A Letter to You, Men



Dear man, 
I write to you in the quiet of dawn, 
When the world stirs with whispers of promise, 
And shadows yield to the birth of light. 
This is a letter, not a sermon, not a scolding,
But a soft wind stirring your soul, 
A call from one heart to another, 
A pause to remember who you are 
And who you could be. 

Wake up,
Wake up from the numbing slumber of conformity, 
From the comfortable tomb of inertia. 
Shake off the chains of apathy 
That bind your dreams to the ground. 
The world is waiting, 
Rise with the sun, let its warmth fill your chest, 
And carve your place into the marrow of this earth. 

Build your own self,
A man not sculpted from the molds of expectation, 
But one built with integrity’s fierce hands. 
Lay your foundation with truth, 
Brick by brick of courage and humility, 
Mortared with the lessons of failure. 
Let self-love be your cornerstone,
For how can you lead others 
If your own heart is a wilderness of doubt? 

Build your family
Make it a refuge where love spills like morning light, 
Where tears are cups of truth, 
And laughter rings like unbroken bells. 
Be the architect of sanctuary, 
Not with walls of pride, 
But with open doors of kindness. 
Do not let regret cloud your vision,
Chart the way with faith and tenderness. 
Homes are not houses,
They are hearts tied together by love’s hands. 

Play your roles with love
Father, son, brother, partner…
Wear these names like a crown of stars. 
Not with dominance, 
But with the strength of gentle hands, 
With the quiet force of a shoulder that bears, 
A heart that listens. 
Vulnerability is not a weakness,
It is the marrow of connection, 
The place where love lives and breathes. 

Oh, dear man, 
Don’t be a ghost of a father, 
A name whispered in longing, 
A shadow in a child’s dreams. 
Children need roots to hold them firm, 
And wings to lift them high. 
Be the guidance in their storms, 
The steady light on a darkened shore. 
In your arms, they learn to trust, 
To dream, to become. 
Be their hero, not perfect, 
But present. 

Do not lose yourself to anger,
That wildfire that devours forests of peace. 
Let it pass through like the storm it is, 
Rage, then rest, then rise again,
But never let it take your soul. 
Meet it with understanding, 
For the world is a fragile thing, 
And love is always the better sword. 

Don’t chase applause, 
For it is the fleeting chorus of hollowed hands. 
Seek truth instead, 
Sing your own song, 
Unapologetically yours. 
There is no peace in pretense,
There is only weariness. 
Live authentically, 
Raw, flawed, radiant. 

Choose your battles, 
Do not draw your sword for every slight. 
Wisdom is knowing when to fight 
And when to let silence be your answer. 
Restraint is not weakness,
It is the quiet power of kings. 

Give, dear man, 
Give with open hands,
But know when to rest. 
Life is not a scorecard, 
It is a dance of give and take, 
A river that drys and flows. 
In generosity, there is beauty, 
But let balance be your guide, 
For even oceans need shores. 

And if love is not returned,
Do not wither, do not fall. 
Some chapters are meant for growth, 
Not permanence. 
Let them go with grace, 
And walk unburdened by what was. 
Detachment is a kind of freedom, 
A breath of peace when the weight is too much. 

Do not linger where the air is poison. 
When toxicity suffocates, 
Leave with your spirit intact. 
Boundaries are not walls, 
They are gardens, 
Places where your soul can bloom. 
Seek light, seek life. 
Don’t stay where your laughter dies. 

Life, dear man, 
Is a song waiting to be sung, 
Art waiting for your hands. 
Be the artist of your existence, 
The poet of your days. 
You are more than breath and bone,
You are a force, a dream, a maker of worlds. 

Wake up. 
Step into your becoming. 
This life is yours, 
A Limitless and glorious scene. 
Write your truth, 
Shape your legacy with love, 
And dance boldly into tomorrow. 

This, dear man, 
Is your story.

@okelododdychitchats

Lady in Black


Mimi ni wa kucum, oh, scrap that, my bad, I meant Mimi ni wa kucome.’”
I was raised in the village. Well, not really a village because Rongo qualifies as a town, but Nairobians will still call it Moshadha, or ushago, or something else altogether. Forget it. 
I grew up in Rongo for most of my childhood and only moved to Nairobi for campus. That’s right, I went to Multimedia University of Kenya in Karen, Nairobi County. Before anyone comes at me with, “Multimedia iko Rongai, bro,” before we argue, check your maps! The lower fence of Multimedia separates Nairobi from Rongai in Kajiado County. So yes, I schooled in Karen and stayed in Karen for four years. Si ni Mimi nawashow.

I bring up this whole kukucome thingie because when I first got into the Nairobi scene, matatu touts kept shouting “Tao Amboseli,” I didn’t catch it right, so I genuinely thought every estate in Nairobi had an Amboseli, just like almost every hood has a Kwa Chief in it. Turns out, they were saying “Tao hamusini,” as in, fare to town was 50 bob from wherever the pickup point was. Today, I’m in one of the moderately pimped Mapepe mats of Utimo Sacco. It’s carrying Tao Hamusini from Umoja Jeska stage. It’s Almost full. People love it because the driver here, knows how to dodge traffic….I’m sitting in the back, on the left window seat, giving me a clear view of everyone getting in, and, of course, judging them. Before I’m done profiling my fellow passengers, a lady slides in beside me. She’s today’s topic. This is udaku for free, feel free to share it with your crew. I hear y’all love udaku, so buckle up.


She’s in a sleek black dress, paired with not-so-new maroon Nike TNs, probably Kamukunji stock, judging by the soles, which haven’t been worn down by exposure to air (yes, I noticed the shoes when she stepped in, don’t ask). Her makeup is flawless, compensating for her questionable style. Thick lenses with frames hugging her round face sit perfectly on her. 
Her eyes? Twin pools of wonder and mystery, they speak in whispers, framed by lashes as soft as a lover’s caress. 
Her lips? Succulent and juicy. 
Her nose? Perfectly symmetrical. 
Her face is a masterpiece on a perfectly sculpted body. 
Her hips don’t lie. When she sits, our hips meet, and I feel something, a desire mixed with comfort and curiosity mingling with hunger. Unsettling and oddly familiar.

I don’t know her name, but I know she smells nice, her dreadlocks are freshly done, clean, and not a hint of dusty brown in sight. 
The bus starts moving, and she turns to me. 
“You look good,” she says. 
So do you, I think. 
“You smell nice,” she adds. 
So do you, I think again. 
Match made in heaven, I convince myself, until she starts talking. And talking. And talking. A relentless stream of words. This river has no banks. Suddenly, I’m not so sure. I reconsider my initial instincts about asking for her name or number. 

She pulls out a Juicy Fruit from her Gussii bag (yes, that’s what it says, probably meant to say Gucci). The way she chews it… carefree, wild, tasting life with abandon. It’s unbothered. It’s maddening….

We are in Town now,

When we reach past Mfangano Street, she turns. 
“What’s your name?” 
I tell her. 
She smiles and walks away, heading toward Luthuli Avenue. 

I watch her walk. That dhudha (that’s ass in some local sheng language.) That graceful stride. That hypnotic sway. 
And for a fleeting moment, I wonder if I could’ve traded all that talking and careless chewing for the simple joy of watching her disappear into the crowd…

I almost get knocked down by a bike. As I snap back to reality, I realize it’s partly my fault. This part of town is always packed with people and matatus. When you mix those two, it feels like the sum of mchanga wa bahari, a bit of an exaggeration, but downtown Nairobi CBD is always a madhouse. I apologize to the boda guy and keep walking toward Nyayo House, with the lady in black still on my mind… I’ll tell you this, if you meet someone in a matatu or anywhere else who catches your interest, don’t wait around. Go for it. Take the risk! The guilt of not trying is way worse than whatever the outcome might be. I wish I’d gotten her number, even if it ended up on that list of contacts I don’t talk to. At least I’d have it, and what I choose to do with it is on me.

All day, I can’t stop thinking about the lady in black. She’s in my thoughts, even in the words I’m about to say. I try to dodge the usual chaos of the crowded streets, so I take a detour towards Kencom, then City Hall. It’s quieter here, with less hustle, and the buildings are lined up neatly, giving off this calm vibe. It’s the kind of peace that lets me think about the lady in black without anything pulling my attention away.

As I get closer to Nyayo House, I notice the street next to Cardinal Otunga and Holy Basilica is lined with Kienyeji ladies, each with an eye on the crowd. They’re advertising cyber services, not with signs, but with their words “bro, cyber, printing…” They’re looking for people who might need a printout or scan before heading into Nyayo House. Their smiles say they’ve seen it all, and they walk with the kind of confidence only Nairobi’s hustle can teach.

I don’t need any cyber services today, so I head straight to the NEMA offices to meet the Nairobi County Coordinator. Her office is warm and welcoming, and one day, I’ll ask her for an interview. But today, I’m here for something else.

Catch you later, guys!

@okelododdychitchats

I Remember

I Remember This 

I remember that day like it was yesterday,
When time just… stopped. 
Everything felt heavy, like carrying sacks of maize on my back,
And your words, they hit me,  
Soft but sharp, cutting through the quiet. 
It was the 31st. 
That date? It stayed with me,
Stuck in my chest like a thorn. 
It made me thirsty, not for water,
But for answers, for understanding,
For some kind of meaning that never came. 

We walked, remember? 
Under those jacaranda trees,
Purple petals falling like tiny blessings
Or maybe tears we couldn’t cry. 
The wind? It whispered secrets,   
Or maybe I imagined that too. 
Everything about that moment was a blur,
But your voice? 
Your voice was clear,
Soft, steady,
Like a song from long ago. 

You told me about her,
And I felt it. 
Every. Single. Word. 
Like the weight of rain-soaked clothes
Clinging to my skin. 
I whispered a prayer that day,
Not because I knew what to say,
But because silence felt heavier than speaking. 
“God, please… please guide her home. 
Hold her close. Let her rest.” 

Ooh, Yesu Kristo! 
My heart,
It broke wide open,
And your name slipped from my lips
Along with tears I didn’t even realize were falling. 
Grief, they say, is the price of love,
And we,
We paid in full that day. 
Every tear,
Every ache,
Every silent scream. 

Loss sits in your chest,
Heavy like a stone you can’t put down. 
But even stones wear smooth over time. 
Grace,
That’s what you taught me,
Grace shapes us, 
Even when we’re broken. 

May her soul find peace,
That kind of deep, deep peace 
That feels like warm sun on tired shoulders, 
Like a calm lake at dusk. 
And I’ll carry her, 
Her memory, 
Her laughter, 
Her love,
Because love doesn’t die. 
It just… changes. 
It becomes wind, 
And light, 
And breath. 

Osiepa, 
You’re still here,  In the stories we tell,  In the way we laugh even when it hurts,  In the quiet moments  When memories sit with us
Like a fire we gather around for warmth.

I remember. 
And I always will. 

@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

Behind Closed Doors, Break Free

Violence doesn’t always leave bruises you can see.
It hides in words that cut, in silence that smothers,
A shadow waiting, patient, behind closed doors,
Quietly chipping away at who you are,
Until you feel small, afraid, unseen.
But knowing the signs, that’s where it begins.

Do they tear you down with a smile on their face,
Chip away at your confidence with every word?
Do their actions make you shrink in fear,
Walking on eggshells, afraid to breathe?
Their cruelty doesn’t need fists to leave scars,
It traps you behind those same closed doors.

You try to convince yourself it’s not so bad,
Smile, laugh, say “I’m fine,” to anyone who asks.
But when the silence settles and no one’s there,
The words come back, loud and sharp,
Reminding you of their power,
Reminding you of your place-small, broken, alone.

And then you start to question yourself.
Maybe it’s you. Maybe you’re the problem.
But you’re not.
It’s their control, their manipulation,
Their need to keep you afraid,
Hidden, quiet, behind those closed doors.

But you can break free.
You can speak. You can stand.
Your voice is stronger than their silence.
Your courage is bigger than their control.
One step, then another, through the open door,
Toward freedom, toward yourself.

It’s time to name their words for what they are.
Time to break the silence,
To reclaim the you they tried to erase.
Because the scars they leave may not be visible,
But you are still here,
And you are still whole.

@okelododdychitchats

Pieces of Me

I’m not stubborn about most things. 
I want to change, I really do, but not everything. 
There are pieces of me I just can’t let go of,
Like my accent, which always feels like home.
Or my style, which speaks for me without a word.
And my team, Manchester Red, through the wins, the losses, and the heartbreaks. I stick!
Those are pieces of me I’ll never trade. 

But some things? I’ll leave behind. 
I’ll swap the bars for church,
Trade the noise for peace, 
Let my spirit find rest in quieter places. 
I’ll keep my screen time, I’m not ready to fight that battle,
But I’ll change what I’m watching. 
No more wanking to strangers’ explicit tapes.
No more moments that leave me feeling emptier than before. 
Instead, I’ll open a Bible. 
Not promising to be holy, 
But I’ll seek meaning in verses rather than fleeting thrills. 

And that muscle, that restless, familiar muscle?
It’s time I show it some respect.
But you better behave too.

 I sit, thinking about what stays and what goes. 
The pieces of me that make me who I am,
my voice, my name, my roots,
those will always be mine. 
But I’m ready to grow. 
Not all at once, but slowly,
Like a tide reshaping the shoreline,
like a man learning to carry himself differently. 

I’m not stubborn,   
I’m just figuring it out. 
Step by step, choice by choice,
trying to become someone better
without losing the parts of me that matter most.

….. And to you all , this isn’t a series of “we listen but we don’t judge.”

@okelododdychitchats

Wacha Ikae

Don’t look at your phone. The urge is there, gnawing at you, but you resist. You know how it happens always. She hasn’t called. She hasn’t left a message either, not even a one-word reply to that carefully written text you sent. But she’s read it. The double blue ticks glare back at you like tiny daggers, taunting you with their silence. 

You tell yourself it’s nothing. Maybe she’s busy. Maybe her phone died. Yet deep down, a faint warning whispers, something is off. The red flags you once ignored are now bold and unrelenting, waving in your face. But no, this isn’t even orange yet, you rationalize. She’ll call later. She always does, and when she does, there will be excuses. So many excuses. Weak and hollow, they tumble out like rehearsed lines in a bad play. 

You’ve heard them all before. “I was caught up with something.” “I didn’t see your call.” “You’re overthinking it.” And yet, every excuse chips away at something inside you. Still, you stay. You try to trust, to believe. But the lateness, the nonchalance, the dismissive tone, they sting. When the responses come, they’re lukewarm at best, indifferent at worst. And when they don’t come at all, you’re left to sit with your thoughts, drowning in a pool of “what-ifs.” 

And when you dare to question it? The tables turn. She doesn’t apologize or explain. No, she gets angry. She calls it “female empowerment” or “girls in male fields,”  her right to do as she pleases. But somehow, your feelings don’t matter. Your concerns are labeled as misogyny, your hurt as bias. Her anger flares, fiery and unrelenting, until you’re forced into silence, swallowing your words like bitter pills. 

It’s funny, though, how the rules seem different when the tables turn. When you’re the one who doesn’t pick up, doesn’t reply, doesn’t explain, the world implodes. Her hurt becomes righteous indignation, and your silence, a personal betrayal. Suddenly, you’re the villain in a story you didn’t write. You’re made to feel guilty, selfish, unworthy. And yet, you understand. Or at least, you try to. Because if you don’t, she gets mad. 

You’re not stupid. You see the pattern, the game, the manipulation cloaked in pretty words. You know the imbalance is more than unfair, it’s toxic. But you hold on, clutching at the tiny string of hope that maybe this time will be different. Maybe she’ll see you. Maybe she’ll call. Maybe she’ll stop making you feel like an afterthought. 

But how long can you hold on? How many excuses can you stomach before the weight of her indifference crushes you? You wonder if love is supposed to feel this way, like walking on eggshells, like a one-sided battle for validation. Deep down, you know the answer. You’re just too afraid to admit it. 

And so, you sit there, resisting the pull to check your phone again. You tell yourself this is the last time you’ll let her silence hurt you. But even as you make the promise, you wonder if it’s one you’ll keep. After all, the heart rarely listens to reason. And yours, stubborn and bruised, still beats for her, despite everything.

Ah, Wacha Ikae Bwana ! Don’t wait to confirm the obvious with a great sense of discovery

@okelododdychitchats

I can See It

The tunnel feels never-ending
A vast expanse of darkness
Thick and suffocating
But I keep pushing forward
Searching for that distant light
That flicker of hope in the distance

My feet are weary
My heart heavy with doubt
But I press on
For I know that the light
Is my salvation
My guiding star in the abyss

I stumble over rocks
And trip on my own fears
But I pick myself up
Dust off my doubts
And keep moving forward
Towards that glimmer of hope

The wind howls around me
Whipping through my hair
Stinging my cheeks with cold
But I am undeterred
For I know that the light
Is worth every hardship

I close my eyes
And imagine the warmth
Of the sun on my face
The gentle caress of a breeze
And I am filled with renewed determination
To reach the end of this tunnel

I remember the words
Of those who have gone before me
Those who have faced their own darkness
And emerged into the light
Their stories give me strength
And remind me that I am not alone

I cling to their words
Like a lifeline in the storm
And I push through the pain
The doubt, the fear
With every step, I feel closer
To the light at the end of the tunnel

I feel it calling to me
Beckoning me forward
Promising me peace
And I know that I must keep going
No matter how hard it gets
No matter how long it takes

For I will not be defeated
By the darkness that surrounds me
I will emerge victorious
Into the glorious light
At the end of this tunnel
And I will be forever changed

So I press on
With newfound resolve
With a fire in my soul
And a song in my heart
For I know that the light
Is waiting for me
At the end of the tunnel.

@okelododdychitchats

Journey of The Heart

The morning sun casts its light over River Kuja, the water glinting like shards of glass as it flows steadily past. I stand at its edge, the familiar sound of the stream filling the silence around me. My feet sink slightly into the warm soil as I cross the narrow road leading to it, pausing to watch the ripples dance. Somewhere in this vast world, I believe, lies the love I seek, though it feels as elusive as the current beneath the surface.

Jodongo always said love is like the treasures hidden deep within Lake Victoria, hard to find, harder to keep.”hera tek tweta.” So, I search. From the shores of Usenge to the busy aswekra market in Kendu Bay, I walk, I watch, I hope. Faces pass by, some kind, some indifferent, but none answer the silent question that sits in my heart. The days stretch long, and the nights longer still.

At night, I sit under the strange sky, tracing the patterns of stars scattered above. Their soft, silvery light reminds me of the cowrie shells my grandmother, Min Ombewa used to wear, clinking softly as she told us stories of long-lost love. The stars seem to mock me now, offering no guidance, only their cold brilliance. My body grows weary, but my heart refuses to give up.

I look to the clouds that drift lazily over Got Asego. Their rough shapes hold no answers, only shifting shadows that point to nowhere. There’s a pull within me, though, urging me toward the quiet Homa Hills in the distance. When I finally arrive, I find nothing but empty spaces, my footsteps speaking in the silence. Even the wind feels indifferent.

I wander farther, beyond the lands I know. I cross into places where the language stumbles on my tongue and the songs of the people feel strange. Still, I go on, driven by the stubborn hope that the next turn, the next road, will lead me to what I seek. But each step feels heavier, each path more uncertain, until I find myself completely lost.

At the market, the women shake their heads as I pass. “hera tek,” they say with laughter, their voices laced with pity. Love is hard, they remind me, and harder still for those who chase it blindly. Their words sting, but they don’t stop me. Despite everything, a quiet ember of hope burns within me, refusing to die.

One evening, as the sun dips low over Lake Simbi Nyaima, I sit on its shore. The stillness of the place feels different, comforting even. The water is calm, reflecting the fiery colors of the sunset like a mirror. For the first time in what feels like forever, I let myself pause. The sound of the lake, the warmth of the fading sun, and the stillness around me all seem to urge me to look inward.

It’s there, in that moment of quiet, that I begin to understand. Perhaps love isn’t a treasure to be found but a truth to be uncovered. Maybe it doesn’t live in the stars, the hills, or even in another person. It begins here, within me. My heart, though tired and bruised, isn’t done searching, it just needs to start looking in a new way.

As I rise to leave, a strange calm settles over me. The journey isn’t over, but it feels less like a race and more like a path I’m meant to walk. I think of my grandmother’s words, her voice steady and wise, “hera en kama rach, kendo en kama ber.” Love is both a good and a bad thing at the same time.


The scent of “kuon bel”and fresh tilapia greets me as I walk back home, the familiar sound of children playing ajuala filling the air. I smile to myself. Maybe love isn’t just in the finding, it’s in the moments along the way, in the laughter of family, the warmth of community, and the quiet lessons life teaches.

As the stars come out once more, I glance up at them, no longer searching. For now, I am content to walk this journey, guided by hope and the gentle rhythm of a heart that still believes.

@okelododdychitchats

Fading Notes of The Heart

For the first time in my once-bright life, 
I feel love slip away, 
draining quietly from a heart 
that once brimmed with warmth and fire. 

Because of her,
passion now feels like a distant memory, 
her eyes, once alive like sapphire stars, 
now hold no light for me. 
The smile that once lifted my world 
has faded into something I barely remember. 

I knew love once, 
I felt it in her touch, 
in the way she made life seem full of wonder. 
But now, that wonder feels hollow, 
a shadow of something I can no longer reach. 

The beauty I once saw everywhere 
seems to have vanished. 
Dreams feel brittle; 
hope feels like a foolish story I once believed. 

Her absence is a quiet void, 
and love, once a tender, living thing, 
is now just a ghost 
I can’t hold on to. 

And so I go on, 
not with the joy I once knew, 
but with a quiet acceptance 
that the song of my heart 
will now play softly, 
alone. 

@okelododdychitchats