Tell me one more time
That it'll be okay
Tell me one more that
That the my darkest hour comes before dawn,
Tell me one more time
That you believe in me
Tell me one more time
That i can make it
Tell me one more time
by Diana Rop
Thursday, 27 December 2018
I Carry A Poet's Burden
There was a morning, a Saturday morning
When the words echoed in my head
Exhorting me to rise and write them
That my heart beat for you
I was the titanic, setting sail
To you, the alluring iceberg
And our collision,
Oh! How beautiful a ruin
The simple thought of us
Wrecked every nerve in me
Sinking, I’d sink in a bliss
As unsure as tomorrow
I wanted to light the stars
The stars in your eyes
‘cause you lit the ones in mine
How much I wanted to
It turns out, sadly
There were things, certain obscure things
That you only felt in your thoughts
Among those things – love
Now I carry the burden of a poet
Expressing other’s feelings
Put my heart on the shelf
and, once in a while, read it like a book,
for the words inside it amount to a thousand pages
of feelings that died like untended fire
all I have is the ashes of a dream
how easily they slip through my fingers
just like you did, and I allowed
now I shoulder a burden,
a poet’s burden
Monday, 17 December 2018
Niruhusu Nikuite Baraddhuli
Kama kuku kwao mtama, chambo chako kikanasa,
Na kwa mkunjufu mtima, ‘kamchagua mkongwe hasa,
Matumaini yazama, vijana kwenye anasa
‘Kiniruhusu raisi, ‘takuita baradhuli
Kwa mapana na marefu, ukamteua Awori,
Nchi yetu tukufu, ‘mebaki la wenye gari,
Wakupa sifa sufufu, mwenye njaa ale mori,
‘Kiniruhusu raisi, ‘takuita baradhuli
Ulisimama jukwaani, ukanena wazi wazi,
Kama kundule kwa nyani, azma ya kijana wizi
Wamo wenye mvi vichwani, ila linavuja zizi
‘Kiniruhusu raisi, ‘takuita baradhuli
Sunday, 4 November 2018
Andy Is Crazy Because of Love
Andy is crazy. People say it is because of love. Because he hasn't had a chance to confirm or dismiss the rumours, people believe it's true.
There are not so many things Andy did when he was young that
were those of a model child. He was truant, a thief, and generally someone who
had grown immune to parental thumping. At school he wasn’t good at it either.
Dropping out of class three, as was suddenly fashionable when one was circumcised,
he disappeared from the village for close to a decade.
When he emerged, he was totting a digital camera, taking
pictures of villagers who still found it attractive to have themselves printed
in paper. One time I accompanied him in
his rounds of delivering the posed moments, frozen in time. We criss-crossed
villages, and thankfully were successful in not being bitten by dogs. Other
than that, people begged Andy to come another time. We crowned that day with a
cup of chang’aa. He had money, a class three dropout, and I a university
student, broke as broke can be.
On the way back, he told me stories which entailed who had
HIV/Aids in the village. They were all people who we had made acquaintance in
my brief stay at the local primary school. He named names, including that of a
girl I had my eyes on. We later briefly dated, although we never met. She accepted
my advances and left for Mombasa. He told me how Kale men are like currency
especially among other tribes. He told about a Kamba chic whom he had managed
to impregnate. She has my twins, he had said boastfully.
I would later spot one of the guys who he said was carrying
the disease. His face had grown bony, and his hair had adopted a particularly
pale and grayish color. His eyes must have began retreating back to its
sockets, probably having seen enough already. With all the modesty I can
summon, he was carrying death within himself. But then he was with a light skin
girl, barely thirteen or fourteen. Being good with faces, I later saw the girl
and almost warned her.
Andy left for Nairobi, hitchhiking my father’s car. We had
exchanged numbers and promised to look for each other when I got there. I was
not in hurry to get to Nairobi. It was pointless to go to campus during the
official opening date. You spent a few days doing productive things such as
looking after livestock until your classmates tell that they have been given a
CAT. Then you would board a plane. And so a month later, I left for Nairobi. We
never met with Andy, although he tried reaching me.
Fast forward, I cleared university, went to the village
briefly and came back. There was no sign of Andy although I could see that he
had erected a house. Nobody told me it belonged to him, it was just a hunch. He would be in the village when I wasn’t, and
I when he wasn’t. This should not be misconstrued that we had any important
business. We were just playmates who life had caught up with them.
On that fateful day, I spotted my dad’s car in the compound.
I was surprised considering that it was a Wednesday. He always came only on
weekends, but then he always showed up when the sun had, observing the ancient
ritual passed down by our forefathers. But then the sun was still up. Okay, it
had set behind the hills that dotted the horizon, although it had not gone with
its light. I did not give much thought to it. I may even have dismissed it with
a remark such as ‘some rituals are bound to be broken, especially on
Wednesdays.’
In every village, there are people who are always on top of
things. They detect unusual activity, even in the wee hours of the night. You
will be surprised by statements such ‘naskia unataka kuoa’ yet you could swear
by god and sonny Jesus that you have never been seen with a girl, at least in
broad daylight. In fact many girls get pregnant without ever having been seen
with a man. Holy Spirit, you may say. But these people are in touch with these
spirits. Just as Andy’s unusual presence, chauffeured all the way from the city
of thugs, by my father, who would have had important things left to commune
with office dust for a days.
“He was bringing Andy. He is mad,” my source told. “It seems
malaria has climbed to the head,” he had added.
Later, he would tell me his story. Andy had a wife back in
the village. She used to bicker with her mother-in-law a lot especially when Andy
preferred to deal with his mother when it came to finance. When the bickering
escalated, Andy took his wife back to Nairobi, and then came to the village to
finalise a few secret things.
As people are prone to diseases, his wife called him that
she had fallen sick, and had decided to recuperate among her people. I was not
told whether he was aware about the fact that she had already gone to her
people or not. My source informed me that he sold his motor bike and left to be
with the wife. It was there that he parted with a bill of seventy thousand. Broke,
he had sent an SOS back to the village that he was stranded in a strange land.
Then Andy came and did odd jobs here and there, perhaps to
raise money to take him to Nairobi. His hunting ground, where he knew the paths
of large edible animals, and also where the avoid serpents and other dangerous creatures,
like political hit men. Then he went t Nairobi and can back, chauffeured by a Good
Samaritan, and his mind was never the same.
He had gone crazy.
Since the village can never lack an explanation to anything,
they said his wife made away with all his earthly possessions. She stripped the
house of anything that had a value above fermented cow mucus. He now loiters in
the village, finding himself in people’s beds, and sometimes talking about
wanting his wife. hehe
Friday, 19 October 2018
A Day in a Dog's Life
A dog used to roam in my father’s compound (it’s his
compound because I am past that age of recklessly using the word ‘our’). The
dog had a name. Sura Mbaya. I will not dwell on how it got the name, because,
just every dead human being, I am obliged to speak glowingly about it. Sura
Mbaya did not act like a typical dog. To it, every stranger was a familiar, or
he was just looking for someone familiar. People that roam in my father’s
compound weren’t actually it first master. The first master went to jail for
stealing cows. May be that’s why it looks for him in every stranger, only
barking briefly before it remembers that it may be chasing its master and
begins wagging its tail, as if to say in dog language, ‘I was only kidding.’or
it may have been thinking that each stranger would give him a better name, or
petition its change.
Well, Sura Mbaya was only good at three things- eating,
shitting, and propagating its seeds. How did I know about the last one? It
would disappear for days on end, and come back with bruises all over its body, but
with a contented look in its eyes. From my experience, the dog world is a tough
jungle because the bitches do not know anything about money. Instead, it’s
about who has the strongest teeth, a menacing growl, and most importantly
resilience. When the bitches emit the odour that tells other dogs that it’s
that time of the year, a million dogs pick the oduor and follow it like that star
that led them to where Jesus was born, only it leads them to where a million
dogs, and one female have congregated for a night of brutal fights.
The lucky dogs, those which had had less fights during the
day because their owners care about their conjugal rights, got their chances, quickly
made out in their usual style that the dogs have been using for years, so much
that human beings have aped it. I envy these dogs, except the brutality
involved. There’s no one to tell them how it has to be done, because their
females are yet to wear trousers and demand that dogs too have to take care of
the cubs. But even when dogs attain that level of civilization, dogs will be
dogs. Dogs will do their things and forget about it, and wait for the next time
the female emits that oduor.
But woe unto us humans, we have to woo. I am not against the
wooing, it’s the best part of living. What I am completely against are these
human beings who want to tell how to do it. Experts. No, sexperts. Ever since
the invention of the best thing after fire-the internet-you cannot rummage
through the anonymous yet savage corridors of social media without stumbling
upon headlines that explain how bedroom conquests should be done. Like, over
time, we’ve grown progressively stupid in that department, so much that they
owe our ancestors the need to re-educate us.
Friday, 12 October 2018
Errands In The Concrete Jungle
A giraffe with the Nairobi skyline in the background [Source/andBeyond] |
You have lived a part of your life wallowing in the luxury
of aloofness, cramming shit that wouldn’t even be a bargaining chip to use ‘toilet za kanjo’ for free. You cannot
walk to that public toilet, umebanwa choo,
and begin telling the mean faced attendant (by the way what does he talk about
when people are discussing serious issues?) that you know about mitochondria,
or, to descend to his level, that you know about salmonella typhi and vibrio
cholerae. As far as he is concerned, you can shit on yourself with that gargantuan
pile of knowledge. On the bright side, the cramming brought us to Nairobi,
where we realized that those yoyos
that made high school miserable came from high-rise slums-Pipeline and Umoja.
And so we came to the city. Over time, the grim and harsh
realities of this god-forsaken concrete jungle has replaced the very knowledge
we thought was a ticket to that Ferrari or Lamborghini with a huge void that’s
very receptive of savage thoughts and ideas. For example you could be walking
along Lang’ata road, and you suddenly see people milling around and peering
into a ditch full of black sludge, and the mind receives the following signal;
THERE COULD BE AN ABORTED FOETUS HERE. Or you could just be hawking your
credentials in brown envelope then suddenly your eyes catch a glimpse of a man
sprawled on the hot tarmac, still as if he can never vote again, and your brain
picks the following signal: YOU MAY BE STARING AT A DEAD MAN. People could be
fighting, and instead your mind waits for replays and slow motion, and blood
spurting out of the fighters’ mouths.
On one occasion, I am walking home in the evening with the
heavy burden of expectation weighing on my shoulders. I had prepared my body
well in advance that the last time it took cheap vodka may as well been the
very last one. May be I told it in a whisper, ‘baby, from now henceforth we
will be drinking whisky, and sometimes beer. We will not frequent those dinghy
pubs along Mfangano Lane.’ May be my body, using the correct apparatus, smiled
in the same way a poet would liken it to the sun on a cloudy day. It turns out
that without blue blood coursing through your veins, you may endlessly chaining
yourself to the yoke of mtu wetu,
renewing it after every five years. The only achievement you’d see that evening
would be an accident. And the void begins engaging its savage receptors,
roaring them to life like those cog wheels that mark the beginning of every
Lionsgate movie.
It turns out that three Japanese cars decided to test their
structural strength, catalysed of course by gross human incompetence. There
were a pile of cars behind. Two potbellied policemen walked around without a
hurry in the world, as if waiting for some instructions from above. Probably
because there was a sparkling brand new V8. Accidents, just like all accidents
are often a terrible inconvenience especially to pedestrians who planned on
walking home without any interruptions along the way. As one of those
pedestrians, I walked looking at the gloomy faces of the people who went to
check out what had happened. There was disappointment, too, because there was
no blood and no one was writhing in pain. Juts a slay queen in one of the cars
fiddling with her phone trying to contact one of her sponsors to come and
rescue her.
One of the guys involved in the accident drove a Toyota
fielder. He was a middle age man, dressed and built just the way a taxi driver
would be. I have never boarded a taxi but I have surely seen them hovering
around taxi parking areas, talking animatedly like it is their sole job. The
middle aged man was talking too, volunteering information to anyone who looked
like they were about to ask what was happening. As part of my journalist
training, I applied the principle of non-interference, leaned to grasp a few
things he was saying then left surreptitiously as if I were some sort of wind. However,
I gathered that the problem was solely on the slay queen, who had the letter L
pasted in front and the back of her car.
“You see, she’s even a learner,” taxi driver said and
everyone agreed with him. His car had born the greatest damage, having had to
mount that barrier in the middle of the road. It decimated a few of those knee
length plastic poles filled with concrete, crossed to the other side, the
supposed Canaan, with a flat tire, patiently waiting for a handshake.
It is served to reinforce one prejudice about slay queens
that I had held for some time; the only psychomotor skills the possessed were
lifting one leg slightly up in strict adherence to standard photo taking
procedures, which, if not obeyed, can lead to death. Whatever it is, do not put
an L in your car. You can get knocked by a drunk driver and it will be
attributed to your learner status.
Wednesday, 10 October 2018
The Phone Peeper
As a mature adult who gladly files nil returns every June, I
take seriously my legal responsibility of peeking into people’s phones in
matatus. It gives me a chance to make insightful remarks about strangers we
happen to be travelling together, just in case we are asked to form groups on
an impromptu trip to heaven.
For a long time, the arduous responsibility had been a
dreary one, where the only things I managed to see were people chatting on
whatsapp, or playing some really stupid game such as candy crush. That was
nothing to report about, not until the other day.
It was a Friday, at noon, when I calmly locked the door to
my house, walked a few metres and went back to check if I had really locked it.
Satisfied that I had actually locked, proceeded (still calmly) to the stage. An
excessively pimped up manyanga stopped and the conductor spread all his fingers
to indicate the fare to town. Using the capture and recapture method, I concluded
that it was the right amount.
I boarded it and scanned studiously, with passenger’s eyes encouraging
this arduous intellectual endevour, whereupon I selected a seat at the back for
one great aesthetic purpose – it was the only seat. As if it was fitted with thousands
of tiny invisible thorns, I carefully laid my Kalenjin ass on the green seat.
The seat could afford me a 360 degree view of the
passengers, and my attention was drawn to a fine lass seated in front of me. She
had these bright red acrylic nails. I watched her dive these nails into what I considered
a dangerous territory and fished out her phone.
The phone had a cover with bunny ears at the corners.
The lady with red acrylic nails pressed the power button and
then proceeded to draw a pattern as complex as nuclear physics. From my
experience, her phone was more secure than our IFMIS systems. She couldn’t draw
the correct pattern on the first try. Neither the second.
On the third try, she managed to bypass he security feature,
then entered a pin as long as River Nile so that she could open her whatsapp. At
that point I was wondering the kind of job this lady did. One way or another it
involved her phone. There’s no way in hell you can put such stringent security
measures on your phone if you just used to receive calls, send texts, and occasionally
updated you IG account.
A while later she switched to the gallery, browsed through a
couple of photos. She stopped at some, studied them in the same way you would
study a mathematical problem that involved numbers and letters either on top or
below each other, went to another or deleted them.
Then bingo, the photo that I had all along been waiting to
see on someone’s phone. It was the photo one of the greatest news quality as
taught in schools; unusualness. There, standing at attention, was a cartoon
drawing of someone’s mjulubeng, and a lady on her knees eyeing the promulgation
weapon with the keenness of a surgeon. The lady looked at it and a wry smile
registered on her heavily made up face. I can’t guess what was on her mind, but
it must have had something to do with Chinese debt.
Happy about this unusual sighting, I concentrated on the
music playing on decibels that suggested that all passengers were partially
deaf. It was great music that awakened nostalgic feelings. Some really nice old
school music that introduced our teenageness to the idea of love – pure and
undefiled. I personally was yearning to go back to those days when I could just
sleep without ingesting some mind altering substances into my body.
The effects of the music was quite profound as nobody wanted
to alight from the matatu when it got stuck in that jam at Ngara. Everyone was quietly
seated, engaged in their own teenage thoughts and perhaps wondering where the
rain started beating them. As far as I was concerned, life can’t get any cruel.
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