembly vows to proceed with Gov Fubara, deputy’s impeachment process 

      January 16, 2026

      Financial disagreements fuel impeachment moves against Fubara — Aide alleges

      January 16, 2026

      The Tinubu I know will not discard Wike for Fubara — Fayose

      January 13, 2026

      APC rejects moves to impeach Gov Fubara

      January 8, 2026

      ‘Do not take our support for President Tinubu for granted’ — Wike warns APC scribe

      January 5, 2026
    • Politics

      ‘Obi or nothing’ a reflection of youth revolt against old politics — Sam Amadi

      January 27, 2026

      Sam Amadi urges Obidients to build new political alliance, calls it unique force in Nigerian politics

      January 26, 2026

      APC makes it 29 governors as Yusuf defects with 22 Kano lawmakers

      January 26, 2026

      Umahi’s son, Osborne secures Ebonyi APC council ticket, salutes Tinubu, Nwifuru

      January 26, 2026

      Political shake-up in Ebonyi as PDP zonal vice chairman defects to ADC with 10,000 supporters

      January 26, 2026
    • Opinion & Editorial
      • Editorial
      • Columnists
        • Osmund Agbo
        • Chido Onumah
        • Uche Ugboajah
        • Hassan Gimba
        • Edwin Madunagu
        • Rudolf Okonkwo
        • Azu Ishiekwene
        • Osita Chidoka
        • Owei Lakemfa
        • Chidi Odinkalu
      • Opinion
    • Special Reports
    • Art & Entertainment
      • Nollywood
      • Music
      • Ikengaonline Literary Series (ILS)
      • Life
      • Travels
    • Sports
    Ikenga Online
    Home » My New Year Resolution, By Osmund Agbo
    Columnists

    My New Year Resolution, By Osmund Agbo

    Osmond AgboBy Osmond AgboJanuary 9, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read

     

    Be water, my friend.


    For many years, I have maintained a sustained and discerning interest in Nigeria’s real estate sector, gradually assembling what might fairly be described as a modest portfolio.
    It has not been easy though. Residing on the other side of the Atlantic and far removed from the immediacies of home, I was compelled to rely on a network of suppliers, many of whom I cultivated over time and entrusted with confidence and loyalty. Regrettably, that trust was often violated. The pattern became grimly familiar: padded invoices, quiet substitution of inferior materials, imaginative bookkeeping, and a relentless inclination to prey upon the vulnerability of the absentee investor.

    Then, almost fortuitously, the landscape shifted.

    By pure serendipity, I encountered Jiji, an e-commerce platform that functions as Nigeria’s equivalence of Amazon. Almost instantaneously, my position within the marketplace was transformed. From the comfort of my bed in America, I could survey thousands of vendors, compare prices with transparency, assess quality and reach informed decisions within minutes. The informational asymmetry that once empowered rapacious intermediaries dissolved. I was no longer captive to predatory gatekeepers who thrived on opacity and displayed little interest in reciprocal loyalty. Technology had quietly restored agency to me.

    The tangible consequences of this transformation was quite evident during my most recent visit to Nigeria. I visited the shop of one of those former suppliers and was struck by the severity of its decline. A once flourishing outlet had been reduced to a faint remnant of its former vitality, marked by dusty shelves, sparse foot traffic and a palpable erosion of relevance. Commercial activity had deteriorated so dramatically that the owner no longer found it worthwhile to attend regularly. With weary resignation, he confessed that the effort was no longer justified. His principal office in a prime district had already been shuttered and he was now, with some urgency, seeking an alternative enterprise.

    E-commerce platforms such as Jiji, operating with substantially lower overhead and superior efficiency, had rendered his traditional brick and mortar model obsolete. The market advanced. He remained stationary, and the market offered no indulgence. The crash is reminiscent of the demise of numerous American big-box retailers such as Toys R Us, Borders, Blockbuster, RadioShack, Sears and Payless ShoeSource following the rise of Amazon. None collapsed for lack of intelligence or diligence. They failed because they underestimated the velocity with which the rules of commerce had been rewritten.

    That encounter crystallized a personal conviction and I was recently asked about my New Year resolution, my response emerged without hesitation: adaptability. In an era accelerating toward relentless disruption, adaptability is no longer a virtue but a prerequisite for survival. Those who cling to obsolete methods merely because they once proved effective will inevitably be surpassed by those prepared to learn, unlearn and reinvent.

    This principle extends beyond individuals and enterprises to the conduct of nations. China, once dismissed as a peripheral manufacturing outpost, has systematically reconfigured its national priorities toward scientific capacity, technological autonomy and infrastructural supremacy. Vast investments in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, renewable energy, semiconductor fabrication, biotechnology and advanced telecommunications reflect a strategic comprehension of where future power will reside.

    Beijing recognizes that contemporary dominance is no longer secured principally through aircraft carriers and foreign bases, but through mastery of data, supply chains, intellectual property and innovation ecosystems. Laboratories now rival legions in strategic importance, and patents increasingly substitute for paratroopers.

    The United States, by contrast, remains psychologically anchored in its imperial inheritance. It continues to allocate immense resources to defense expenditures, sustaining a global military footprint designed for twentieth century conflicts while comparatively neglecting the civic foundations of twenty first century competitiveness. America often conducts itself as though coercive capacity alone guarantees leadership, even as the decisive arenas of competition migrate toward educational excellence, infrastructural resilience, technological literacy and social cohesion.

    This divergence is not merely fiscal but philosophical. China adapts by anticipating the emerging terrain of competition. America frequently responds by fortifying the architecture of its prior triumphs.

    Nature has never permanently rewarded the strongest nor guaranteed lasting security to the cleverest. It has consistently favored the adaptable. Survival, whether within ecosystems, financial markets, empires or private lives, belongs not to those who cling most fervently to certainty but to those who negotiate intelligently with transformation. Adaptability is not simply a useful attribute. It constitutes the quiet architecture of endurance itself.

    Darwin’s most misunderstood idea is not about strength or dominance, but about adaptability. Survival belongs to those who can adjust without breaking, who reshape their instincts when circumstances change. The extinction of the dinosaur and the survival of the sparrow teach the same lesson in different ways: size, power, and past success offer no protection against changing realities. Evolution acts like a strict editor, removing rigidity and preserving flexibility.

    Human history echoes this biological truth. Civilizations rarely collapse primarily through invasion but rather through stagnation. Empires decay when institutions transform into ceremonial museums of past victories instead of laboratories for emerging realities. The Roman Senate recited tradition even as its frontiers dissolved. Once dynamic religious movements hardened into dogma and confused preservation with fidelity. Orthodoxy frequently fossilizes insight, embalming yesterday’s wisdom and mistaking it for timeless relevance. When a society forfeits the courage to revise itself, it begins rehearsing its own obsolescence.

    On the personal plane, adaptability distinguishes growth from grievance. Life seldom honors original blueprints. Careers fracture, relationships evolve, bodies age and convictions mature. Those who demand that reality conform to their early assumptions become embittered curators of a vanished world. The adaptable intellect, by contrast, interprets disruption as instruction, converting disappointment into data, failure into feedback and uncertainty into opportunity for reinvention.

    Adaptability is not timidity disguised as flexibility. It is disciplined responsiveness rather than moral capitulation. The adaptable individual does not abandon foundational values but refines the mechanisms through which those values endure. Principles constitute roots, while methods form branches. Roots must remain firm, yet branches must sway with the storm or succumb beneath its force. Wisdom lies in discerning what must remain inviolate and what must remain negotiable.

    Within professional life, adaptability has emerged as the new intelligence. Credentials depreciate rapidly. Skills decay. Entire industries mutate with astonishing speed. Competence has become provisional, rented rather than possessed. The conceit of mastery undermines relevance. Only the perpetual student remains capable of sustained utility.

    Psychologically, adaptability represents emotional maturity in motion. It requires humility sufficient to acknowledge error, courage adequate to relinquish obsolete identities and resilience robust enough to rebuild without resentment. Many prefer to defend erroneous positions rather than evolve toward wiser ones. Ego privileges consistency over accuracy, yet survival refuses to negotiate with pride.

    Even moral reasoning demands adaptability. Ethical clarity does not entail static answers to dynamic dilemmas. Each generation confronts unprecedented technologies, unfamiliar social configurations and novel concentrations of power. A rigid moral lexicon eventually falters before new questions. Adaptive ethics preserve enduring human dignity while constructing fresh interpretive frameworks for emerging realities.

    The paradox is that adaptability itself presupposes inner stability. Only a grounded consciousness can afford transformation. Flexibility without identity degenerates into drift, while identity without flexibility calcifies into confinement. Survival resides within their creative tension.

    Ultimately, adaptability constitutes the art of remaining alive, not merely biologically but intellectually, emotionally, culturally and spiritually. It signifies the refusal to become embalmed while still breathing and the courage to revise oneself without self betrayal. The future does not belong to the loudest, the strongest or even the most intelligent. It belongs to those who can learn more rapidly than the world transforms and who retain the humility to continue learning long after yesterday’s triumphs have lost their luster.

    Survival, in the final analysis, is not conquest. It is an ongoing conversation with change, and adaptability is the language in which the wise maintain fluency. I believe Bruce Lee aptly captured this wisdom in his famous line, “Be water, my friend.”

     

     

    Osmund Agbo is a medical doctor and author. His works include Black Grit, White Knuckles: The Philosophy of Black Renaissance and the fiction title The Velvet Court: Courtesan Chronicles. His latest works, Pray, Let the Shaman Die and Ma’am, I Do Not Come to You for Love, have just been released. He can be reached at eagleosmund@yahoo.com.

    Osmond Agbo

    Related Posts

    Mr. President Was in Turkey. So Was I, by Osmund Agbo

    January 29, 2026

    Re: Russian embassy’s fuss over Azu’s article on Putin by Richard Akinnola 

    January 29, 2026

    Yusuf’s red cap on Tinubu’s red carpet by Azu Ishiekwene 

    January 29, 2026
    Editors Picks

    Mr. President Was in Turkey. So Was I, by Osmund Agbo

    January 29, 2026

    Re: Russian embassy’s fuss over Azu’s article on Putin by Richard Akinnola 

    January 29, 2026

    Yusuf’s red cap on Tinubu’s red carpet by Azu Ishiekwene 

    January 29, 2026

    Police detain officers over alleged killing of motorcycle rider in Ebonyi

    January 29, 2026
    Latest Posts
    Columnists

    Mr. President Was in Turkey. So Was I, by Osmund Agbo

    Opinion

    Re: Russian embassy’s fuss over Azu’s article on Putin by Richard Akinnola 

    Azu Ishiekwene

    Yusuf’s red cap on Tinubu’s red carpet by Azu Ishiekwene 

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from Ikenga Online.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    IkengaOnline is a publication of the Ikenga Media & Cultural Awareness Initiative (IMCAI), a non-profit organisation with offices in Houston Texas and Abuja.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
    • Home
      • Igboezue
      • Hall of Fame
      • Hall of Shame
    • News
      • Other States
      • National
      • International
      • Interviews
      • Personalities
    • Abia
    • Anambra
    • Ebonyi
    • Delta
    • Enugu
    • Imo
    • Rivers
    • Politics
    • Opinion & Editorial
      • Editorial
      • Columnists
        • Osmund Agbo
        • Chido Onumah
        • Uche Ugboajah
        • Hassan Gimba
        • Edwin Madunagu
        • Rudolf Okonkwo
        • Azu Ishiekwene
        • Osita Chidoka
        • Owei Lakemfa
        • Chidi Odinkalu
      • Opinion
    • Special Reports
    • Art & Entertainment
      • Nollywood
      • Music
      • Ikengaonline Literary Series (ILS)
      • Life
      • Travels
    • Sports

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from Ikenga Online.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
    © 2026 Ikenga Online. Ikenga.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.