The First Morning in Ghana
The year began the way Ghana always does—
with sound.
Not fireworks, not speeches, but the low, familiar noises of life returning to itself. A cock crowing too early. A neighbour dragging a metal gate across concrete. Somewhere, a radio preacher still holding onto last night’s anointing, his voice cracking through cheap speakers, declaring that this year will be different.
The first day did not ask us if we were ready.
Water had to be fetched.
Food had to be found.
Phones had to be charged—if the light stayed.
By morning, the streets were awake in that half-serious way Ghanaians wake up on January 1st. No rush, no urgency, just people standing, watching, greeting each other with cautious optimism.
“Happy New Year,” we said.
Not as a celebration, but as a prayer.
Because in Ghana, those words mean more than time. They mean you survived. They mean I hope you survive again.
Church bells rang—not because everyone believed more today, but because tradition demanded acknowledgment. Some went to thank God. Some went to negotiate with Him. Some stayed home, exhausted from hoping too hard the year before.
Food was reheated—rice that had seen midnight and crossed into morning with us. Children laughed without knowing why today mattered. Adults counted quietly: school fees, rent, debts postponed by December’s generosity.
The year did not reset poverty.
It did not erase politics.
It did not silence the noise of promises already breaking.
But it gave us something Ghana understands well: another chance without explanation.
In trotro stations, drivers joked about fuel prices before the prices reminded them who was in charge. Traders arranged tomatoes slowly, touching each one like the year itself—testing what was still firm, what had already begun to spoil.
This is Ghanaian hope.
Not loud.
Not careless.
Resilient.
We know the year ahead may disappoint us. We know leaders will speak, prices will rise, and patience will be tested again. We know prayers will be answered selectively.
Yet here we are—standing, greeting, cooking, laughing, complaining, believing anyway.
On this first day, no one asked us to reinvent ourselves.
We only needed to show up.
To greet the neighbour we avoided last year.
To forgive what the calendar cannot fix.
To rest, even when rest feels undeserved.
To hope carefully—so it doesn’t break us when it is delayed.
The year stretched before us like an unpaved road—dusty, uncertain, familiar. We did not know how far it would take us.
But we stepped onto it anyway.
Because that is what Ghanaians do.
HAPPY NEW YEAR. 1Love!!!
cujoe999x1@yahoo.com
Eric Paddy Boso is a spiritual researcher and visionary writer on a mission (SPIRITUAL AWAKENING OF HUMANITY) to awaken divine purpose in a distracted world. He exposes hidden systems, bridges ancient wisdom with modern truth, and speaks with the fire of alignment and awakening.
Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."