Most people think about health and money as two separate conversations. Health is about what you eat, how much you sleep, whether you exercise. Money is about what you earn and spend. But the two are more connected than people realize, especially when it comes to small habits that seem harmless but add up quietly.
Skipping breakfast because of a rush. Eating from a roadside stall every afternoon because cooking feels like too much effort. Going to bed at two in the morning because the phone is more interesting than sleep. These feel like minor inconveniences, not real health concerns. But over months and years, they compound into something much more expensive.
Consider the cost of consistently poor sleep. When you do not sleep well, concentration drops, decision-making weakens, and the body produces hormones that increase cravings for sugar and heavy food. You end up buying more snacks, more energy drinks, more coffee. Work performance dips, which affects income over time. And eventually the physical toll of sustained poor sleep shows up as headaches, low immunity, and fatigue that no amount of rest seems to fix.
Or consider what happens when people repeatedly delay seeing a doctor because they do not want to spend the money. A small infection becomes a larger one. A manageable condition becomes serious. What could have cost a few thousand francs to treat early ends up costing ten times that, or worse, keeps someone out of work for weeks.
Healthcare in Rwanda has become more accessible, but there is still a common habit of treating medical care as a last resort rather than a regular investment. The people who come out healthiest and wealthiest over time are the ones who catch problems early, eat consistently, sleep properly, and understand that their body is the most important asset they own.
The most protective health habits do not cost much, sleeping seven to eight hours is free, drinking enough water costs nothing, walking instead of taking a moto for short distances saves money and builds fitness at the same time. Health and financial stability are not pulling in opposite directions, they are the same goal approached from different angles.
Brenna AKARABO
RADIOTV10











