A Peace I Cannot Take Yet

The world was a thief in a velvet cloak,
It took the bread, the wine, the light.
It turned to ash the words I spoke,
And left me shivering in the night.
I gave my gold, my grace, my years,
To hands that only learned to take,
Until the well of all my fears
Ran dry within an empty lake.

I do not fear the quiet dark,
The ending of the breath and bone,
I do not dread the final spark
That leaves the weary traveler prone.
The grave is but a silent bed,
A place where treachery must cease,
Where heavy hearts and aching heads
Are folded in a shroud of peace.

But oh, the faces at the door,
The ones who hold my tattered name.
I fear the shadow on their floor,
The snuffing of their candle flame.
For though the world has stripped me bare
And traded kindness for a stone,
Their love is all the breath and air
That I have ever truly known.

I stay for them. I bear the weight.
I walk the miles I cannot stand.
I bar the final, silent gate
With nothing but a trembling hand.
It isn’t death that makes me weep,
Or shadows where the spirits roam;
It’s knowing, if I fall to sleep,
I leave a broken house for home.

@doddyokelo

After

It didn’t fall so much as it unfolded.
One minute, the sky was a familiar ceiling,
and the next, a bruise began to spread from the center out,
smothering the sun until the light felt thin,
brittle enough to snap between my fingers.

You don’t realize how much the light holds you up
until it’s gone.

Now, the air is thick with the soot of burned-out stars.
The iron draft of a closing door has changed everything,
it’s a predatory thing.
It’s in my bones now, pulling my shoulders toward the dirt,
turning my footsteps into heavy prayers that no one hears.
My knees have forgotten the habit of standing.

There is a cold, dense knot where my chest used to be,
a collapsed star, a private black hole
feeding on the scraps of my better days.
It doesn’t just take, it erases.
It has swallowed the before, the maybe, and the us,
leaving only this heavy, crippled silence
where my heart used to beat.

@doddyokelo

Crunchy Honest Chips

I was born just outside my father’s home. I mean outside the fence. Not in a hospital. Not in some sterile maternity ward with nurses who smell like Dettol and sigh through masks. No. I came into this world the traditional way, on ancestral soil, barefoot and bold, like a true son of Asembo. My grandmother delivered me. I’ve said this before, and I’ll say it until my tongue is weary, it’s something to be proud of. It’s raw. It’s traditional. And I guess, so am I.

Asembo is about 15 minutes away from Raila’s Opoda Farm. But this is not about him. This is about home. Or the idea of it. Because although I was born there, I didn’t grow up there. In fact, it took me seventeen years to return. And when I finally did, with the awkward gait of a visitor in his own past, I found our home was no longer a home. It had become a farm.

The only proof we were ever there are the graves—traces of my father, my uncle, my grandmother, and my grandfather. The cement doesn’t crack. It holds secrets. They told me the land is mine now. Or at least part of it. My father was the last born, and in our traditions, that means the home was his. By extension, now mine. But what do you do with a piece of land full of ghosts?

There’s another parcel—12 acres or so. I didn’t earn it. Didn’t break my back for it. Didn’t argue with chiefs or attend land tribunal hearings in stuffy rooms with men who say “utu ni utu” before betraying you for a bribe. It was passed to me like a baton in a relay. A gift from the dead. So no, I’m not bragging. And even if I was, who really wants to sweat for something they can get for free? This is Kenya, after all. We queue for handouts and call it luck.

I grew up in bits and pieces—Homa Bay, Kisumu, Rongo. Like a nomad in search of permanence. In 2007, my mother built a modest house in Rongo. That’s home now. We live there with strangers who’ve since become family, the kind you don’t choose but grow into like an oversized sweater that slowly starts to fit. In Rongo and almost everywhere else in Luo Nyanza, people intermarry—Luos, Luhyas, Kisiis. But not Kikuyus. No, Kikuyus are where the line is drawn.

Luos hate Kikuyus and Kikuyus hate Luos. That’s the story we were handed by the colonialists—wrapped in propaganda and sprinkled with enough suspicion to last generations. Divide and rule. And rule they did. Now we inherit the hate like old family furniture we’re too proud to throw out. We say things like: “A Luo is a witch with a sack of rituals on his back” or “A Kikuyu is greedy and selfish” or that “Kikuyu women kill their husbands.” What is that? That’s not wisdom. That’s premium-grade poetic cow dung.

Ask anyone for proof, and they’ll stutter like a bad radio signal.

I don’t believe in what I haven’t seen. I won’t condemn a whole tribe because Otieno once borrowed your charger and never returned it. Or because Wanjiku blocked you on WhatsApp after you bought her chips kuku.

If that makes me fallacious, then call me a walking fallacy.

And listen, Kikuyu women are beautiful. Not the stereotypical light-skinned, big-chested, flat-behind and thin legs that don’t  match the body types, those that your uncles warned you about. No. These days, they come in thick—size sevens with curves that look like they were negotiated in parliament. Faces sculpted like the gods used cheekbones as currency. And thighs, God help us, thighs the colour of roasted cashews—thighs that can save entire nations.

I’m dating one. A Kikuyu. Six years now, give or take a few breaks that almost broke us. Her name is Koi, but if you know her like I do, you call her Spiky. And Spiky? Spiky is divine.

Spiky is what you’d get if elegance had a baby with audacity. She walks like confidence and still laughs like she was raised by love. Her skin is caramel dipped in honey, the kind that makes you wonder if sunlight took lessons from her. Her smile is a gospel that can turn a hard man soft. She’s smart, too. Smart with the kind of intelligence that knows when to speak, when to keep quiet, and when to look at you in a way that makes you question all your life choices.

Her body is poetry. The kind of body that makes you want to write odes in traffic. Her mind is a map. Her heart is a home I keep returning to. Even when I say I’m done.

I am not here to convert you. I am just here to say—love is not tribal. Neither is beauty. Neither is home.

Some of us were just born outside, by grandmothers with hands strong enough to deliver a future.

And maybe that’s enough.

It was 2AM or thereabouts. You know that hour that’s neither here nor there—when the silence feels staged, like the night is watching you back. I wasn’t asleep, of course. My insomnia is back. It always returns like an old lover who doesn’t knock, just walks in and makes itself comfortable.

Spiky was up too, prepping for one of her strange shifts. She works those ungodly hours, where your body wants to rest, but capitalism wants a report submitted by 5:45AM. I decided to keep her company, texting back and forth. In the middle of our banter—whose contents I won’t get into, partly because I’m lazy and partly because it might send you off on a tangent—we veered into a detour.

There’s a Mugithi na Ndumo at Red Room from 2PM,” she texted. “Come with me?”

Mugithi is a Kikuyu genre—think of it as country music that drank a full bottle of Muratina and decided to wear a hat. Ndumo is the dance—the erratic, shoulder-driven, hip-twisting rhythmic warfare. It’s like watching a fight that no one wants to break up. I don’t speak Kikuyu. I know only “mbesha shigana?” which loosely translates to “how much money are we wasting here?” But I said yes. Because love is also showing up where you don’t belong and hoping the rhythm saves you.

Google Maps says Red Room is in Kilimani. Technically true. It’s on Adlife Plaza. But if you follow those blue dots on Google blindly, you’ll find yourself in West Pokot or emotionally lost. Take my advice: get to Yaya Centre, take that left turn. Adlife Plaza is a few blocks in, across from Shujah Mall. Red Room lives on the first floor.

The place is cool.  Genuinely cool. It’s shaped like an L, as if someone folded the club and forgot to unfold it. The counter sits at the center like a bartender god. There’s a stage—clean, slightly elevated, and a DJ booth carved with intention, not just dumped there. The seats in the regular area are metallic, but not the koroga kind. These ones have cushions that hold your secrets. They are comfortable. The VIP area, of course, has better seats—those white kinyozi-waiting-area chairs, only here they’ve been baptized and saved.

The roof is translucent, high enough not to threaten your dignity, and there’s space to dance without knocking a stranger’s elbow. The floor is plastic turf. That fake grass that doesn’t pretend to be real anymore. The kind you’d find in a cool rooftop bar, or a child’s playground where no one gets hurt when they fall—except emotionally.

Our waiter is polite. Genuine. The kind that makes you want to tip even when you’re broke. We order goat meat and chips not fries. I refuse to gentrify potatoes. Spiky, glowing like the first sip of good wine, is in wide-legged purple pants stitched by a fundi who understands women. Her top—a crocheted piece of African fabric art—is from the same fundi. She looks like Nairobi confidence dressed in culture. I’m in wide-legged pants too (no judgment), a free shirt I got from Dura Poa and my trusted white Converse. I order a litre of Muratina because, well, when in Rome… get tipsy on their traditions.

Spiky orders two bottles of Kenya Originals.

The food comes and we eat because what else do you do when food comes? Their meat is soft. Tender like it was raised by a grandmother with a kind voice. The chips are golden and crunchy—honest chips, not those oily, sad ones that taste like heartbreak.

Then comes Gasheni. She wasn’t on the lineup, just a curtain raiser. But sometimes curtain raisers leave you wondering why the main act even bothered. She did well. She cleared the path like John the Baptist. And when DJ Dibull came on, he walked through like the Messiah of sound. He played magic. I danced. I didn’t understand a single lyric but my body understood the beat, and sometimes, that’s all that matters.

Tony Young came in next. One hour and thirty minutes of pure Kikuyu Vaibu. By the time Waithaka Wa Jane got on stage, I think the crowd was tired. Or maybe he was just too mellow for 11PM energy.

Ah, I almost forgot—DJ 44. That man spins like he’s in love with every beat. Like each song owes him rent.

At our table, a couple and a lady joined us. Later, a guy.   All of them were vibes. They figured out pretty quickly that I wasn’t Kikuyu—maybe it was the way I danced, like someone dodging potholes. But they embraced me. One of them told me, “If you can’t beat us, join us.”

So I did.

And I’ve invited them to the Luo Festival on the 9th of August. There, I’ll beat them. And they’ll join me. And we’ll call it unity.

Mugithi was greatness. Pure, fermented, cultural greatness. The kind that reminds you that sometimes all it takes is a beat for you to remember how good it feels to just live.

Thank you for this Spiky. I loved it Baby!

@okelododdychitchats

AND YET, WE VOTE

WHO PROTECTS THE PEOPLE FROM THE POLICE ?


You may write us off,
dismiss us ,
ignore us in Parliament halls padded with stolen wealth,
but still, we see

We are the country beneath your motorcades,
the hands that build and break,
the voices cracking in the dust
because hope costs too much now.

And yet,
we vote.

We vote for thieves in clean suits

We vote for wolves draped in our flags,

Enough.

We are tired.
Tired of job descriptions reading “Must be connected.”
Tired of degrees gathering dust
while our dreams starve in silence.

We are tired of joblessness turned into weaponry,
young men hired cheap to kill our own voices,
paid to break bones they’ve never healed in their own lives.

Tired of watching peaceful protesters
shot dead,
while those who loot in daylight
are guarded like royalty.

Tired of asking:
“Who protects the people from the police?”

Tired of staged outrage,
press conferences filled with air,
and politicians who only remember their roots
when it’s time to lie again.

You fight for positions, not for people.
You dine with the devil,
then kneel in churches too small for your sins.

You debate your egos on live TV
as our people dig trenches
not for roads,
but for graves.

You die to be seen.
But we die because we’re ignored.

Kenya is choking.
On debt.
On lies.
On the stink of promises unkept.

We are not asking.
We are telling.

This time, we vote with memory.
With pain.
With names.
With tears that learned how to speak.

This time,
you will not scare us with teargas.
You will not buy us with t-shirts.
You will not distract us with empty tribal drums.

We will remember who was silent when we bled.
We will remember who smiled while we starved.
We will remember who disappeared our brothers
and called us TREASONOUS CRIMINALS.

We are not the children you once fooled.
We have grown teeth.
We have grown rage.
And we are coming.

So let the ballot tremble.
Let your seats shake.
Let the ground beneath your stolen homes shift.

Because next time,
we are not just voting.

We are reclaiming.

And if you still don’t listen,
then hear this:

We are not afraid.
We are not asleep.
We are not yours.
Not anymore.

@Okelododdychitchats


#RUTOMUSTGO #ENDPOLICEBRUTALITY #RAGEANDCOURAGE
#JUSTICEFORELIJOSHUA

To You, Tonight

You say you don’t read much.
But somehow, you always read me.
And maybe, without knowing,
You taught me how to bleed through the pen,
To shape silence into syllables,
To hold space for feeling,
Even when the world is loud.

So tonight,
As night settles in a robe of velvet quiet,
I write not to ask, nor to explain,
But to bless you, softly.

When the night folds her arms around the sky,
And the stars murmur lullabies in silver tongues,
May your burdens loosen,
May your spirit stretch.

For even the moon, full in her glow,
Knows the ache of holding light too long.

Rest, love.
Lay down the weight of unspoken things.
Let dreams drift in like gentle winds
Through the windows of your mind.

Don’t dwell,
Not on what didn’t grow,
Not on what wasn’t said.

Just sleep.
And let this be the lull in the poem of your life,
The stanza where you exhale.

Goodnight, beloved.
Goodnight.

@okelododdychitchats

The Sound of Love (In Three Words)


There is a river in my chest,
its current stirred by longing.
I have wrestled with syllables,
wrestled them like Jacob with the angel,
and still, they slipped from me.

I’ve summoned sonnets like old friends,
dressed up my ache in velvet metaphors,
cradled my truth in gilded rhyme,
but still, the soul was unclothed.

Words, those proud and peacock things,
marched across parchment
but none bore the weight
of my trembling heart.

Then came silence.
And out of silence,
three humble drumbeats:

I. Love. You.

They stood,
not as grand orators,
but as gospel.

Simple.
Sacred.
Enough.

@okelododdychitchats

Still, I Write

I hate words. 

They slip in when I don’t want them to, 
curl around me like smoke, 
sharp at the edges, soft in the middle, 
always taking more than they give. 

They crash like waves, loud and relentless, 
dig into places I thought were safe, 
fill up the quiet until it isn’t quiet anymore. 
And when they cut, they cut deep. 

But I use them anyway. 
I shape them, mold them, send them out into the world, 
let them dance across pages, spill from my lips, 
like I trust them, like they’ve never left scars. 

And yeah, I’m good at it. 
Words are how I find my way, 
how I turn the mess into meaning, 
how I make sense of the silence. 

But not all words are gentle. 
Some hit like fists, sharp and sudden, 
slice through moments that should’ve been soft. 
They linger in the air long after they’re spoken, 
turning into ghosts that refuse to leave. 

So if I ever throw the wrong ones your way, 
don’t let them fester. 
Call me out. Make me see. 
Because I know words can wound, 
can twist, can take more than they were meant to. 

Still, I write. 
Even when my hands shake. 
Even when the words don’t feel safe. 
Because somewhere beneath it all, 
where kindness still breathes, 
I know there’s light waiting to be found. 

Words can build or break. 
They can hold you together or tear you apart. 
And maybe, if I get them right, 
they’ll be enough to bring me home.

@okelododdychitchats

I will not Dim my Light


If I do all you want today,
Will your love shift?
Will your arms stretch wide,
Wide enough to hold the ghost of me?

I have danced on the edge of your wanting,
Spun circles ‘round your longings,
Bent my back, bowed my head,
Tamed the fire in my chest
To keep your comfort warm.

You ask for little things.
A smile where silence sits.
A nod when my spirit shakes its head.
You ask for more.
To silence my no’s, to trim my edges,
To mold away the man
Who dares to stand whole.

I have walked your road,
Worn my feet down to whispers,
Lost my name in the fading call of your voice.
But tell me,
If I do all you want today,
Will I wake up tomorrow
And know the shape of my own shadow?

I have learned the lessons of yielding,
Learned to tuck my thunder away,
To let the winds of your needs
Blow me soft, blow me small,
Blow me into something easy to hold.

But what of me?
What of the man who sings her own name?
Who does not shrink,
Who does not fall silent,
Who does not twist himself
Into the shape of another’s desire?

I will not be whittled down,
I will not be swallowed whole.
Love should not ask for a life
That forgets how to live.

So I ask you,
If I stand tall, if I stay true,
If I let my wild bloom,
Will you still call my name?
Or will you fade,
A dream that could not bear
The weight of my wings?

I will not trade my fire for comfort.
I will not barter my soul for belonging.
If I must walk alone,
Let my feet find steady ground.
Let my heart beat in its own time.
Let my love be limitless and unchained.

For love should lift,
Not bind.
It should open doors,
Not lock them shut.
If I stay,
Let it be as I am,
Unshaken. Unshamed. Unafraid.

And if you must go,
Go gently.
But know this,
I will not dim my light,
Not for you.
Not for anyone.

I was born to shine.

@okelododdychitchats

She Still Wears Dirty Shoes


She was beautiful. 
Not the loud kind of beautiful, 
not the kind that demands attention, 
but the kind that catches you off guard,
soft, steady, 
like the warmth of the sun on your skin when you didn’t realize you were cold. 

I admired everything about her. 
The way she walked, 
like she wasn’t just passing through the world,
the world was lucky she chose to walk on it. 
The way she spoke, 
words rolling off her tongue like they’d been waiting for her to find them, 
gentle but firm, 
like truth dressed in silk. 

Her skin-flawless. 
Not flawless like makeup ads promise, 
but flawless like rivers cutting through stone, 
like history written softly across her face. 
Her body? 
Not perfect by anyone’s rules but her own, 
a shape that felt like poetry,
not the kind you study, 
the kind you feel. 

Her style was effortless. 
Not curated, 
just honest. 
Clothes didn’t wear her; 
she wore them,
with a grace that made simplicity look like art. 

But her shoes were always dirty. 

It didn’t matter if they were brand new, 
straight from the box, 
or worn down from years of walking,
somehow, 
they were always stained with something. 
Dust, mud, 
Just something

And I hated that. 
Not because it mattered, really, 
but because I thought it should. 
Maybe it was the part of me that needed order, 
needed neatness,
the part that saw beauty in straight lines 
and clean edges. 

Her shoes didn’t fit that picture. 
They kicked at the corners of my mind, 
scuffed up the idea of what “perfect” should look like. 

So I let her go. 
Not because she wasn’t enough, 
but because her shoes weren’t clean. 
It sounds ridiculous now, 
but at the time, 
it felt like reason. 

Five years passed. 
Life happened,
the kind of life that leaves its own dirt behind. 
Mistakes, lessons, 
love gained, love lost, 
all of it piling up like dust in places you forget to clean. 

Then I saw her again. 
Last week. 
Standing there, 
the same light in her eyes, 
like the years hadn’t dimmed a thing. 

She smiled,
the kind of smile that could stretch across oceans, 
the kind that makes you feel like you’ve been missed, 
even if you haven’t. 

She still looked good. 
Better, actually. 
Like life had layered her with more stories, 
more depth, 
and none of it weighed her down. 

Her teeth were bright, 
her scent was warm, 
her presence still undeniable. 

And her shoes? 
Still dirty. 

But this time, 
I didn’t care. 

Because now I know,
life isn’t about spotless shoes. 
It’s not about keeping clean what’s meant to get messy. 
It’s about walking, 
about moving, 
about showing up, 
even if the road leaves its mark on you. 

Her shoes weren’t a flaw. 
They were proof. 
Proof that she’d lived, 
that she’d walked through things and kept going, 
that beauty isn’t about what stays clean,
it’s about what survives the dirt. 

She still wears dirty shoes. 
And now, 
I think that’s the most beautiful thing about her.

@okelododdychitchats

When Death Speaks

Let’s talk about death. 
Yes, death. 
I know,
you’re probably wondering, “who talks about death?”
I do. 
I do it courageously, 
yet timidly, 
like a child with a secret too heavy for his pockets, 
but too delicate for his lips. 

I speak of death because I know,
one day, 
I will lie beneath the soil of my ancestors, 
soaking in the dust of my father’s land, 
a homecoming where no one sings. 
Six feet under, I will be, 
like my father before me, 
and the fathers of fathers 
whose names were lost 
long before my tongue learned 
the language of grief. 

I haven’t made peace with death, 
just like you haven’t. 
It presses its weight on my chest, 
a shadow I can’t shake, 
a sorrow buried in silence,
the kind of silence that resounds 
in places where laughter used to be.

The thought of losing someone 
you’re used to seeing 
is a gap
no bridge can span. 
It’s a limb ripped from the body of your soul, 
a phantom pain
that keeps reaching 
for what isn’t there anymore. 
And sure,
you can build prosthetics out of memories, 
fashion artificial limbs 
from old conversations, 
but they will never function 
like the real thing. 

I hate death. 
I hate its finality, 
its audacity to steal 
what we are not ready to lose. 
I hate its silence,
how it robs us of voices 
we still hear in dreams. 

But hate or not, 
death is a truth 
we cannot escape, 
a reality we cannot undo. 

And when it speaks,
there’s always that quiet sorrow,
the truth we’re unwilling to face,
the call we’re afraid to answer,
knowing it’s a summon
we can never ignore.


So, I carry it with me,
not in defeat, 
but in defiance. 
I lace my words with its gravity, 
so that every breath, 
every heartbeat, 
becomes a rebellion 
against the quiet 
waiting at the end. 

@okelododdychitchats