James Ssekamatte
Bio
Engineer and artist sharing my perpective with the world.
Stories (51/0)
3 Ways Self Love Affects Your Success
When I started my online journey a few years ago, I was making videos on youtube and hated everything I watched about myself. I hated how I looked, sounded, talked, and so on. I always secretly thought that my success would be possible if only I were built differently.
By James Ssekamatte3 years ago in Longevity
How To Remain Optimistic in a Pessimistic Environment
Introduction I recently came across an article that talked about the frustrations of readers having to get generic advice and sometimes irrelevant or obvious advice like “how to brush your teeth”. This article also addressed issues that I have been thinking about for a long time where writers give very questionable advice about writing like “you should write every day”…
By James Ssekamatte3 years ago in Motivation
11 Signs of Highly Insecure People
If you have ever had any form of social interaction which am assuming everybody has at some point, chances are that you must have encountered some of the most interesting people you know as well as those that are not very interesting. In my experience, most people think that the latter are the only ones who are always insecure and the former aren’t.
By James Ssekamatte3 years ago in Humans
Passive Income Is Not A Lie
I was watching a youtube video of this favorite vlogger of mine that had not posted in over 7 months. 10 seconds into the video, I was hit with an ad and it for some reason got me thinking about the nature of passive income and our expectations about it. And here comes my rant.
By James Ssekamatte3 years ago in Trader
From Broken Families to Private Planes
The issue I discuss here is deeply personal to me. Most people in the world have grown up in non-ideal conditions and even those that have grown up in royalty-like lifestyles have a lot to think about when it comes to what the meaning of their lives is all about.
By James Ssekamatte3 years ago in Motivation
The Ocean Healing
At 35 years old, Reni knew that he could no longer live as he did for the first 34 years of his life. The lazy, reserved, soft-spoken and usually timid character that defined him had to take the back seat for good this time otherwise these habits would erode his life away like the way the 6-foot waves he was currently looking at were eroding the rocky shores of this fish farm beach on which he had found solace.
By James Ssekamatte3 years ago in Humans