Be thankful for the small achievements in your life.
Don't live another person's life.
Run your race. It is fulfilling.
Be patient. Your reward will come.
@KenyaPower_Care@SusanGiton77134 Three days of low voltage at Umoja Road, Rongai and still nothing from @KenyaPower_Care. This is gross incompetence and negligence. You are destroying appliances and crippling businesses while remaining silent. Do your job and fix this immediately.
@KenyaPower_Care Can we get assistance please or who do we need to know to be assisted...Low voltage since Wednesday night then yesterday their was maintenance and no help came to us ref no.15028860 near National Bank Along Magadi road Ongata Rongai
KPLC, it’s time to end this token nonsense.
Most Kenyans don’t need SMS.
Most don’t need to key in codes.
Just make it simple:
Pay -- tokens reflect -- power comes back instantly.
Anything else in 2026 is inefficiency.
Respect your customers.
In 2019, MIT professor Patrick Winston gave a legendary 1-hour lecture called “How to Speak.”
It has 18M+ views for a reason.
His frameworks:
• Your ideas are like your children
• The 5-minute rule for job talks
• Why jokes fail at the start
15 lessons on communication:
I’ve been reading replies on my Meru Cancer tweet, and one said almost every home in Meru is spraying something on their crops nowadays, unlike the past.
And that’s exactly the concern.
Many people are using chemicals they don’t fully understand. They’re told “this kills weeds fast” or “this works immediately”, and that’s where the problem starts.
Over time, these chemicals don’t just stay on the farm. They end up in the soil, water, and even the food they eat, causing some of the cancers we are witnessing.
We need to start asking harder questions about what we’re using, how we’re using it, and the long-term effects.
This is not about blame. It’s about awareness.
Must watch full interview : 🚨🔔‼️
A man in is 50’s is going viral for his frank explanation on
“ why Men die early and are lonely at OLD AGE “ Wow ! He never missed !
People who work inside homes pick up on things very fast, small details that quietly tell a whole story about the owner. Here are some of the biggest ones people don’t realize they’re revealing:
1. How they handle stress. A house that’s messy but not dirty usually means someone is overwhelmed, not lazy. But a spotless house with hidden chaos like stuff crammed in drawers or under beds often signals someone trying hard to stay in control.
2. Financial reality vs appearance. Expensive furniture but broken basics leaking taps, bad wiring shows someone prioritizes looking well-off over actually living well. On the flip side, simple homes with everything functional often belong to people who are financially disciplined.
3. Relationship dynamics. Two people living together? You can tell a lot. One side of the house neat and the other chaotic usually means imbalance. Also, separate sleeping setups or unused shared spaces can hint at emotional distance.
4. Self-respect and mental state Basic hygiene matters more than luxury. A home that smells bad, has piled trash, or hasn’t been cleaned in a long time, often reflects burnout, depression, or someone who has mentally checked out.
5. Habits and discipline.Things like unwashed dishes, overflowing laundry, or constantly unfinished repairs show procrastination patterns. Meanwhile, small consistent order even in modest spaces shows strong discipline.
6. How they treat others how someone treats a plumber, cleaner, or electrician says everything. Respectful, patient people usually have calmer homes. Rude or dismissive clients often live in tension-filled environments.
7. Hidden addictions or coping habits Empty bottles, excessive takeout containers, or certain smells can quietly reveal habits people think they’re hiding.
8. Whether they actually “live” in their space, some homes look like showrooms perfect but cold. Others feel lived in, warm, and personal. You can tell who is performing life and who is actually enjoying it.
9. Attention to detail If small issues are ignored like tiny leaks and loose switches, it usually means bigger things in life are also being avoided.
10. Priorities What people invest in comfort, aesthetics, convenience, or status always shows. A home is basically a silent list of what matters most to someone.
It’s interesting because most of this isn’t about money at all. It’s about mindset, habits, and what’s going on beneath the surface.
I sit sometimes and think how ridiculous it is that we go to school own homes, drive cars, fly in choppers, tour the world, have wives and kids but still feel lost and incomplete? What is supposed to complete us? What is the meaning of this life?