Posts

The Youth Are Not the Problem — They’re the Awakening

Image
  The Rebellion of the Wounded Generation Across the continent, something remarkable is happening. From the streets of Nairobi to Dar es Salaam, young people are standing up — not for handouts, not for empty slogans, but for a future. A future they’ve been promised for decades but never given. African youths are increasingly making it difficult for the old guards to misrule. The clash between generations — one fighting to live, another clinging to the power to suffocate — is not chaos; it’s correction. It’s the immune system of a continent kicking in. The youth have realized that silence is complicity. They’ve watched their parents endure cycles of deception, where elections change faces but not systems. They’ve seen promises rot into debts, dreams traded for tenders, and hope turned into hashtags. Now they’ve decided: enough. They’ve taken to the streets — not out of rebellion, but out of love for a country that doesn’t love them back. Out of hunger — not for food, but for d...

Why Is Dating So Terrible Right Now?

Image
The Age of Leverage “Why is dating so terrible right now?” someone asked online. The answers came fast — too fast. “Because everyone’s playing games.” “Because nobody wants to commit.” “Because it’s all about money.” But the one that stuck was this: “Because nobody wants love anymore. They want leverage.” That’s it. That’s the truth everyone keeps circling but never wants to name. Modern dating isn’t about connection — it’s about control. It’s about who texts first, who waits longest, who cares less, who wins. We’ve turned love into a chess game, not a sanctuary. People swipe through humans like inventory, chasing validation instead of value. Every interaction is filtered through fear: “What if I’m too available?” “What if they lose interest?” “What if they want something from me?” The irony is that by protecting ourselves from heartbreak, we’ve killed intimacy itself. We don’t date to know someone anymore; we date to negotiate with them. We don’t fall in love; we trade emot...

Why I Think Caring More Is the Real Strength

Someone once told me that the power in all relationships lies with whoever cares less. At first, it sounded harsh, but they were right. When you care less, you hold the upper hand. You’re less vulnerable. You can walk away without much loss. The other person, the one who cares more, feels the weight of uncertainty, the sting of dependency, the fear of rejection. But here’s the catch: power is not happiness. Caring less may give you leverage, but it also keeps you at a distance. It robs you of intimacy, of connection, of the joy that only vulnerability can bring. Power protects you, but it also isolates you. Happiness, I believe, comes not from caring less but from caring more. From showing up with open hands and an open heart. From investing in people deeply, even if it costs you something. From being the kind of friend, partner, or parent who leans in rather than pulls away. Yes, caring more means you risk hurt. But it also means you open yourself to love, to loyalty, to memories ...

Truth Without Kindness Is Brutality

Image
  The Double-Edged Sword of Truth  Truth is one of the most powerful forces in human relationships and society. Without it, trust crumbles. Without it, justice becomes a mirage. Yet truth is not neutral; how it is delivered determines whether it heals or harms. A surgeon’s scalpel and a mugger’s knife are both sharp, but only one is used to save life. Similarly, truth can liberate when paired with kindness, or it can brutalize when thrown like a weapon. We live in a culture that often glorifies “telling it as it is.” Brutal honesty is praised as authenticity. “At least I’m real,” someone says after tearing another person down with words. But what if “realness” without compassion is simply cruelty dressed in virtue? Telling the truth is not just about accuracy; it is about intention. Do we speak truth to heal, to build, to guide — or do we speak it to dominate, humiliate, or win an argument? The Bible warns that “the tongue has the power of life and death.” Truth without kin...

Kenya the Kiosk: How an Unpredictable Tax Regime Is Robbing Citizens of Trust

Image
  Kenya the Kiosk  “Somebody said Kenya is run like a kiosk.” It was a throwaway line on social media, but like all great satire, it stuck because it was painfully true. A kiosk is not a supermarket. It is not a store with a fixed price list, barcode scanners, receipts, or warranties. A kiosk is a place where prices are fluid, where the seller may look you up and down before deciding how much to charge. Sometimes you pay one thing, tomorrow you pay another, and if you ask why, the answer is always the same: “Bei imepanda” (the price has gone up). That’s exactly how Kenya feels today, especially when it comes to taxation. The tax regime is not a carefully designed system built on stability and predictability. Instead, it feels like a small kiosk where the shopkeeper changes prices at will and you, the customer, must either pay up or go home empty-handed. Every week brings a new announcement, a fresh “clarification,” or a circular from the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA). You...

The Performance Abroad vs. The Reality at Home

Image
The Stage of Global Compassion Every September, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) becomes more than just a gathering of world leaders—it turns into a theater. Leaders deliver speeches not just to fellow diplomats, but to the watching world. Carefully scripted, laden with buzzwords like “dignity,” “justice,” and “humanity,” these addresses are performances. For many leaders, it is their chance to polish an image that at home may be bruised and battered by discontent. When Kenya’s president stood before the UN and spoke passionately about Haitians as “humans who deserve dignity,” the words rolled off like poetry. They echoed the moral tone of a statesman eager to be remembered as a defender of the vulnerable, a voice for those who suffer. The world applauded—or at least, politely nodded—as it always does at such spectacles. For an outsider, the speech sounded inspiring. It carried the weight of empathy, responsibility, and statesmanship. Yet to those who know Kenya intimately...

Borrowed Dreams: Is Your Life Yours?

Image
How We Learn What to Want From the moment we are born, society begins whispering dreams into our ears — and often shouting them too. These aren’t our own dreams, but scripts written long before we arrived. They come through parents, teachers, media, and culture: go to school, get good grades, land a stable job, marry the right person, build a house, raise children, accumulate wealth, retire comfortably. These steps are presented not as options, but as obligations. Rarely does anyone pause to ask: Is this what you truly want? Instead, success is defined by compliance — how well you follow the map that others drew. The tragedy is that many people never realize they are living borrowed dreams until they wake up one day in midlife, accomplished but hollow, wondering why the life they built feels like a stranger’s home. The inheritance of scripts is powerful because it masquerades as love and wisdom. Parents push children into certain careers “for their own good.” Communities enforce no...