It must Be a Beautiful Death

It Must Be a Beautiful Death

Let it come like a sigh, 
like the silence between waves, 
like the slow separation  of a ribbon, 
loosened by the hands of time. 
No violence. No suddenness. 
Just the peaceful folding of the day into night, 
a quiet hand-over to the pull of the tide. 

Let it not be an end, 
but an opening, 
a door swinging wide to something big and golden, 
a breath released, not stolen. 
Let it feel like stepping into warm water, 
like sinking into silk, 
like the weight of the world slipping from tired shoulders. 

Something will rise from the silence. 
It always does. 
A blade of green through frost-bitten earth, 
a flame that flickers but never dies, 
a heart that stops only to be remembered 
in the sound of another’s breath. 
Life does not go. It stays. 
It clings to the air, to the hands that once held it, 
to the laughter built into the walls of an old house. 

It must be a beautiful death, 
the kind that  smiles instead of weeps, 
that glows instead of dims, 
that steps lightly into the unknown, 
leaving warmth where it once stood. 
Not a Disapearance, but a soft dissolve, 
like sugar in tea, 
like smoke curling into the sky. 

Something sweet will remain. 
A voice Singing in the quiet of morning, 
a scent-faint yet familiar-caught on the wind. 
The way their name still tastes on your tongue. 
Love is stubborn. 
It does not bow to time. 
It finds itself into the cracks of your bones, 
into the spaces between dreams. 

And something great will rise from the silence
A light in the dark, 
a constellation drawn from the ashes, 
a name that refuses to be forgotten. 
No one is ever truly gone 
if their love still stains the walls of the world. 

It must be a beautiful death, 
not because it does not pain, 
but because it matters, 
because it leaves fingerprints on the soul, 
because it whispers through the wind, 

I was here. I loved. I lived.
And somewhere, somehow, I still do.

@okelododdychitchats

How Busy Can Someone Be?



The clock swallows minutes whole,
Gulping down greetings, gnawing on goodbyes. 
Excuses stack like bricks against a door, 
While silence hums between us,
thick as stone, 
thin as breath. 

A phone vibrates, a message waits, 
Unanswered. 
I see you read it.
A thousand reasons grow in that space, 
But not one blooms into a simple, 
“I’m thinking of you.”

How important must a life be 
To lose the weight of one small word? 
How far must a soul stroll
To forget the way home is paved 
with pause, 
and presence, 
and tender replies? 

What do we build with our busyness? 
A monument of meetings, 
A kingdom of calendars. 
We count every second, 
but never the heartbeats missed 
between deadlines. 

We are architects of absence. 
Masters of the unsaid. 
Too proud, perhaps, 
to admit that we let love sit idle 
while we sharpened schedules into swords 
and called it survival. 

Wahenga na wahenguzi said, 
Akufukuzaye hakuambii toka.
The one chasing you never says leave. 

What are you still waiting for?
What more do you need to realize you’re not wanted?
Respect yourself!…


Somewhere, there is a hand 
reaching for yours, 
A voice waiting at the edge 
of a message unsent. 
Kindness grows fragile 
when left in the dark, 
but it never dies. 

So, how busy can someone be? 
Busy enough to forget,
but not enough 
to stop remembering.

@okelododdychitchats

I Don’t Care

I Don’t Care 

I sit. 
And I watch you. 
You dance in colors that aren’t yours,
A queen in paper armor, 
A prophet of mirrors who fears reflection. 

You laugh loud. 
Louder than truth. 
You wear pride like a coat with the sleeves too short, 
Talking about wisdom you never heard, 
Pointing at horizons you’ve never chased. 
The ground shifts beneath your feet, 
But you don’t feel it. 

And I,
I don’t care. 

You build kingdoms with sand, 
Palaces of opinions stacked like cards. 
The wind speaks warnings in whispers, 
But you never learned to listen to silence. 
So go ahead, 
Stack your stones, 
Yell into the wind. 
I’m not holding the wall when it falls. 

You ask for counsel, 
But only to hear your own thoughts. 
You want change, 
As long as it looks just like you. 
There are cracks in the glass you refuse to see,
A compass that spins and never lands north. 
You follow it anyway. 
I watch. 
I stay still. 
I don’t care. 

What kind of human walks without leaving footprints, 
Shouting justice but stumbling over truth? 
You brandish swords forged from hollow words, 
Slicing wounds in places no one else sees. 
You call it bravery. 
I call it noise. 

Let me be clear,
I don’t care. 
Your storm is yours to drown in, 
Your sea to sink or swim. 
I have my own shores to walk, 
My own sun to chase. 
I’ll breathe air that’s free of your thunder, 
And find my calm beneath skies you can’t reach. 

You tell me to climb your glass mountain, 
But I see through it, 
Thin as pride, 
Fragile as ego. 
I’ll stand at the bottom and watch it shatter. 
You’ll bleed. 
I won’t. 

This is not lethargy,
It’s freedom. 
I won’t wear your chains of validation, 
Won’t dance to the beats of your demands. 
Let the tide rise, 
Let your words fall like rain on someone else’s skin. 

I’ll walk. 
I’ll breathe. 
I’ll write my own name into the wind, 
And let the song belong to me. 

So live your truth,
Call it gospel, 
Call it fire. 
Build your temples, 
Shout your sermons. 
But don’t ask me to kneel. 

The world is vast, 
Full of roads I haven’t walked, 
Of songs I haven’t sung. 
And I will walk them, 
I will sing. 
Unbound. 
Unmoved. 
Unapologetically free. 

I don’t care. 
Not out of spite, 
Not out of scorn, 
But because I refuse,
To be a prisoner of someone else’s storm. 

This is where I leave you. 
Keep your crown. 
I’ll keep my soul. 

@okelododdychitchats

Grace in the Details

I’m at this restaurant along Moi Avenue. Its food looks like an upgraded version of Homabay High School meals (you will understand why). I can hardly pronounce its name, let alone write it. Honestly, why name a restaurant this hard? I thought names were supposed to connect with customers. Has that changed? Marketers, is this strategy now a relic of the past, is it a vestigial structure ?

The place is well-designed. It’s a sanctuary carved out of dreams, and that’s what drew me in! I love good designs, but I’ve just learned the hard way that the prettiness of a place doesn’t guarantee the sweetness of its food. Trust me, you can use this in any context you want ! 

The receptionist is a light-skinned lady with poorly done makeup and an attitude to match. I choose to ignore her entirely and look for a seat where I won’t have to see her chewing gum carelessly every time I lift my head. 

I settle next to a window, where I can take in the scenery. It’s beautiful in its own way-not green, but full of life with people walking in different directions, a flock of matatus, and a road that seems to have missed maintenance since independence. 

The waiter here is Grace-at least, that’s what her badge says. She’s beautiful. Her skin is a rich mix of bronze and gold. Her wide, luminous eyes seem to hold a thousand untold stories. She carries a natural beauty that stands out effortlessly, paired with a calm and confident demeanor that speaks volumes about her self-assuredness. Her restaurant uniform is a clean white blouse neatly tucked into a black skirt-looks like it was tailored just for her. The simple outfit hugs her elegant figure perfectly, and the black-and-white contrast gives her a sharp, polished look. She moves with such poise and confidence that something as ordinary as a uniform suddenly seems extraordinary on her. Simplicity has never looked this good. 

Grace approaches me, asking what I’d like to have while taking me through the menu. Everything on it seems mlimarish. I settle for ugali with beef. She tells me, “Hiyo mbando hainjaiva,” in a heavy accent. From her voice, I can tell she’s Meru. Her second name is probably Gitonga, Kendi, or something similarly Meru-sounding. There’s something irresistibly beautiful about the Meru accent. I listen, I judge, and I know, I’m not wrong about this one. 

I decide to wait because my craving for beef won’t let me pick anything else. It feels like I’m nursing a hangover, but I’m not! 

When the food comes, I’m shocked, bana! This is thufu in reality. Tiny chunks of meat are floating in a watery broth, and the ugali is poorly made. To make it worse, they’ve served it with cabbage. My appetite disappears in an instant. I can’t eat this food, it’s beyond poorly done. 

But at least Grace is here. I can enjoy listening to her  accent. She has a heart of gold, and I feel guilty sending the food back. I pay the bill and even leave her a tip. She smiles and says, “Azante. I want to laugh, but I hold back. As she walks back toward the reception, I catch myself admiring her “Nyash,” and honestly, it’s worth every shilling I just spent. Bana Nyathini Kado !

I have no more business here, so it’s time to leave. 

Will I return for the food? Absolutely not. But I’ll come back for Grace, for her smile, her accent, and her presence. I think she might just be the one. Forget the food, this “Nyash” is unmatched!

@okelododdychitchats

It’ll Take all of Us

I walk the familiar paths,
their beauty dulled by the litter that lines them. 
Plastic bottles, discarded wrappers, 
a shoe missing its pair,
a trail of neglect that’s hard to ignore. 
Why always here? 
Why do we treat our home this way? 

The roads are heavy with filth, 
the air thick with fumes and frustration. 
Bins stand idle, waiting for use, 
while rivers, once full of life,
carry the weight of our waste. 
Water, meant to be clear and pure, 
now tells a different story, A very dark story.

I step carefully, dodging the trash. 
An empty soda can here, 
a torn newspaper dancing in the wind. 
Is it so hard to care? 
So hard to find a bin, 
to think beyond the moment? 

I search the faces around me, 
hoping for answers, but find none. 
Just more garbage, plastic bags snagged on trees, 
cigarette butts crushed into the dirt, 
fast food wrappers blowing like tumbleweeds. 

It makes me sad,
not just for the streets, 
but for the way we’ve let them become this way. 
The beauty of Eastlands 
hidden under piles of indifference. 

I bend down, 
pick up a piece of litter, 
and toss it into a nearby bin. 
It feels small, insignificant, 
but it’s something. 

I know it’ll take more than one person, 
more than one act, 
to fix this mess we’ve created. 
It’ll take all of us, 
a shared sense of responsibility, 
to bring life back to these streets. 

Still, I dream,
of rivers running clear, 
of air free of smoke, 
of roads where the only footprints 
are those left by hopeful feet. 

Until that dream becomes reality, 
I’ll keep walking these paths,
beautiful but broken,
reminding myself that change 
starts with me.

@okelododdychitchats

Golden Hue

My skin drips cocoa butter, 
rich and unparalleled, 
like the earth holding stories of rain and sun, 
like a promise whispered by the night. 
It’s dark and beautiful, 
mysterious as a velvet sky laced with stars, 
It tells a story of history. 

It doesn’t glare or dull,
it balances like a seashell 
cupped by moonlight, 
a perfection gleaming in the sun, 
catching light like a secret revealed. 
This is my skin, 
a story of generations, 
a mark of resilience passed down with pride. 

Its scent is Yara cologne, 
layered and lingering, 
a melody made tangible, 
a fragrance infused with culture, 
with memory, with home. 
Every breath of it recalls 
the places, the hands, the voices 
that shaped me. 

Above it rests a crown, 
soft coils and curls that stretch toward the sky. 
Hair that defies gravity yet welcomes touch, 
a crown sculpted by no one but me, 
alive in its strength, its freedom, 
a hymn of self-love in every strand. 

This essence of me,
is seen and felt
it’s carried, 
it’s lived. 
Every inch speaks 
in a language only I can translate, 
a declaration of identity, 
a love letter to the self. 

So let my skin drip cocoa butter, 
let it shine unapologetically. 
Let it sing of power and joy, 
of beauty that doesn’t ask for permission. 
This darkness isn’t a void, it’s fullness, 
it’s richness, it’s light wrapped in shadow. 

Let it carry the rhythm of culture, 
the heartbeat of diversity. 
In its depth is strength, 
in its texture, truth. 
It doesn’t hide, 
it never will. 
My skin drips cocoa butter, 
and in it lies the whole world.

@okelododdychitchats

The Burden of Being

They say men drag themselves to hell,
As if each step they take is a burden,
As if the weight of their struggles,
Their pride, their pain,
Should remain hidden,
Silent, unspoken.
And when a man is wronged,
When his dignity is stripped away,
When his worth is questioned,
They turn away,
As if it’s his fight to bear alone.
No one speaks up, no one defends,
He’s left to pick up the pieces,
His bruises ignored.

Have you ever seen
What happens when a man’s life is taken?
How the story shifts,
How the reason for his death is twisted,
Explained away,
As if it’s somehow justifiable,
As if it’s easier to accept
If the pain can be rationalized,
If the wrong can be painted in a different light.
The truth is bent,
The facts contorted,
Until the sharp edges of injustice
Are softened, made palatable.

Why is it only wrong when it doesn’t fit the narrative?
When a man’s struggle doesn’t meet the approval of those who’ve never walked in his shoes?
When the pain doesn’t match their prescription of how things should be,
Why do they bend and twist the story to make it easier to understand?
Why is it that the wrongs done to a man are shrugged off,
Ignored, forgotten,
Until they can no longer be ignored?
Is it because they expect him to endure quietly?
To accept disrespect as part of his place in the world?

Why must we turn a blind eye when a man is dismissed,
When he’s disrespected,
When his value is diminished,
As if he doesn’t deserve the same empathy,
The same respect,
The same justice?
Why do we question his pain,
His frustration,
When he’s left standing alone,
Fighting battles that no one else sees?
Is it because he’s a man,
And somehow, his hurt is less?
Somehow, he’s expected to rise without the help of others?

It’s a sad, painful truth that we live in a world
Where some lives are weighed differently,
Where some struggles are minimized,
Where the wrongs done to men are excused,
Simply because they’re men.
But when will we see that pain is pain,
That disrespect is still wrong,
That when a man’s dignity is stolen,
When he’s pushed down,
When he’s wronged,
It’s just as heavy, just as real
As the wrongs done to anyone else?

I won’t stand for it.
I won’t accept it.
I believe we can do better.
I believe we can rise beyond these broken rules,
Beyond these silent expectations,
And see each other for what we truly are,
Human.
Every one of us, deserving of dignity,
Deserving of respect.
And maybe, just maybe,
When we stop justifying wrongs,
When we stop twisting the truth,
We can heal, together.
Men, women, everyone,
Equal in our worth,
Equal in our struggle,
And equal in our right to be seen,
To be heard, to rise.

@okelododdychitchats