Yogis

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I don’t need to reintroduce Nduta, do I? Neither do I need to rehash Dar’. Or how twisted you guys are here. The response, even surprised her. But she feels that the story may have cast her as a one dimensional kind of chick. Which she insists she isn’t. She was a girl who had been chaste for 300 days and jumped at an opportunity that presented itself. Very few of you know what that feels like. (The 300 day chaste thing, not the other thing).

So she said she would write something that doesn’t involve her kneeling (cough) and hopefully exorcise the demons of Tanzania. So she wrote about what anyone else would write about; yoga.

By Nduta

You can always tell who’s new at yoga by how they breathe. Regulars at yoga class take deep, regular breaths through the nose. Even when doing one of those crazy poses like side crow, where you are basically carrying your entire body weight on your wrists, they never gasp, and they never, ever pant.

I love to watch these newbies, especially the men who have some gym experience, but have so obviously came to yoga just to check out women in yoga pants. Yoga pants, by the way, are a necessary part of the practice – you have to wear something that is fitting enough that it doesn’t get in the way as you are twisting & contorting away. These guys strut in, chests puffed out and looking everyone in the eye (regular yogis hardly look anyone in the eye during practice; yoga is such a private, meditative thing that it almost seems intrusive). They stride in wearing those noisy track suits, chuckling as they take off their shoes and socks, because, seriously, what kind of sissy exercise routine is this where you have to be barefoot? I mean, really?

So they take off their triple padded sneakers and the class begins with child’s pose – you kneel on the mat, knees far apart, then you sit on your heels with your arms stretched out in front of you – and even with my eyes closed, I can feel them grinning away at all the behinds now in the air.

But shortly, the stupid grins disappear & the huffing and puffing begins as we get deeper into the practice. The grins turn into grimaces as we step on our palms with our heads on our knees in gorilla pose (these names!), hardly any of them can touch their toes, let alone step on their palms. And by the time we are doing wheel pose, they have basically collapsing into a huffing puffing heap.

I don’t blame them though – yoga is tough for men for anatomical reasons. Men have narrower hips and less flexible joints than women, and that makes it difficult for them to make their bodies fold upon themselves. Proportionally, men get injured more often than women during yoga, and suffer damage that is far worse, including fractures, dislocations and shattered backs – especially if you are a macho guy trying to force yourself into a challenging pose just to prove a point.

It doesn’t help that yoga is done in a quiet room, with soft music piping at volume level 2. The kind of music played depends on the instructor – there’s one guy who likes playing some instrumental clarinet or flute music; there’s another lady who plays empowering stuff like Alicia Keys’ Superwoman, and there’s another one who goes the full shebang and plays Hare Krishna chants. It’s easy to underestimate an exercise routine that is done with flute music at volume level 2, especially if you’re from the world of gym/aerobics where the standard is that infernal techno electronic dance music at full blast.

The newbies who do well are the ones who are newly single. I can tell from the fire in their eyes’ the determination to prove to themselves, and the world, that they are still here. If you take the concentration, passion and intensity they exude, and bottle it, Kenya would attain middle-income status way before 2020.

There’s one woman at yoga I really admire. First of all, yoga in Nairobi is generally a mzungu thing, with a few Asians here and there, even though it originates in India. A friend of mine likes to rant against the “cultural appropriation”, and though I hear where she’s coming from, I don’t agree – culture is really all about borrowing and sharing ideas. Imagine if the Hittites of Anatolia – my history books, if I remember, said they were the first to smelt and work iron – started calling in their iron tools, because, yo, it’s a Hittite thing. Where would that leave us all?

Anyway, this mzungu lady is built like a real African woman, with a narrow waist and heavy hips. She’s not thin, but is clearly the most advanced in the class, with incredible upper body strength that supports her entire body weight seemingly effortlessly. These days, I can almost do what she does, when I summon strength from the deepest part of my soul.

Still, there’s a part of me that feels like an impostor. Growing up, I was always the fattest kid my class. OK, second-fattest, there’s one girl who had these rolls around her belly like I did. During P.E., if she was absent from school, you can be sure that I would come last in running. I even empathize with those huffs and puffs coming from the back of the room, considering that pretty much described every single P.E. class of my life.

But I didn’t dwell on it too much as a kid, for two reasons. One, my mum always told us how beautiful and healthy I was – I believed “healthy” was a compliment, which, coming from my mum, it was. But the other reason is that I was always top in class. When you are number one in every single subject, you can brush off the P.E. thing.

The weight fell off inexplicably when I had my first baby, and after the second one, I lost even more weight. I don’t like talking about this because I really don’t know how it happened, and when I say that, most women think I’m lying and just flossing. But it’s true, I’m 10 kgs lighter than before I had kids, and I don’t know why. It troubles me because I didn’t learn anything, so in the future, if I need to lose weight, I don’t have any lessons to draw from.

I started doing yoga about nine months ago, and soon after, that famous song on yoga that gets radio play a million times a day was released. So that brought a lot of curious faces to the yoga studio – but nearly all of them never came back after one or two classes. Especially the men.

So I started doing yoga not to lose weight, but because I had trouble sleeping. Physically, I’d be tired, but my mind would refuse to shut down, whirling and whirling around endlessly. Maybe it had something to do with the fact that just a few months earlier, I had been gasping for a different reason – my partner of four years, with whom I had two children, strangled me within an inch of my life. As his fingers crushed my throat, our son, six months old at the time, woke up and rolled over in his crib, to see his mother suffocating under his father’s hands. My son didn’t cry, didn’t make a sound. He just lay there wide-eyed and silent, and for months after, I couldn’t get his face out of my mind as I tried to go to sleep.

So yoga helped. It made my body tired, but crucially, there’s a point at the end of a yoga class where you focus your mind, and bring it under your control, without dwelling on any particular thought. Think of water flowing over a surface, but the surface actually doesn’t get wet. The room is utterly quiet, except for the Hare Krishna chant.

Some people have a problem lying on their back in a quiet room with a Hare Krishna chant playing in the background. I understand why, especially if you happen to be familiar with the idea of “backmasking”. If you’ve never heard of backmasking, you probably have never played a cassette tape, and your music memories start with CDs, or (the horror!) an MP3 player or iPod.

Anyway, backmasking is when a sound or message is recorded backward onto a track that is meant to be played forward. It is usually associated with Satanism and DMX for some reason, but although everyone said you could hear devil messages when you played the tapes backward, I’ve never met anyone who could actually play anything backward. (You were supposed to press Play, Rewind and Record simultaneously to hear the backmasked message, but I don’t know anyone whose cassette player could actually do that).

So there are those who think it’s kind of spooky to listen to chants, in case there’s some subliminal programming going on. I don’t, I dumped the whole idea of backmasking with a bunch of other beliefs I had grown up with.

Most of my unravelling came at university. When I was 21, in third year, I had a boyfriend who was an incredible preacher. He was the kind of preacher who would begin a sermon with a quiet intensity that would build and build, until it reached its crescendo and people would come trembling to the altar.

After service, we would walk back to his room in that post-service afterglow. But there’s an emotional vulnerability that comes with that kind of intensity, I think, so after church he would always want us to kiss or caress each other, and I would, because it felt good (but not going the whole way, because we were saving ourselves for marriage).

So one afternoon, after showing me what a 69 was, he said we should pray and repent from our sins. I knelt, and he prayed that God would help me be stronger to say no to him. What surprised me was his sincerity – really, he genuinely believed that our purity was my responsibility. That struck me as terribly unfair – why was I always the one expected to say no? What if I wanted to say yes? In those circles, there’s something that sexualises women all the time – you must watch how you dress, how you sit, how you sway your hips, in case you are leading someone astray. But when a woman goes ahead and acts sexual, then it became huge uproar, since the burden of chastity is all yours to bear. So that’s the reason why I don’t feel responsible for someone else’s purity.

So going back to the silence at the end of the yoga class, as I lie there on the yoga mat, I realise that there’s some inconsistency in my beliefs. It seems fuzzy and New-Age ish, the kind of stuff on Oprah – the stuff about being one with your consciousness and so on. My yoga instructors don’t go the whole way into the chants and meditation because that scares people away. But yoga is all about conquering the body, though conquering the mind. If you can make your body a slave to your mind, then you begin being more aware of yourself. Inevitably, you become more aware of others around you, and the consequences that your actions have on them. No wonder every session we end the class by saying, “May the light in me shine the light in you, and the light in you, shine the light within me.” You can’t say this 3-4 times a week without starting to actually think about it.

Still, even as the class comes to an end, I realise that there’s one thing in yoga that men have an advantage in. Remember when I said you’re supposed to lie there and not think of anything in particular? Now that I’ve tried it, I think men really mean it when you ask them what they are thinking about, and they say, “Nothing.”

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185 Comments
  1. Weee Biko don’t let too many peeps take over the blog…we still need your pieces.This Yoga thing just doesn’t work for me. Nduta pls stick to the Dar script.Lol!

    1. Confession: I’ve never read any of these guest pieces. Just came here to find kindred souls in the comments section :D.
      There’s a reason we subscribed to BIKOZULU’s blog and not Nduta’s or Cherono’s.

  2. Nice try Nduta. Now we know that you can write (pretty well) on ‘neutral’ matters. Ahem! Dar ghosts needed to be
    exorcised! I think this one, content aside, is better
    written. Well done. Please pick up your B plain grade on your way out. Thank you.

  3. As a yogi, you are totally right. Newbies stride in like they own the place, only to shake like a leaf in the African storm and perspire at the rate of a leaking pot when holding side plank. Nduta keep writing and we’ll keep reading. #Namaste

  4. Quite interesting piece.
    I need some yoga classes too. Why? Unlike Nduta, my mind shuts down too early and unfortunately wakes up much earlier than jogoo la mjini na kijijini combined

  5. And she cleverly responded to y’all who were like “he is a married man”…..Nduta says… “So that’s the reason why I don’t feel responsible for someone else’s purity.” Nice easy read but I cant help compare it to Dar….

    1. I like that response too… all the judgmental Judys & Johns can take that to the bank! Awesome read that left my thoughts with her 6m old son looking at his mommy being suffocated. Thank God he will never remember what he saw.

    2. I saw that too. Lakini though:-) Anyhu, She managed to show us she isn’t one dimensional, which although is unfair, was kinda how I perceived her. Good writer

  6. Awesome article.Why should she write about one thing in particular why she can write about everything under the sun.Nduta keep us guessing on what’s coming next.

  7. So am marking Biko’s scripts and I land on Yoga!!…first I thought he had cheated in the final exam but upon further scrutiny I unearthed something.His assignment was done by a recent catch.Hahaa,come on! guys with foreheads and high on whiskey dont do yoga(blame my monday hangover)…A good piece but Nduta left us hanging in Dar! I have never travelled back home

  8. I AM CONFUSED! I PROTEST!
    How Dar became yogi is incomprehensible, and plainly unacceptable. Nduta writes beautifully, even about yoga. Yet Dar was a step shy from masterpiece status, and Part 2 would have surely propped it’s perfection. If it pleases Nduta, may we have round two of Dar?

  9. Nduta literally knocked our socks off with her ‘Dar’ article. It was actually a very good read (and yeah l would have loved to read the entire unedited piece). This piece was nice…sigh. So Nduta please knock again.

  10. I agree with Nduta when she said that the burden of purity falls on women’s shoulder.It’s funny ,I read somewhere that in Victorian England women were considered more lustful and prone to ‘follow their urges’.Today,were are supposed to resist all the lustful men who we have been told have ‘uncontrollable urges’
    Anyway,great article!I’m more of a gym bunny myself though,the whole’ mystic chanting yoga’ has never appealed to me. 🙂

  11. She writes very well. I love how ahe drifts from the main topic and gives you a glimpse into her thoughts..like when you walk along a corridor and some doors are open and u can peep inside….and how nobody has commented on how she is a survivor of domestic violence beats logic…Nduta, keep moving..

    1. Sad tale but I hope Nduta she’s fine away from the batterer. Now one gets a glimpse of just why the Dar story took its shape to the bottle of Nduta’s emotions. Aluta continua sister!

  12. To be honest, I struggled to read this article to the end because I thought that a continuation of the Dar story would appear in the next paragraph…. Nduta please, do a part 2 of your last article. Please..please..please….

  13. Can’t believe I put my lunch date on hold for yogis!when I saw Nduta’s name on Biko’s post, I said to miself ‘this is definitely going to be hot!’
    only to read about yoga!(smh)Nduta please give us more of that Dar stuff, and fyi Biko,I get laid,a lot!

  14. Lets say i would like nduta to remain in Tz… i read it in a minute, first, middle (Strangling) and last.The wording is awesme, the piece is good. …just that you set a Tz bar up there.

  15. Nice piece but it doesn’t take me away, NOT like Dar where I think am still trying to find my way back. I don’t like insulting God with pretence, i love sex and everything that comes with it, especially reading about it.

  16. I’m still hanging at Dar after my mind refusing to shut down.At this state yoga won’t help.Nduta,come pick me from where u left me.

  17. Nduta, you write really well. Sometimes you may not get all the readers but your way of writing is amazing. Coincidentally, every time you write, I share my link here. Check it out

    https://mwauramswati.wordpress.com/2015/09/24/loyalty-over-everything-part-1/

  18. I think by now you can tell that most people want Dar’. Nduta, I love your writing. This was an insightful piece but I always come to Biko to get a laugh, chuckle, a smile n a giggle or 3. So,how about we get back to Dar’, I’d love to read that. Do your thing Nduta, Dar’, yoga, men/women and life, 69 and other positions…lol. Do your thing!, we love the way you write and so, we….er’..I will look forward to reading it.

  19. “If you’ve never heard of backmasking, you probably have never played a cassette tape, and your music memories start with CDs, or (the horror!) an MP3 player or iPod.” What a way to describe it. The best ever!

    ………….I’ve never met anyone who could actually play anything backward. (You were supposed to press Play, Rewind and Record simultaneously to hear the backmasked message, but I don’t know anyone whose cassette player could actually do that). Actually, if you take the cassette out, open it up and invert it upside down, the words play out backwards. How do I know? Coz I used to mess up with cassettes back in the day.
    There was a time on radio back then, the presenter played some words spoken by a politician, backwards. All you had to do was figure out the jumbled words and you would win a crate of beer and some roasted mbuzi. I recorded the words, inverted the tape in the cassette and had the words clear in no time before any listener had claimed the prize. I couldn’t call to claim the prize coz; 1. I was a kid, kindu class 7 or 8. 2. We had no phone in the house.
    And yeah, I was right!.

  20. Welcome back Nduta.
    Liked what you did there…That struck me as terribly unfair – why was I always the one expected to say no? What if I wanted to say yes?…… But when a woman goes ahead and acts sexual, then it became huge uproar, since the burden of chastity is all yours to bear. So that’s the reason why I don’t feel responsible for someone else’s purity.
    Anyway still waiting for Dar part two+unedited version.
    .you write so well,hope this is a thing now .n sorry for the violence you experienced..
    @Biko 3posts….yipee

  21. Not bad! But Nduta should stay in Tz!!!!
    Biko where is your article???? I mean, really… I was happy that today is tuesday cause I get to read your stuff!!! WE are waiting…
    Nduta … I want part 2 of 50 Shades of Grey in Dar!!! hahahahha 🙂

  22. This time I really enjoyed the article…I felt that I met Nduta, the human being, the woman, the fighter…forget her escapades in Dar, this is what life is really about, getting past the taunt and trauma to make something of yourself…she shared her heart in this one, thanks Nduta!

  23. nduta apewe a corner Hapa. she can regale us with sexcapes on that corner, and we all call it ‘Thirsty Thursdays’. This Yoga stuff? naah

  24. I love it… I like Nduta’s writing as well + Chero. Whether it is on the erotica from Dar or yoga…
    p.s. I hope you kicked that man who strangled you to the curb.

  25. “if I need to lose weight, I don’t have any lessons to draw from” Since you lost weight by getting pregnant;I think the lesson you can draw from it is that it is pleasurable to have sex but painful to deliver a baby

  26. You got me thinking. One’s beliefs are made up of one’s experiences. & your experiences make for good reading. I like both pieces and that you are here to tell the stories!

  27. Well written piece Nduta. A great writer should be able to write about anything. And While we’re at It, a good reader should Be Able To Swing between writing Styles And Content With Relative Ease. You Are Strong To Write About Your Experiences. I Admire You.

  28. Hold up…..so you learned what 69 means from a “man of the cloth”!!!!
    What a time to be alive!
    PS:we picking up what you laying down….keep writing

  29. Nduta, your writing gave me a deja vu moment.. Its like I was reading Elizabeth Gilbert.. I love the many sides to you, I love the prose how you introduce the big issues in the middle of rather normal text.. Word of advise, this is not your audience, so you will not get the recognition you deserve.. Start a blog , I and many like-minded people will follow

    1. True, I agree… This audience is mixed. Some of us get you! Such truth and deepness in the middle of normal text. Start a blog and I will be among the first to like.

    1. Yes, Allen I second that.
      Nduta, it was a good read, scratch that, an awesome read.
      That Ex-husband deserves some mob justice from the gang if not worse.
      #nduta@69

  30. Maybe it had something to do with the fact that just a few months earlier, I had been gasping for a different reason – my partner of four years, with whom I had two children, strangled me within an inch of my life. As his fingers crushed my throat, our son, six months old at the time, woke up and rolled over in his crib, to see his mother suffocating under his father’s hands. My son didn’t cry, didn’t make a sound. He just lay there wide-eyed and silent, and for months after, I couldn’t get his face out of my mind as I tried to go to sleep.

    Despite the humor in the article, I felt the pain in those words…,

    The imagery in your words Nduta…,

  31. Good piece Nduta! I love the your
    article. Such great depth and insight. The newagish stuff resonates with me…it’s probably because of living abroad for over 8 years. Keep writing!

  32. This Nduta. Does she have a piece where she writes about how she ended up with that pastor boyfriend of hers?

    I am thinking it might actually be hotter than the Dar script. Okay, if she doesnt, she can attach her photo to the next piece she writes.

    We wont wank to her face, we promise.

  33. i gave up readin the piece 5 paragraphs to the bottom….fast scroll down and i saw there was not much left and so i went back and read the rest…Tip: you have to deviate from the main topic at least twice in the story, Biko ametuzoesha vibaya sana

    1. I love you Nduta!I think I found my kindred spirit.Don’t be afraid of being sensual,It’s the human condition and not a reserve for men. You write beautifully.

  34. Very interesting,mature and thought provoking piece. Nduta has redeemed herself. At least all these millenials still waiting for some raw version will go away!hahaa!

  35. i can relate to that church guy, a ‘brother’ once broke my heart, because i was causing him to sin. In fact, he called me satan.
    Fast forward, he got his fellow praise & worship lead pregnant, they got kicked out of church,their son should be 4 now.
    I like telling this story, it gives my soul so much joy!

  36. Mind over body!!! I loooooove this piece. Its calm, thoughtful and real. Nduta, keep this coming. At the end of the day we must quieten the demons with in us with stillness they can’t even begin to comprehend. That is what conquering our fears is all about.

  37. you can’t catch a cloud and pin it to the ground, I think, you don’t needto hold yourself back Nduta, writing is about freeing yourself. One more thing, it takes a badass woman to walk away from any form of abuse, kudos.

  38. Nduta, ignore the comments from any naysayers above. They are not as multidimensional as you are. You have an awesome personality that comes through in your writing. You are the friend I wish I had but can’t find. Start your own blog and I for one will be an avid follower.

  39. I like this.
    Im what you can call an on and off yogi and I am yet to experience that level of spiritual awakening but I am so glad it made you cope with the ghosts of your past. Good for you girl. Looking forward to more of your reads

  40. nduta i still remember your ukosefu wa nidhamu and shudder at the prospect
    of freeing myself from the yoga grip if i let constrict me

  41. There is something about Nduta that is captivating. Dar aside (that is at another level), Nduta is deep, really deep. Can we have more
    of you please Nduta! I have fallen for the variety,from Biko, Chero and now Nduta.

  42. Nduta brings a captivating read.We’ve had enough of the guy with a sharp forehead,can the momuska kindly take over?Not seriously though

  43. Haiya, why is every body mad that Nduta isn’t continuing with escapades za Dar? Not that I would mind them, hehe. All am seeing here is a lot of starved people *evil laughter*. I mean, you can’t feel that denied because of a story. You could just ask nicey 🙂

    Anyhu, It’s an emotional rollercoaster with you Nduta,with no freaking warning signs of what’s coming. I’d read whatever you write mama, your skills are mad and then some

  44. I enjoy how she lets us into her mind with her stories. I especially enjoyed the unexpected and very shrewd response to the married man questions…with yet another story. Fantastic stuff Nduta.
    Lol Biko, mocking your adoring fan’s comments.

  45. Hahaaaa!! People are twisted over here, hehe. Great easy read. I’m studying for an exam and was feeling so much pressure I couldn’t sleep. But reading this kind of helped. Nice! Biko I saw what you did up there, to Mbugua. Hehe…

  46. The meat of the story was in the choking and the campus preacher. But she tumbukizad it in a lot of cabbage, waru and carrots.

  47. Smug about:
    – Her intelligence
    – Her yoga skills
    Defiant about:
    – Shagging a married guy
    – And pretending not to care about what you think about it (even though she clearly does, and has written this piece with the primary purpose of appropriating the blame on the chap, not her, since sexuality is owned by each person right? Ok..)
    Writing Style?
    – Clear enough I suppose, scores highly visually, not very funny or interesting though, but full of attitude
    Does She Invoke Empathy? (this is something Biko excels at)
    – Nope. Too much smugness (or insecurity pretending to smugness) to be considered an honest account of things, i.e. the lies are either witting or unwitting, if the latter then yes, I can empathize, shes been through lots and may be struggling to appear fine, if the former than perhaps the things she thinks are awesome about herself just sound empty and vain to me.

    1. never posted here and think biko is brilliant. as a survivor of domoiu estic violence, i know the feeling and urge to minimise the experience or make it sound funny when you know you could have died!!! its because people, like a lot of you here have established, trivialise it or swat it away like some nasty insect that they just cannot be bothered with!!!!

      1. oh, spottedchui, the name suits, as in they never change their spots, do not assume the the thoughts or mindsets of others, you end up sounding smug

  48. My first time commenting,feels awesome being part of the gang.keep it coming Nduta!.Biko you from another writing universe big up.

  49. Captivating. I love reading something that makes me feel like I’m a part of the story. This is one of those. Great ending too. Sorry about what happened with your partner.

  50. I was skipping paragraphs and when I found the preacher boyfriend story, I thought this is it… the blog is starting only to be taken back to bloody YOGA!

  51. … Also, I like how many different stories become woven into 1. There is a link, effortless connection. She moves quickly from a frightening experience to Yoga! Brilliant.
    I like how Nduta can weave a story from something as simple as Yoga.

  52. Such sophisticated writing…And I love how you catch us unawares with moments of deep pathos (your 6-month old son watching you get strangled in this one, and smoking that cigarette with your friend who’d been kicked in back from the Dar’ piece.) Reading through the comment section I can’t help but feel sorry for the people who don’t get the genius of your writing…Biko, please give us more of Nduta!

  53. 1st time I have read a post in one hour (that is the time I use to read a novelette) you write well. but please, as multidimensional as you are, stick to the Dar arena. We wont judge.

  54. A well written and articulated piece….your prose has an ethereal feel to it, transcending time and space anf pulling at the chords of our very souls.

  55. This woman was strangled by her husband and still managed to dish out her thingie to a total stranger on day one? I know what part of her body is not one-dimensional…

  56. In my mind I have a face ready for all these names herein..including Biko’s. So after this yoga/yogi piece I’ve literally run to my September issue of true love flipped through to the yoga bit to see if nduta’s face is there for copy pasting..Lol! And I was sure as hell she’d be one of those ” twisted” girls there…

  57. Aki Biko, for a person who doesn’t like Yoga, si you rant alot. (Am talking about the Sato article). Heh, I only finished reading it because they acknowledged you as the author.

  58. People, we just want part II of Dar because we are nasty.
    I love the story she did not quite tell, the one about attempted homicide she did not quite tell.

  59. one afternoon, after showing me what a
    69 was, he said we should pray and repent
    from our sins. I knelt, and he prayed that God
    would help me be stronger to say no to him… That is just hilarious.

  60. Nice piece Nduta keep writting i like they way youve answered those who were quick to judge you by your previous post so short and straigh….. ” So that’s the reason why I don’t feel responsible for someone else’s purity……”
    Cant wait for more bring me back from Dar though.

  61. Nice piece.Nice prose. Don’t kill the messenger, but I’m I the only one who thinks those saying ‘oh you write well but stick to Dar kind of writing (curiously majority being women) are just really saying sc**w your nduta you might write well, but we’d rather view you as a s**t?

  62. Biko, I love that you are giving space for other writers on your blog. A candle is not dimmed by lighting up another candle. It makes me appreciate (your)writing even more because I am reminded that your posts are not the same as they were almost 5 years ago when I started reading your blog. It should inspire everyone that excellence takes time and is groomed by nurturing others in the process. For those who think the guests posts have no room here, you always have the option of NOT reading them.