Tuesday, 9 December 2025

DEAR PARENT, TATTOO ON YOUR CHILD? NO JOB FOR THEM

 

The ongoing KDF recruitment has been a wake-up call for me, both as a parent and an educator. About 1,500 recruits were sent home after failing drug tests. Let that sink in. 1,500Just last month, two friends and I were celebrating because our kids had been shortlisted for Cadet professional courses. 

We decided to do pre-screening early to avoid surprises.

Good decision.

A trip to the Coast revealed a tattoo on my daughter.

Luckily, I knew KDF bans tattoos, so we had it removed. One of my friends wasn’t so lucky—he only discovered his son’s tattoo this week. The boy was turned back on Tuesday. Dream shattered.

The other friend’s daughter failed the drug test. She has never smoked, injected or sniffed anything. But in law school she casually ate those “brown weed cookies” at parties. That was enough.

This generation is swimming in weed culture. Back then, “kukunywa bangi” was an abomination.

Today? It’s normal. Even fashionable.

Two friends recently found rolls of weed in their daughters’ bags. These are bright, lovely girls. Sweet kids. But the world they live in is different—and very unforgiving. Parents, let’s stop living in denial. We need honest conversations, early guidance, and real vigilance. Teachers, start career talks WAY earlier—before peer pressure, parties, tattoos and piercings close doors like KDF, NYS, law enforcement, aviation, and more.

As for my girl, a medical issue (not drug-related) made us step aside from this year’s intake.

Bottom line:

Parenting today requires sharper eyes, open conversations, and early intervention.

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Tuesday, 4 November 2025

Burial sermons in big 2025

Hello 👋 Mr preacher, sermons during burials in Africa in this big 2025? Please let's evolve. 


My thoughts on sermons during burials in Africa. This has got nothing to do with wokeness. 


Photo courtesy - Wikipedia 

The preaching /sermon session  during burials in Africa is a very unnecessary endeavor. It's ridiculous at this point imo. That's one practice that the next generation should discard completely in let's say 50 years or so. It beats my common logic the importance of it coz if I want to know more about Jesus I'll go to a church and not a burial. It actually feels like a chore . Is it designed on purpose to break the monotony of that current somber mood? What's the intention of that session? What is it designed to achieve? If the deceased was a staunch Christian the business of the presiding preacher should end at prayers only. Am tempted to assume that specific sermon is meant to gaslight/manipulate/instill fear to those left behind to see if they'll give their lives to jesus. Does that gospel still work? That one of frightening/threatening people with hell fire 🔥 and suffering for eternity? Like kambas and kikuyus casually put it "mwaki wa tene na tene"! Also eulogies in big 2025? Com'n fellow African . A small quiet send off attended by close relatives and friends only should be the norm. But no let's hold the biggest most expensive burial in this side of Sahara, with pomp and mbwembwe. Let's do an online fundraising to feed hundreds of multitudes. you'd even be surprised we are now in a competition of which family outdid the rest in giving their departed one the most dignified send off of all time. And what shocks me about this African culture that's basically deluded with hypocrisy is how we are neglecting our very own during their last days on this universe, forgetting them in their hour of dire need in totality only to show up immediately they pass away when they nolonger need us. A relative will be down with a chronic terminal illness, they will need palliative care and attention but we will be so unavailable because we are busy with our daily hustle and bustle, grinding hard every single day with no time to spare in town but we will magically find time and resources to spare when they're long dead. What for? Those employers that can't give you an off day to rush and see your loved ones where do they get the audacity to release you when that person is dead? Does it come off as if we are valuing the death more than the life? That business that we can't close when they are sick, that money we don't have when they are chronically ill where do we magically get it from to traverse miles, cross rivers and bridges to go bury them? Ai man Africa is one glorified ghetto immersed in hypocrisy and mediocrity.  Can we stop doing that please 🙏. Can we develop a culture of showing up to people when they need us please. They need us when they are alive. They need  us when they can see and feel the love we profess to them when they're silent in those coffins.  Let's show our loved ones that strong love and affection when they are breathing. Coz the minute they breath their last they nolonger care, they nolonger need it. Let's give them those fancy fantastic rose flowers when they can still smell them and smile at us with appreciation. 

Lastly please, let's avoid lying during that eulogy session. We are living badly with people. We have total disregard of people while they are still breathing and kicking. You can't see eye to eye with your brother or sister or neighbor but you want to lie to us during their burial that you loved each other and you lived well with them? I'm sure even Satan herself doesn't appreciate that. Do good, Change or perish. 

Na pastors wanalipwa kuzika mtu these days . shuwaly maina ni udinyi upi huo? 

Ai man just blow the Damn trumpet atp. The rupture is long overdue.

Saturday, 20 September 2025

Whats the purpose of life to a man?

 You get to a point in adulthood when you have so much in your mind, your heart is heavy, and you really want to open up to someone, then you look around and realise there is no one to talk to. 


It is intimate stuff that is eating you up. Gobbling you up like an aggressive cancer. You need a confidant. You need a comforter. A mentor. A spiritual advisor. Someone who can make you see life from a different dimension, or at least introduce new perspectives or lenses to view life with.  

Typically such person could be a parent, an uncle or aunt(senje, in that traditional affectionate sense). It could be that wise friend who seems to have figured out life.  

Then one day in your adulthood, your parents are gone. The uncle or the aunt who could pump some hope into your life is gone. And you have drifted apart from your friend, or he or she is dead. Another worse situation is when they exist but now your existential problems are misaligned with whatever advice they may offer you. Say, you want to divorce an abusive spouse but your trusted parent or uncle/aunt only believes in kuvumilia. You don't exactly hate or despise their advice. If anything you see their point, but their adamant stance is completely anti-thetical to your angst. You need different gears and levers to move your life forward. 

This particular problem can smack you any time after 25, but it gets objectively worse as you age. And then, later in your 30s, the problems become deeply personal. Every man or woman you open up to, is either battling their own demons, or is ill-equipped to offer you the padded shoulder to lean on in such times. 

As an adult you will battle a lot of problem. Some could be frivolous, some serious, and some life-threatening. From infertility problems under the probing eyes of relatives and friends, to a diabetic man with other attendant problems causing all manner of problems in his marriage, to unemployment, unrealised and unfulfilled dreams, unmet expectations, disappointments, relationships that didn't work, jobs that didn't deliver the high hopes they promised, can only ruin a person. 

But there are higher spiritual problems that we battle with. The question of identity. Who are we? What are we doing here?  Is there a point to life? After all this suffering, we die. Just like that. Gone and forgotten. 

The internal battles, away from those problems that can be fixed(e.g, if broke, we can fix that if you get a job or money), have a way of isolating us. Hence the friend who stops picking calls. The friend who disappears under the radar. The poor choices like alcoholism or drug abuse, as an escape from the harsh reality of life. 

The worst poverty is to be in a place where you have no one to confide to your worst fears, whatever their nature. 

Hence later in life, you will learn a certain sad fact about a friend that will break your heart. "You mean he was going through all that and we didn't know? Poor thing..." 

People say when something tragic happens to a friend and with hindsight you start to think it was completely avoidable. It wasn't. We only confide things to people when we feel safe. 

That is why kujitia kitanzi is something that I understand. Someone who does that means whatever that that was troubling them, in their assessment, no human being was capable of understanding their pain. People could trivialise the pain, laugh at it, or fail to understand the enormity of the problem. As human beings we are very poor at assessing people and what they are going through.  

I don't know if I am making sense.

 But I know many adults have so many battles inside them, some they will win with time and creative adjustments to their situation. But some, may take time and unfortunately the pain may never be resolved.  Resentment is permanent human condition, and mastering how to handle it is not an easy thing. 

To understand the loneliness of internal battles, allow me to use the example of Jesus. Remember when he went to Gethsmane to pray. I often think about his last days before being crucified. He took three disciples with him to pray. When he moved away from them to pray, asking God to take the cup from him, he asked the disciples(John, James and Peter) to pray so as not to fall into temptations. Two times he came back to find them asleep. Later that night, Peter even denied him, and Judas did betray him eventually.  

Sometimes you can tell your friends what you are going through and they can laugh at you, deny you, or betray you and now that we live in the tea culture, you become the hot tea.  Motivational speakers will tell you to be there for yourself. But what if the self is scared, afraid and inadequate? 

We used to seek refuge in family, but family in some cases the source of the pain you are going through. A believer can turn to God. What A Friend We Have in Jesus? the old beautiful hymn asks, and answers more profoundly what a friendship with Jesus means. 

But what does a non-believer do when walking through that Valley of Darkness?  By and large, we get by, human beings are surprisingly resilient. What we never talk about is the mental scars we accumulate as we age. From the heartbreaks, the betrayal of friends, the unmet expectations, unfulfilled dreams, the realisation that there isn't so much to life, unless you assign meaning to it, and the many things beyond our control that are thrown at us. But finding a comforter, a confidant, a trusted friend, is truly one of the most blessed gifts life can grant you. Not all of us can be stoics( though I encourage it).  Count yourself lucky if you do become a stoic. Count yourself lucky if you escape crippling internal battles.  


Written by Silas Nyanchwani. 

X @nywanchani. 

A seasoned author and publisher.