There is something powerful about water.
When you walk a long distance to fetch it, you learn to value every single drop. You don’t waste it. You protect it. You understand its worth — not because someone told you, but because of the journey you took to get it. The same principle applies to innovation. There are young people in technology building projects from scratch — with limited resources, little exposure, no funding, and no strong networks. They learn by themselves. They fail quietly. They restart. They sacrifice time, comfort, and sometimes opportunities. Because of that distance — they understand the value of their innovation. Every line of code matters. Every improvement matters. Every user matters. Then there are others who find systems already built, get early exposure, access funding, mentorship, or institutional backing. That support is important — and powerful. But the relationship with the innovation can be different when you did not walk the full distance to fetch the “water.” This is not about who is better. It is about understanding the value of the journey. Sometimes the most resilient innovators are those who built in silence, without support, and still refused to quit. The question is: How do we create systems that recognize both — the ones who walked far for the water, and the ones who were given a well — and make sure no drop of innovation is wasted? Because in the end, innovation — like water — must be valued, protected, and shared wisely.
2026-02-26 09:17:48 - Rashid Mussa