Browsing: Written Word(Story Poetry)

I asked the questions I feared the most:
What if I’m tired?
What if I’m lost?
What if this anger is really grief?
What if this silence is begging belief?

When you speak about your journey while you are still broken, you are safe. But when you begin to heal, build, and rise, your story becomes a reminder of what others are avoiding in themselves. And not everyone is ready to face that.
Your success can feel like an accusation to someone who has chosen comfort over courage.

Often, people project their reality because it feels safer than facing the possibility that they could have chosen differently. If your dream works, it forces them to confront their own untried courage. If you succeed where they failed, it challenges the comfort of their explanations.

Kenya argues loudly. It litigates fiercely. It debates endlessly. It protests visibly.
Its elections are messy — but they are contested in courtrooms and scrutinized in public.
The democratic muscle here has been exercised too often to dwindle quietly.

Political parties frequently lack strong ideological foundations. Many coalitions are formed around personalities rather than policy platforms. Politicians shift parties before elections with minimal ideological explanation.

Human behavior spreads the way moods do. Spend time with anxious people, and you may notice your shoulders tightening. Spend time with hopeful people, and suddenly tomorrow doesn’t feel so heavy. This isn’t weakness—it’s wiring. We are social beings designed to adapt.

Kenya has a documented history of police excesses raised by human rights organizations, civil society groups, and international observers. Each time an investigation is completed and forwarded for prosecution, it becomes a test of whether accountability is real or rhetorical.

Some relationships live best in silence—not because they are weak, but because they are unfinished, undefined, or too honest to be reduced to labels. You think about them while washing dishes, while staring out of windows, while pretending to listen to conversations that no longer hold your attention.

But here’s the truth: most people learn the hard way that emotions don’t disappear just because we ignore them. They settle into the body. They leak into relationships. They show up as irritability, exhaustion, anxiety, or a quiet sense of emptiness we can’t quite explain.

Health reform is not merely technical. It is moral.

The success or failure of SHA will not be determined by press conferences or political slogans. It will be determined by whether Kenyans experience dignity, transparency, and reliability in their healthcare.

And in that measure, governance — not rhetoric — will be the final judge.

Kenya’s youth deserve strategic, sustainable empowerment — not conditionality by debt, political signalling, or uncertainty about whether the next administration will change the rules.

And as citizens — young and old — understanding the real nature of these funds strengthens our collective power to ask better questions, demand better outcomes, and build systems that uplift all.

Some critics argue that regulatory decisions — especially withholding carbon authorisations — may benefit players more adept at navigating opaque processes or informal influence networks. There is public speculation about opaque connections among regulators, policymakers, and other energy-sector actors — though definitive proof is not available in public sources.

No matter the truth, perception matters — and perceptions of favoritism erode investor confidence and public trust.