
I don't set targets for myelf - Nana Aba Anamoah
2 mins read
1st September 2025 5:28:29 PM
2 mins readBy: Amanda Cartey
Television personality Nana Aba Anamoah has revealed that she does not set resolutions for her life as it's done by many at the beginning of each year.
Her comment came as a response to the question of whether she was able to achieve a lot the previous year.
She responded by stating, “Well, I don’t set targets for myself. You know every day is a beautiful day, and I just face the day as it happens. Yes, that is how I deal with my life. I know what I want to achieve in my life. I don't do yearly targets because then, I end up disappointing myself for not meeting them. But I just want to be a good person. I want to be able to give back to people. I want to be able to be better than I was the previous year or the previous day. And so I don’t really set targets for myself, she told radio host, Nana Romeo on Accra FM.
Despite Nana Aba Anamoah’s stance, she does not oppose those who make resolutions and set targets for themselves in any way.
“But for me I don't do that.I just know that at the end of the year, I want to look back and say to myself that I did good,” She added.
She has also denied claims by some Ghanaians that she is rude. During a conversation on Joy Prime on February 20, 2025, she clarified that she is not rude, as some people think.
She explained that many Ghanaians confuse confidence with rudeness. Nana Aba Anamoah also mentioned that she is not affected by such negative remarks about her.
"I hear that all the time, and I don't apologise for it. I don't render any apologies for it. I don't know why anybody would say I am rude because I just like to tell things as they are."
"In many ways, most of the time, I am polite. But my politeness is sometimes hidden sarcastically. I am just a very confident person, but I can be rude when I want to be," she said.
When asked about her recent criticism of the former Deputy Minister of Tourism, Arts, and Culture, Mark Okraku-Mantey, she stood by her words and insisted that the former deputy minister failed woefully during his tenure in office.
She explained that the creative arts industry expected much from him because he was once a creative.
"I felt his comments were unnecessary. He has been in the media before, and he didn't decide to approach the show. It was my disappointment in him because I felt that, for someone who has been in the creative arts industry before, I expected better from him," she added.
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