While the world sleeps, you build.
While others rest, you prepare.
That’s the mindset. That’s the mood. 💻🔥
While the world sleeps, you build.
While others rest, you prepare.
That’s the mindset. That’s the mood. 💻🔥
The Cobra Effect and the Rat Effect are closely related ideas in economics and public policy. Both describe situations where well-intended incentives backfire, making the original problem worse.
Definition:
When a solution to a problem creates incentives that unintentionally encourage the very behavior it was meant to stop.
Origin story (colonial India):
British authorities offered a bounty for dead cobras to reduce their numbers.
People began breeding cobras to kill them for the reward.
When the program ended, breeders released the cobras.
Result: more cobras than before.
Key idea:
Poorly designed incentives change behavior in unexpected ways.
Modern examples:
Paying schools based only on test scores → teaching to the test or cheating
Paying per bug fixed → developers create unnecessary bugs
Traffic fines that are cheaper than parking → people treat fines as fees
Definition:
A broader term for reward systems that lead people to game the system, often by producing the problem being rewarded for solving.
Common story (varies by region):
Governments pay for dead rats to control infestations.
People begin breeding rats to collect rewards.
Ending the program releases rats → infestation worsens.
Key idea:
When rewards focus on outputs instead of outcomes, people optimize for the reward, not the goal.
| Aspect | Cobra Effect | Rat Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | Specific historical example & concept | Broader behavioral pattern |
| Focus | Perverse incentives | System gaming |
| Use | Policy & economics | Policy, management, organizations |
| Relationship | A classic example | Generalization of the same problem |
👉 All cobra effects are rat effects, but not all rat effects are cobra effects.
Measure outcomes, not just outputs
Anticipate how people might game incentives
Use multiple metrics, not a single reward signal
Pilot programs before scaling
Include behavioral and cultural analysis
I wrote a letter meant for you,
Yet found no dove to bear my heart.
Other birds offered their wings,
But trust refused to follow them.
To fly and rest beside your soul,
The distance stands too wide, too far.
To speak my love aloud to you,
I tremble at the watching eyes.
What, then, is the solution?
💜🔥
I still remember the toughest moment between graduating and landing my first job. It took me three months to find employment, but those months felt like three years. Every day came with costs—transportation, food, house rent, and making copies of my CV. You feel embarrassed asking your family for money, even though you’ve already graduated and are supposed to be independent.
Sometimes, you need experience to get hired, but no one hires without it. You try freelancing to build a portfolio, but clients ask for previous projects you don’t have.
Time flies. Soon, the next batch graduates, and suddenly your CV and credentials feel “expired,” and you feel almost retired without ever getting hired. I hope many of us have felt this same pain.
Frustrating? Absolutely. But these moments teach powerful lessons:
USA: CareerOneStop, Goodwill Industries
UK: National Careers Service, Jobcentre Plus
Germany: Bundesagentur für Arbeit (Federal Employment Agency)
Canada: Service Canada / Job Bank, YMCA Employment Services
Australia: JobActive
Remember: Catch-22s aren’t walls—they’re puzzles waiting for the right move.
Some things can’t be rushed. You can’t just put growth in a microwave oven and expect perfection.
Whether it’s learning a new skill, building a career, or developing a project, trying to force it usually backfires. Real progress takes patience, effort, and time.
💡Lesson: Give yourself the time to grow because good things don’t happen overnight.
We, as human beings, are faultfinders by nature. Sometimes we blow small stuff out of proportion—we try to make a storm in a teacup. Some problems are tiny, yet we turn them into mountains and even blame someone for them.
Dear comrade, relax, keep it simple, save your energy for the big picture, and move on.
💡 Takeaway: Focus on what truly matters, not the little things.
Not everything that looks shiny is actually safe. Some wins? They’re just burning ice.
It reminded me of the Oromos' idiom: “Heeruma dharraanee, heerumnaan rarraane.”
Meaning: We over-wished for marriage; we were overwhelmed later after marriage.
Take a closer look before celebrating too soon. You might be holding something that’ll hurt later.
💡Takeaway: Don’t just chase the shine. Focus on what really matters.
While the world sleeps, you build. While others rest, you prepare. Morning comes, and you rise just like everyone else—calm, focused, and ...