By Nature Udoh
I didn’t plan for inspiration that day—yet life has a way of hiding angels in ordinary places.
I was traveling to Calabar and decided to board an AKTC bus. My mind was on my journey, not on anything special. But then… I saw him. A bus driver unlike any I had ever seen.
He stood beside his bus dressed not in slippers and dusty clothes like the others, but in a spotless black suit, perfectly ironed trousers, and a bow tie that sat proudly on his neck. He looked like someone on his way to a wedding—not someone about to drive for hours on a dusty Nigerian highway. His presence demanded attention. He is handsome, composed, and carried himself like a man who knew exactly who he is.
But what struck me wasn’t just the suit—it was his spirit.
While other drivers casually chatted or scrolled through their phones, he was busy cleaning his bus. Over and over again. He wiped the seats, cleaned the windows, dusted the dashboard, even polished the side mirrors as though they were made of gold. There was no rush. No frustration. Just pure devotion.
I watched silently, humbled by the sight. Eventually, curiosity pushed me forward.
“Sir,” I asked, “why are you cleaning this bus so much? It’s a long trip. It will still get dirty.”
He paused, looked up at me with the calmest eyes, and said something I will never forget.
“If I take care of my bus, my bus will take care of me. It will not break down. It will not embarrass me. This thing is spiritual.”
Those words hit me like thunder.
This wasn’t a bus driver—this was a philosopher, a king in uniform, a man who understood the covenant between excellence and destiny. He wasn’t cleaning a bus; he was planting seeds for his future. In that moment, I realized something:
Some people are waiting for success, but some people are preparing for it.
I asked him what his dreams were, and with no hesitation, he said:
“One day, I will own my own bus. Not just one… many. I want a transport company known for excellence.”
He didn’t whisper it. He didn’t doubt it. He believed it.
His confidence wasn’t arrogance—it was faith wrapped in hard work.
I took pictures of him and told him I would share his story. Because men like Mr. Edwin deserve to be seen. They deserve platforms. They deserve opportunities. They deserve helpers.
Maybe someone reading this is his destiny partner. Maybe someone reading this has the means to sow a seed that will help him buy that first bus. Maybe someone reading this is the push he has been praying for.
But whether or not help comes today, one thing is clear:
He is already successful—not because he owns a fleet, but because he has the mindset of a leader.
His story taught me something powerful:
Your attitude towards what you have is the prophecy of what you will become.
If a man can dressed like a CEO to drive a bus, if he can polish his vehicle like a throne, if he can speak about his dream like it’s already a reality— then nothing can stop him.
Let his example guide us:
Don’t wait for the big stage before you give your best. Honor the small beginnings. Respect your hustle. Cherish your work. Be diligent. Excellence is not a destination—it is a habit.
Mr. Edwin may be a driver today, but his mindset is already driving him into greatness.
And if you ever see a man in a black suit wiping down a bus like it’s a Rolls Royce—stop and learn. Because greatness doesn’t always come with applause.
Sometimes… it comes wearing a bow tie and holding a rag.
Edwin’s number is : 0706 732 1114.
Udoh wrote this on his Facebook page.
