The Opportunity Cost of a Lost Girl: Why Adolescent Health Is an Economic Issue

To address the structural challenges of adolescent health in Kenya, experts are increasingly viewing the Triple Threat, the intersection of teenage pregnancy, HIV, and gender-based violence, as a singular public health emergency that requires a unified institutional response. The gradual erosion of national pregnancy rates, which dropped from 18% to 15%, is seen by policy analysts as a sign of progress, yet one that masks deep-seated regional inequalities. In areas like Samburu, where the rate remains at 50%, the crisis is viewed not merely as a health issue, but as a systemic breakdown of the protective social infrastructure intended to support the girl child. This crisis is compounded by the Triple Threat synergy,  a lack of agency to negotiate safe sex often results in a simultaneous surge in new HIV infections and unplanned pregnancies, frequently rooted in gender-based violence.

Education remains the most significant predictor of reproductive outcomes in the country. Data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS, 2022) indicates that only 5% of girls who complete secondary school become pregnant, a stark contrast to the 40% observed among those with no formal education. Institutional experts emphasize that education is thebest contraceptive, serving as the most effective long-term shield for a girl’s future. The current Education Re-entry Policy is designed to treat pregnancy as a temporary pause in a girl’s development rather than a permanent exit from society. By mandating that schools readmit young mothers without conditions, the government is prioritizing the long-term economic viability of these young women. We must support her return and protect her potential to mitigate the massive opportunity cost to the national GDP.

With the rollout of the Social Health Authority (SHA), there is a strategic move to eliminate the financial barriers that often drive transactional sex. This phenomenon occurs when girls, particularly from the poorest households, exchange sexual favours for basic necessities like sanitary pads or school fees. Health administrators argue that removing the cost of maternal care is a pivotal step in normalizing adolescent health services. When girls can access youth-friendly clinics without the fear of financial strain or the stigma of judgment, the likelihood of safe deliveries and the adoption of postpartum family planning increases. This approach frames reproductive care as an essential public service, similar to the management of other chronic health conditions.

Sociological research highlights that the social death of a pregnant teenager is frequently a by-product of community-level shaming. While childbearing rates are significantly higher in the lowest income bracket, they drop drastically for the wealthiest, suggesting that pregnancy is often a symptom of economic desperation. The community’s role must shift from isolation to integration, especially as new threats like digital grooming emerge. Experts suggest that a girl’s destiny should be shaped by her dreams, not her zip code, and that ending thesocial death of teenage pregnancy is Kenya’s path to a stronger nation. Breaking the cycle of poverty requires community leaders to stop negotiating defilement cases through traditional settlements and instead move toward formal legal accountability.

For Kenya to reach its development goals, the focus must remain on the enforcement of the Sexual Offences Act at the grassroots level. Legal advocates insist that justice cannot be settled with livestock or secret payments. Every instance of legal accountability sends a clear signal that the safety and education of the girl child are non-negotiable national priorities. By aligning government policy, community action, and economic support, the goal is to ensure that every girl has the power to decide her own future on her own terms.

@doddyokelo

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

What Next for Kenya’s HIV Response?

Otieno, a resident of Kamwango in East Kamagambo, Rongo Sub-county, sits on the edge of his bed, the weight of the world pressing heavily upon his shoulders. He looks at his wife, Achieng, who is meticulously organizing their remaining ARV tablets, and their seven-year-old daughter playing by the window. For years, those pills have been their lifeline, a daily ritual of survival. But the news on the radio is cold. Following the transition in Washington on January 20th, 2025, and the looming impact of March 2026, the whispers in the clinic queues have turned into a dull roar of panic. He hears that the containers might stop coming, and the thought of the virus waking up in his daughter’s blood because of a political shift thousands of miles away is a terror no father should carry.

For 23 years, Kenya has been receiving roughly 69% of its HIV funding from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). This massive investment, totaling over 8 billion dollars (approximately 1.1 trillion Kenyan shillings) was the backbone of the national response, paying for the very ARVs Otieno’s family is counting on, the laboratory reagents for viral load testing, and the salaries of over 40,000 health workers, nearly 18% of the country’s total health workforce, who now face an uncertain future.

The crisis has ceased to be a storm on the horizon, it has become the drying of the well, a sudden, natural silence where the ever-flowing vein of supply once lived long. Since the executive freeze in early 2025, approximately 34 million dollars (4.5 billion Kenyan shillings) worth of life-saving commodities have been caught in a logistical gridlock. This disruption was triggered by a stop-work order that deactivated the payment and distribution systems managed by U.S.-funded agencies. By March 2026, the buffer stocks that once protected patients like Otieno from supply shocks will have run dry. In many facilities, doctors have been forced to ration medicine, moving from three-month prescriptions to one-week emergency packs, a desperate measure to ensure that at least everyone gets something, even if it isn’t enough.

To bridge this gap and heal the mess of daily adherence, there is a growing call to develop and deploy long-acting treatments for reactive individuals. While currently available injections like Cabenuva require a visit every two months, the dream is to innovate even further, creating a once or twice yearly injection specifically for treatment. Such a breakthrough would be the ultimate sustainability tool by replacing 365 daily reminders with just one or two clinical visits, the government could drastically reduce the logistical nightmare of monthly pill distribution. It would solve the adherence crisis for families like Otieno’s, ensuring that even if a shipment is delayed or a clinic is crowded, their protection remains locked in their blood for months. This transition to long-acting treatment is the missing piece that could turn the tide, making the 2030 goal of zero transmission a reality by removing human error and pill fatigue from the equation.

The physical landscape of care is also shrinking. Community Drop-In Centers, which provided a refuge for vulnerable groups to receive medication away from the prying eyes of the general public, have begun to shut their doors as their rent and staff costs were tied directly to the now-paused U.S. grants. This has pushed thousands of patients back into overcrowded outpatient clinics where stigma remains a biting reality. The shift is driven by a fundamental pivot in U.S. foreign policy toward domestic rescissions, clawing back billions in global health aid and leaving a Sh30 billion hole in Kenya’s 2026 health budget.

The Kenyan government has responded with urgency and strategic redesign. Health officials, led by the Ministry of Health, are frantically working to integrate HIV services into the new Social Health Authority (SHA). The goal is to move HIV care from a donor-funded silo into the national insurance framework, essentially treating it like any other chronic condition. To prevent a total stockout, the government is also fast-tracking licenses for local pharmaceutical companies to manufacture ARVs within Kenya, aiming to break the cycle of dependency on foreign shipments that can be halted by a single signature in a foreign capital.

Sustainability is the ultimate goal, but it is a bridge built under fire. The National Treasury is being asked to ring-fence emergency funds to unlock meds held in private warehouses, while civil society groups under the National Empowerment Network of People living with HIV in Kenya (NEPHAK) have taken to the streets to demand that laboratory tests, like viral loads and CD4 counts, remain free under the new insurance scheme. While the move toward a Kenyan-led, self-reliant system is the only long-term solution, for Otieno’s family, the immediate reality is a month-by-month struggle to stay undetectable while the country waits for the first gears of its own factories to turn with purpose.

@doddyokelo

Let Me In

Your mind is a cathedral of locked doors,
where I walk the perimeter, tracing the cold stone,
listening for the silver resonance of a breath that sounds like my name.
I am an expert in the art of the unspoken,
gathering the crumbs of your glances like a hungry bird,
content to wait in the shadow of your mystery
until the daylight finally learns how to break through.

Expose the map of your pulse, the hidden place
where your armor thins and the genuine heart beats.
I do not ask for a tour, I ask for the keys to the foundation,
to be the protagonist in the story you tell yourself at midnight.
Let me inhabit the space of your firsts,
as the very oxygen that fills your lungs
before the world taught you how to hesitate.

I can feel your love like a subterranean river,
heavy and gold, moving where the marrow dreams of light.
But I am drowning in the shallows of your caution,
wondering if you will ever let that river break the banks.
I love you with the violence of a sun that never sets,
I am waiting to see if you will finally surrender to the same
beautiful, terrifying gravity that holds me to you.

@doddyokelo

Lenacapavir, The Twice-Yearly Miracle: Is This the End of the Beginning for HIV?

People hesitate most at clinics closest to where they live. That hesitation is rarely about distance or time, it is about being seen. In my journey through community development and health advocacy, I have watched people walk past facilities meant to save their lives because they fear the look that seems to measure you. Fear the silent calculations neighbours make when someone enters a clinic known in the community as an HIV point, whether clearly branded or simply recognized locally. For years, HIV drug points marked with PEPFAR, USAID, or familiar donor logos have told a story before a word is spoken. Separated from other services, they invite judgement and connect dots.


To cope, patients travel. Someone living in Homa Bay town collects ARVs in Oyugis, Ndhiwa, or wherever anonymity feels safer. It helps, yes, but it does not heal the fear. It only relocates it. Treatment becomes a journey of avoidance rather than access. And it raises the question, “should life-saving care require disappearance?” Until HIV services are fully integrated, until seeking treatment looks no different from visiting any other clinic, stigma will continue to do its damage through the systems meant to defeat it.


HIV survives in systems that expose, in routines that punish the ordinary act of seeking care, in the invisible calculations people make every day to remain unseen. And it is within this reality, where access still demands courage, that breakthroughs like Lenacapavir become not just medicine, but possibility.


For decades, the United Nations’ goal of zero new HIV infections by 2030 has felt distant. Roughly 1.3 million people are diagnosed with HIV each year, and the 2025 target, fewer than half a million new infections annually, was missed. As the finish line drifted, global funding tightened. Cuts to PEPFAR and USAID transformed what once felt inevitable into a whisper of hope. Then came Lenacapavir.


Lenacapavir is neither a vaccine nor a cure. It is a long-acting capsid inhibitor, a drug that targets HIV-1’s protective shell and disrupts the virus’s replication at multiple stages. For decades, prevention relied on daily discipline. One missed pill could open a window for infection. Lenacapavir changes that equation. Administered just twice a year, it works like pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) without the daily burden. It offers a six-month shield protection that slips seamlessly into life as it is actually lived.


The trial results were extraordinary. In sub-Saharan Africa, the PURPOSE trials reported zero new infections among women using Lenacapavir. Among gay and bisexual men and transgender women, protection reached 96%. In a field long accustomed to incremental gains, these numbers feel historic.


Breakthrough, though, means little without access. Gilead Sciences, which manufactures Lenacapavir under the brand name Yeztugo, could have confined it to wealthy markets. Instead, it signed royalty-free licensing agreements with six generic manufacturers, opening the door for affordable versions in 120 or thereabout low- and middle-income countries.


In Kenya, the National AIDS and STI Control Programme (NASCOP) is preparing for a nationwide rollout beginning January 2026. Lenacapavir will not replace condoms, daily PrEP, or other prevention tools. It will expand choice. And in high-burden settings, choice is power. Protection without disclosure. Prevention without permission. Safety without explanation.


Can a twice-yearly injection help the world reach the UN’s 2030 target? Possibly. Lenacapavir directly confronts three long-standing gaps in the HIV response:


1. Adherence: No daily pill. No constant reminders. No fear of discovery.


2. Biology: Clinical trials leave the virus with almost no room to replicate.


3. Access: Generic production makes scale realistic, not rhetorical.


Lenacapavir will not end HIV on its own. But it may mark a turning point.

@doddyokelo

Man Enough to Cry

I know, I’m a man, yes, the great pillar of might and muscle,
The one who never trembles, never falters, never feels.
Society’s favorite statue, polished, silent, hollow.
But save that sermon, really, keep your “men don’t cry” gospel.
I am human, not granite shaped for your comfort, I bleed too, I just hide it better.

Oh, how noble it must look, dying quietly inside,
Smiling wide with a cracked soul, calling it strength.
You call it “African masculinity,” I call it emotional suicide.
I can’t drink your bravery forever, it burns going down.
Sometimes I just want to exhale without the label “weak,” without the world mistaking honesty for failure.

Let me speak, even if my words leak salt and sorrow.
Don’t hand me depression and call it dignity.
If tears offend your tradition, good, let them flood it.
I’d rather drown honest than live pretending I’m steel.
After all, even lions cry, you just don’t stay long enough to hear it roar in pain.

@doddyokelo

Tailored To Your Ego

You teach me how to love,
like a tutor with a chalk of affection,
sketching rules on my heart’s blackboard,
telling me where to pause, where to ache,
how to sing your name.
And I, the willing fool, take notes,
hoping to pass your exam of devotion.

You say, be the best person you can be,
but only when that person pleases you.
How noble, how godly, how perfectly human
to mold me into a version of you,
and call it growth.
Love, you say, is sacrifice,
but it’s always my neck on the altar.

A romance tailor-made, you claimed,
stitched with precision and care,
fitted to the edges of your comfort zone,
hemmed with your insecurities,
fastened with silent rules I never signed.
Sorry, my love, correction,
fitted not for love, but your ego’s parade.

Still, I tried.
God knows, I tried.
And in the trying, I learned,
how love can shape a man into a shadow,
how tenderness can bruise if held too tight,
how devotion, when one-sided,
becomes self-destruction in silk.

You ask what I’ve learned in return?
That your affection has terms and conditions,
your heart is a subscription service
that renews only when I bow enough,
laugh enough, obey enough.
You call me names when I forget,
darling, I’ve never seen such poetry in cruelty.

You say you can’t do this anymore,
compare me to your gallery of ghosts,
men built in marble, flawless in memory.
And still, I stand there,
a living, breathing imperfection,
learning that your love speaks fluent disappointment.

So walk, my sweet torment.
Take your lessons, your mirrors, your masks.
You’ve taught me what love is not,
and that’s worth a diploma in heartbreak.
Go, darling devil,
your absence will be my peace,
and my freedom, finally tailored to me.

@doddyokelo

The Hour of Resignation


Is not the deep, dark rest a better plea,
When every single waking breath is war?
What am I fighting for, and what’s in store
But the same old tide that washes over me?
I searched the sunrise for a silver coin,
A simple piece of joy I could rejoin,
But found the coffer empty, shut, and cold,
The story of my striving left untold.


They promise gain, a comfort to be won,
If I just keep my shoulder to the stone.
But I have carried burdens all alone
From the first shadow cast beneath the sun.
I’ve seen no profit, felt no easing touch,
Just giving everything and getting much
Less than the peace the simple stones enjoy,
A hollow effort that I can’t employ.


Look on the record, read the final count,
There is no happiness beneath this sky.
The truth is written in the tear-wet eye,
The only offering from a spent account.
Every hard-won moment just a trade
For a new hurt, a deeper struggle made,
The only harvest that my hands can claim
Is the slow, bitter knowledge of the flame.


I tell you plainly, I can take no more.
The line is drawn, the final cord is cut.
My stubborn spirit, now locked in a rut,
Cannot hold past the breaking of the core.
This weight is not a thing you lift and clear,
It is the atmosphere of sorrow here.
The mind gives way, the tired will descends,
And all the forced endurance finally ends.


The anchors slip, the vessel has no guide,
The heart’s great drum beat only low and faint.
I won’t pretend, nor make myself a saint,
I only know I can no longer hide.
I am too fractured to be fixed again,
Too soaked in the relentless, icy rain,
The scaffolding of hope has bowed and split,
And I am done with all the grit and wit.


So let this truth be clear when I am gone,
My failing was not weakness of the soul.
I did not stumble short of any goal,
But fell beneath the weight of every dawn.
It was not sickness, foe, or sudden blast,
Life Itself came for me, and overcame at last.
The battle’s over. Hear the final word,
I lay my weary head down, like a bird.

@@okelododdychitchats

A Rose for You, My Love

The red rose sings of wild fire,
The white one breathes like the sea,
One burns with untamed longing,
One rests in serenity.

But I bring you a soft blush petal,
Not white, not crimson bright,
It holds the warmth of sunrise
And the still of falling night.

For love is not just quiet,
Nor only made to burn,
It’s the tender pull of yearning
And the joy when you return.

So here, my love, this rosebud,
It’s not bold, but it is true.
It blooms with gentle longing,
Like the way I bloom for you.

@okelododdychitchats

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