I have good news
Friday, December 8, 2023
My Book: Going to Buy a Plot in Maaĩ Mahiũ is on Nuria Store
Thursday, December 7, 2023
My BOOK: Going to Buy a Plot in Maaĩ Mahiũ
This has been my dream. To create a book and place it in the hands of people who tell me ‘ I think I’m excited more than you are.’
Thursday, November 9, 2023
Death of Boyish Feminity
I came to age in the era of Destiny's Child, Alicia Keys, and EVE, and solidified my womanhood with Avril Lavigne guiding my style, my walk, and the company I kept.
We were coached on how to sit by Save the Last Dance
It was a time when you could be hood and pretty
You could be dressed like whatever and still have both girls and boys crushing on you, like when Alicia sang Falling. We all fell.
And rose again to sing to -Gangsta Lovin, rapping all of EVE's parts, not having a clue what she was saying but feeling real gangsta dropping those English words like motorbike exhalations
We were cool
Until it was no longer okay to bounce, as a girl
No longer okay to wear a tie with a tee
No longer okay to wear your cargo pants and just be, without someone asking if you preferred women to men.
We learned to cross our legs when we sat,
cover our mouths when we laughed
and hang out with other women.
Tuesday, October 31, 2023
Salon Stories
Financially speaking
Sunday, October 15, 2023
Middle Age: Why I want to leave civilised Society and move to the forest
My biggest concern in life is that I always to come home to a peaceful house, and a quiet, peaceful environment. It stresses me out when the balance is shaken because home is my sanctuary, and whenever this is disturbed I get unsettled.
I have lived ina wonderful place for almost five years now bt recently my heart is getting unsettled.
A family moved in that fights everyday, they harass their children, they have a new hosuegirl every two or three weeks akikaa sana, they leave the gate open, their kids are naughty and unruly and basically, they's turned our formerly peaceful environment into a plot 10.
The woman always has an issue with someone in the family, and now she is picking up a fight with neighbours.
One time she and her husband started screaming at a young girl,about17 years old and threatening to call the police on her. Reason- the girl had scolded their son- the son had pitched the girl's bottom.
But the girl was roho juu, she told the mother if you don't discipline your children we'll be happy to do it for you and challenged her to a fight.
Another time, the boy scratched someone's car- the parents denied it.
The one that has all of us up and arms is a recent one.
Something about a toy that was run over in the parking.
And so the mother of the child whose toy was run over went round cursing everyone that owns a car in the plot.
‘ Mnaringa huku na magari Kwani sisi hatuwezi nunua.’
(Na si ununue)
‘Hata hamna akili!’
(The problem with cowards is they like to throw words around uselessly. )
‘ Hamtutishi! Mimi niko na pesa na hata nikitaka kununua gari haiyanichukua two minutes!’
(Na siununue)
And so some of the plot members had accompanied the woman who had accidentally, and very slightly cracked the toy as she reversed, as she approached the other woman full of curses)
“ So can we have a solution? I can have the toy repaired.”
‘Unafikiria mimi sina pesa ya kuirekebisha? Kama nililipa 5000 fundi tu ndie atanishinda?’
(So unataka? Kuchapa mtu? Si useme basi tutengeneze ring ni nini mdomo mingi?)
So she finally felt silly and started talking on the phone.
And the well mannered lady told the silly woman’s child to bring the toy for repair.
Thursday, October 12, 2023
20. That Ka- age - Adult Orphans And Morgue Visits
I pulled out this story from my upcoming book- Going to buy A plot in Maaĩ Mahiũ. This is too dark for a funny book. I will add it to my next book : Conversations into Adulthood, which is also a hilarious tragedy, but expected.
And then your parents begin to fall apart. They are on daily medication and monthly clinics. When they are not needing intensive care, they have lost their memory and want you to tell them where you work for the fifth time.
You arrived an hour ago. Now you are wondering how this long weekend is going to get by.
Or they die and now, as a human adult, you are asking for the number for Ebony Meeting chambers on Tom mMboya street so you can indicate in the WhatsApp group that family and friends are meeting at 7 p.m. for funeral arrangements.
You have become so proficient at writing eulogies that it’s a bit heartbreaking.
Your friends are losing their parents as well;
You are crisscrossing the country attending funerals every month.
You have lost friends.
You have lost siblings.
And when your heart is cracking, your boss tells you,
‘By the way, contract yako iliisha September.’
How do you tell him, please let’s talk about this, I just lost my big sister and there is a dark cloud hanging above me now!
Or you get called for a job, after being out of work for a whole year. They want you to start tomorrow. But you are in your village in Mikindani. Na mūtirī mūracokia mibomu ya ītū ūramtaa. The mtaa chairlady has come to check if the utensils are in order and so far five out of 120 cups have broken handles, 20 spoons are missing and someone used a plastic plate to carry hot ash.
Rīu mwī hau mūgīka ithabu rīa damages.
How do you tell that admin girl that the earliest you can start work is next year, February because hata hamjajua huku kunabaki aje!
Ama you are those who “keep yourself busy”, so you plan and organize and hold back grief.
Then two months later you break down in the Super Metro on your way home and argue with the conductor for 15 minutes and people look at you and stay very busy on their phones. And you go home and realise “man! I am in pain”.
When you lose a parent it’s like a wall that shielded you falls down in one swoop. Mbu!
Unabaki hapo umejishikilia usipasuke.
You feel a cold cold shiver that doesn’t get better with time.
If one parent is alive you start to visit them more often.
You are scared; you work harder so they don’t wear out and die too.
You worry about every single bit of their lives.
You regret the times you didn’t appreciate them enough, and you are ready to slap anyone disrespecting their parents.
‘They could be dead, you know !’ You want to scream at them.
But you have to learn self -control.
Quietly quiet your beating heart when people talk of
‘My mum, my mom, my dad, my daddy, dadii, my bro, my, my.’
————
You come back to your house and discover a child left some graffiti on your door, with charcoal and crayons..
It shouldn’t matter but it’s the last straw.
You have to move.
You cannot stay here.
You must start your life somewhere else.
A completely different place where people don’t know that you were once happy.
You once had parents,
And brothers,
And sisters,
And friends,
And you keep thinking, “Aren’t we all better off dead, tumalize hii confusion!”
‘Ata, there are more on that side than the ones left on this side.’ My brother likes to say.
Maybe we should all be gathered up to our forefathers, mapema ndio best.
But then you realise, haiya, life is for the living.
And if you have to drag yourself up by a forklift, you better.
You have to pick yourself up.
Again and again you get up and live.
You get up another day and dig deep inside of you for that flicker of hope.
Because pain and hope exist in parallels.
And sadness and joy are fraternal twins.
And just when your strength is out.
You catch a moon the size of a big basket.
A faithful witness in the sky.
A reminder that in heaven, we have a Father.
And he will never die.
Revelation 7:16,17
Yesterday made four years since I got the call that left me motherless. I tried to push it out of my head and not have an 'anniversary' but it's hard not to think about it. She was an amazing woman, and each year I appreciate just how much courage she had to continue putting one foot infront of another for 55 years. I don't think I'll make it that far. I often feel a sense of loss, but I habe to keep moving until I also breath my last. Irene Nyawira Munyeki. May you wait patiently, all the days of your compulsary rest. Until He calls out and gives you back your life.
Conversations on dating as a broke year old.
He said if you haven't been on a date at Uhuru Park then you haven't seen anything. 'You have to have done an Uhuru Park date...
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Teacher Teacher- Kamande wa Kioi Teacher teacher teacher, my teacher Wherever we shall meet, just know I shall give you a kiss. ...
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Ngai! How do you view me, you?….Aii…. I am not getting you clearly Can you repeat what you said? Or maybe one of my dials ...
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I pulled out this story from my upcoming book- Going to buy A plot in Maaĩ Mahiũ. This is too dark for a funny book. I will add it to my ...