Julia: The thing with trauma is that it gets stored in a child’s body and when you grow up, your nervous system starts responding. In the Kenyan and broader African setup, we have parents who are very quick to correct their children rather than connecting with them.
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Kennedy: I’m a victim of words and it’s something that affects people a lot. This happened to me when my parents separated, all the pain and tantrums were directed to me.
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Windrose: After experiencing all that, I was advised to go for counselling but I refused. I didn’t understand the benefits of guidance and counselling at that time.
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Grace Kinuthia: Most people, if their childhood was okay or even just average, they wouldn’t be in therapy, they wouldn’t have relationship issues and we wouldn’t see such a high prevalence of mental health issues being projected.
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Sam West: There is a shift, a revival, something is happening in our generation and in our country. This is happening across the world. Young people are not embarrassed of speaking about Jesus himself.
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They said young people had left the church. But now… they’re coming back. Not for religion. Not for routine. But for something real. This episode dives into the why behind the return and what this generation is truly hungry for.
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Love, Lies & Red Flags is a raw, eye-opening episode that exposes the warning signs many people ignore in relationships and the cost of ignoring them.This episode dives into the tension between what feels good and what is actually healthy.
#SpeakLife@MissTamima
Love, Lies & Red Flags is a raw, eye-opening episode that exposes the warning signs many people ignore in relationships and the cost of ignoring them.This episode dives into the tension between what feels good and what is actually healthy.
#SpeakLife@MissTamima
Barrack: After telling my mum that I am not her husband, we stopped speaking. We were enemies for a year and would pass each other on the road without talking.
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Barrack: I told my mum that I am not her husband and that I do not care. I work for a national radio station, and when my family hears my voice on air, they feel entitled and expect me to provide for them. It became exhausting, and I even had conflicts with extended family members. I eventually had to vacate the house.
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Anne:I had to do an evaluation, a life audit, and go through every aspect of my life, and I discovered that most areas were struggling, especially my spirituality.
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Today we are having a real conversation with no theory no pressure and no need to be perfect just real people sharing real goals and honest stories about starting stopping and finding the courage to begin again.
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Caroline: I got a boyfriend, and we were both students. So, things went, and I got pregnant. I told him, and as obvious, he said, 'I don't want responsibilities.'
Host: @MissTamima#SpeakLife
Are people choosing partners for love, or for visibility, status, and attention?
This episode of Speak Life unpacks the fine line between genuine connection, clout chasing, and emotional exploitation—and how to discern the difference.
Because real love isn’t built on likes and followers. It’s built on truth, honor, and intention.
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@misstamima
Beyond @SakajaJohnson please lets name the government officials responsible for city planning, roads, and drainage. We need accountability and real solutions, not endless press releases. The people deserve infrastructure that works!
Nelson Maina: I started my business with 2,000 shillings, buying five pairs of shoes from Gikomba, which I then sold to my neighbors.
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