Monday, 31 December 2012

Mwalimu Andrew

http://www.nation.co.ke/Features/lifestyle/Fiolinas-day-out-in-Nairobi/-/1214/1653492/-/item/1/-/m40xnlz/-/index.html

posted from Bloggeroid

Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Till semester do us apart



I wasn’t planning to write anything soon but trust Caroline Mutoko to always inspire me. She hit a raw nerve when she said generation Y are idle and of average mind. Well, here’s me writing and tweeting and fbooking to kill the idleness. I hope they count as something meaningful. I just don’t understand though how someone would one call her listeners idle. You won’t be in the market had it not been for these idlers who have nothing to do other than listen to you day in day out. Besides I don’t think just yapping on the radio for two hours could be that hard. For her lovers don’t lynch me #just saying.

After a hard academic semester I believe I deserved ample time with my screen watching all the broken series I had acquired courtesy of the post modern internet in KU’s post modern library .I just had to mention that ,just so my family would know my favourite hangout spots in school.

If there is something that I would rather skip is the semesterly moving with luggage to and from KU. The only silver lining is that the sacks of maize I came with are now history having been converted into arega. Am already thinking of not carrying cham next sem. You’ll have to ask Jaduon’g Omosh what that means. It’s during packing that you realize just how many paraphernalia that you have that you are not using. With the season over, my hockey equipment are just nuisances. Just as is the cooking coil, the books, the bedding, the clothes amongst others. The only thing preventing me from discarding them is that there is the East Africa games coming in Dar (just had to mention that too, don’t worry swry all be back).And of course all still have to eat to be fit, look good and have bedding for good use- to rest in case you were starting to have some ideas.
just y i have to carry cham

The semester has been short what with the lectures strike and senior lectures like Dr Onsongo going to the Yunaired States of America every fortnight to parry(read party).

There is a concept in epidemiology called epidemiological transition. Relax, it’s no biggie .It simply means that the patterns of disease or a condition are changing based demographic factors such as age, sex, employment status etc. Well, if there is a phenomenon that can be observed is the changing patterns, not of disease, but of relationships throughout the sem. At different times, there are those guys who are most sought after.

 At the beginning of the semester the regular Joe has a chance just as everybody else. This is especially true if HELB has ‘done something’ or he can create the impression that he is loaded. Just long enough to get, get in some more and get out. The trend however changes during the middle of the sem when the global economic turndown starts to be felt. The ladies just like the nomads are forced to look for greener pastures. It’s at this time of the semester that Naliaka of Bungoma suddenly has an uncle she visits every weekend. However, just like the heavy Joe at the beginning of the semester this marriage of convenience ends before it even starts. Though not coz the pot of cash ran dry but because it’s the exam time and people forgot that at the end of it all, there is always an exam.

operation tembelea uncle
At such times, the academically gifted of us get to hold the drivers seat. Assignments get done for them, sweet SMSes start coming their way.

Babe u r God’s gift to me, I don’t know what I could have done that without u

It is usually followed by a request
Babe siskii poa,c unifanyie hiyo assigno ya PPH 301,pleez,……….mwaaah!

The majority swallows the bait whole and do two assignments, write two notes and even in cats think for two. Others however, know the drill, bide their time and make sure that their academic contributions are well rewarded in goods commensurate to the effort put in. However, there is need to move in fast lest she moves to uncle on her way home.

I remember when I was in primary school, the bullies used to bellow that, “abiro loro kodi”
That translated simple means that I will close with you.
People would gather and watch as the two fought their way down to death, not death death. A self appointed referee would ask a person who feels strong enough to cross a marked line or put the grass on the other. Even though sometimes you were scared to the stomach there would be no turning better. During those days we used to say that dhiang tho gi lum e thoga.

Today am in good moods so ill translate that too. It means a bull dies with grass in its mouth. The overlying logic here was that one could lose honorably in the ‘arena’ or punk out and be the laughing stock of the school until somebody did something more stupid. It is during such battle that you would wish for the referee to end the match and just declare the winner especially when you were the man on the receiving end. The referee had at this time however forgotten his responsibilities and was enjoying the action. At such times one could only be saved by the closing bell or by turning carnivorous. You know like biting a huge chunk of meat from the bingwa. However such actions were considered girlish thus one had to it discreetly.

I remembered this incidence because it does happen in universities too. No, not of sweaty men strangling each other or fighting to the ground. In universities, one just chooses something and marks it in his head that I will close with it. In most cases it is that girl you have always wanted during the semester or getting drunk silly, momentarily forgetting who you are, what’s going on around you and overindulging .The latter is very risky as you might be forced to walk to Westy (I don’t mean Westlands Nairobi but western Kenya) or go to the campus shylocks to ask for fare. Unlike the shylock of Venice who asked for a pound of flesh, these ask something of greater value like that camera you bought with your first HELB or that phone your aunty gave you as a birthday present. Who said we can’t do aunties?

There is that surge of courage that comes when you realize that she’ll be leaving next week. After all what’s the worst that could happen. If she says yes it’s till semester do us apart, if she says no, well I was just kidding. There is however need to be careful of some ladies who fatten the ram before slaughter. These are the ones that invite you over for uji in the last fortnight of the semester. At the end of it all know that you are being readied to carry luggage to the gate. This category of men however don’t score because asking would be very very awkward. So the next time u notice extra friendly activity at the end of the semester, and it’s usually consistent, don’t be that hen who thinks their owner gives her maize because he loves her.

Then of course there is the all weather group. These are the guys who are likely to charm at the beginning as they are likely to charm at the end. In most cases they play for the Vultures, are cash laden and spot Mohawks on their head. They most cases have a pink shirt, purple pants and orange shoes. They usually have sun glasses never mind its 2000 hours. My friend Masibo calls it ‘swagger’
Where do the rest of us fall? There is this category who subscribes to the broes over whores philosophy. I used to be a staunch member of this group till I heard that the thinking out there is this broes don’t have hoes .I guess am temporarily groupless.

The moment I realize what group I belong to, will inform you good people.

Sunday, 2 December 2012

AshyVy Lauvly




You are the reason behind my many a sleepless nights
Neither coz u shout nor coz you play loud music
Not coz you burnt my house or stole my bed
Not coz you bother me but coz you don’t

The crack of dawn finds me wide awake
Thinking not how am going to make bread
Charting not a path to prosperity
But forging a way to win you

My days have never been this longer
My nights never more intolerable
Everything I touch crystallizes into you
My mind is devoid of anything but you

Life has never been the same since I set my eyes on you
Your stunning curves an object of my fantasy
Your big blue eyes a target of my lust
Ur smile my rallying call to action

Adoration rage in my heart
Thoughts of you suffocate my mind
Strategies and work plans form in my mind
Each though has a slight defect and joins the ever growing pile on the dust bin

For how long is this going to continue?
For how long is cupid going to hold me at ransom?
For how long I may going to be under this spell?
How long am I going to play hostage?

Am not asking you to love me
That though would be the best thing fate would ever throw my way
Am not even asking you to try
All I am asking is that you let me love you

To let me replay the scenes in my mind
To have you in flesh
To fulfill what I was brought forth to do
To love you; to dream on

Mzee Varaq

Wednesday, 21 November 2012

There's a country I used to lead

There is a country I used to lead
I was their supreme leader
They adored me like a faithful dealer
I was their Messiah sent to sire

They loved to be manipulated
Shoved and ordered around hither and thither
Sadistic made them go ballistic
They saw the strong grip of a tyrant ruler as artistic

Anarchy wasn't a vice in that nation
Nor was the selfishness evident like a cancerous lession
Civil liberties and freedom were kitch and fad words
Gruesome violence was awesome

Accountability is the thing in this nation I lead now
A hundred rats jostling for my position
Democracy,equality and transparency is their new song
They are tired of the fervent hold of an ageing dictator


©MzeeVaraq2012

posted from Bloggeroid

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

The grand conspiracy


I have not updated this blog of late, too much activity in the varaqsphere I would add. Yet the main reason I think has been lack of motivation. I have recently discovered that I can write best when am mad at something or somebody or can feign enough anger, just sufficient to complete a post. The truth however is that things have not been that bad, really. Am even tempted to say good, the only problem though with that word is that it doesn’t exist in varaqsphere. My blog is about whining remember?

So last week, after a long sabbatical I finally decided to pay a visit to DJ Brayo. Now DJ Brayo is not your normal mix master, he is my movie guy. Okay, not just mine alone, Default’s too. Okay even you Wekemeu. He operates, or for the purpose of this story, used to operate a movie shop in Tom Mboya Street. I can’t really recall the last time I was there. I think I went to look for some series, it must be How I met your mother, I think. The construction of the Post Modern Library and free Wi-Fi I think have something to do with it. This is despite the director of Wi-Fi’s (am not sure the position exists) best effort to limit the internet usage to things academic. After all, doesn’t watching Dr House, teach us practical medicine? 

Well, the place looked different with a new shelving system; beautiful ladies on cue, ready to assist you choose the new thing in the market. Also gone with DJ Brayo was my dear Caro. Now Caro in all sincerity was the reason I went to DJ Brayo’s on such a regular basis. She was just a sight to behold. She had this charming smile that made me buy documentaries upon documentaries, even those, especially those I didn’t need. Sometimes I look at my collection and wonder how the hell I got to buy documentaries such as `How to smuggle marijuana in the US’. Nothing personal against marijuana people but seriously? Smuggle? Marijuana? In the United States? I think I must have thought uncle Barry would come for me. I remember I used to tell her how Roba and Caro would make a lovely couple. There is this line that I liked using a lot then that if we cancelled the similar letters in our names, we would   remain 1-1, yaani draw yaani moja. What perfect sync!

And even though I knew her first loyalty was to DJ Brayo, I was just willing, and of course able to buy anything she recommended. In all fairness though, they weren’t such bad choices, I mean most of them. So I finally looked at the handsome man in the mirror, mustered some courage and told myself,”Varaq, you can do this!” you must imagine my disappointment when I got there and not being greeted by my most favorite smile in the world, okay second favorite, just so I don’t find myself single after this article. She had left, just like that, I mean who does that? No note, no press statement. In all fairness we didn’t exchange numbers; she liked it mysterious and random. But she could just have googled me. The new ladies though were not keen on offering any information on the former tenants so I guess all just have to look for you manually all over Nairobi, that’s if you dint go to smuggle marijuana in the US already.ill knock on ever door, until I find you. So in case you are reading this  1/1 is coming for you  babe.

Well this episode at DJ Brayo’s reminded me of just how far apart we are getting, I mean the Maseno community in KU. One can’t rule out that there has been a grand conspiracy to destabilize and disorient the Mase Musketeers by the top echelons of power. I remember every Friday was nyama day in mzee Default’s room, never mind that we didn’t have sufurias, plates, spoons, or even basic ingredients such as cooking oil and even the cooker! All we had was hope, the same hope instilled in Barrack Obama jr by Barrack Obama snr, a Maseno boy. We didn’t care whether we had to borrow, steal or buy and dispose(we weren’t keepers then).All we had was the conviction that at the end of a laborious week, Default ,Sad News, Dzjaduon’g Dimitri, Wekemeu, and occasionally Mchil would congregate in Frunk’s corner in Longonot 2B and talk over mouthfuls and revise a few episodes of Boondocks.

During those days, if I got a text I knew it was free Dzjaduon’g Dimitri telling me he’ll be running late and asking me to’ catch for him’ two chapatis at the Nyayo mess before the stock got depleted. Then we liked Nyayo mess because the rice was yellower as compared to the others. We naturally assumed then that yellow was the colour of sweetness. And in case were still waiting for Wekemeu to finish an episode that he was always at the verge of finishing, we would order more  chapo and wash it down with free soup freely accorded by our gracious university administration. We called it desert then.

Well , that’s untenable now that my roommate, mzee Byudeh has introduced me into the wonderful world of arega(just ask around in case you don’t know) and Wekemeu now ‘travels’ to school, I’ll get into that story shortly. Sad news as you might be aware is the new Mr. KU and can’t allow his hard earned reputation to be soiled. Imagine if rumor mills has it that he was seen gulping down soup in the students mess. His new status elevates him to the table of men. As for Dzjaduon’g Dimitri, let’s just say that if anybody would like to do a study on the progression of arega addiction and dependency then Dimitri would be your perfect candidate.

Before I forget, I promised you my dear people a story on Wekemeu’s commuter status. This is the guy who invented the only surviving Mase tradition, an ancient tradition called #teamgikosh in the year 2010 as well as contributing several words to the Mase’s dictionary. The tradition is a unique and complex journey that involves waking up at 6.25 am and covering a stretch of about 200 meters in order to catch the 6.30 am train to town. One would wonder how five minutes would be adequate to prepare himself, well it would be if you slept fully dressed .In case you are wondering what was wrong with adjusting the alarm to give adequate time for preparation, here is your answer. The sheer fun of barely making it, the rush of adrenaline, and the joy was fun that couldn’t be traded for anything, not even at the altar of convenience. Yes, and the fact that it provided the founder with a God given opportunity to work out, albeit even for five minutes. 

The catch though was to carry less cash lest one succumb to the impulse to buy what he didn’t really need. In most cases though this intervention didn’t work because of the new Barclays branch in Gikomba. The elite only bank with the elite. Back to Wekemeu, with such achievement, one can drown in his own invincibility. Well if Wekemeu thought he was important, the director accommodations just reminded him how average he is. In all respect though, the fight isn’t over, maybe his good friends Alicia Florick, Danny Crane or Allan Shaw might just unite for him in the greatest legal battle of all time.

I must have mentioned something about Willis House in my piece, the school of men. A description wouldn’t be complete without mentioning the guy Adush Latif Maxcy. If there was a guy who was conspicuous then it was adush. If it wasn’t about his higher than normal melanin concentration then it was his short trousers that were way above the knee. In all fairness, the shorts being provided by the boarding master weren’t tailored for a man of Adush’s physique. Here was a tall form one standing in front of the house assembly giving cover for the naughty guys behind just finishing their loaves or talking about how a madam teacher was really smart that morning, sharing or creating the latest rumor in school.

If there is a reason am mentioning him today is because of his big heart, literally. This abnormality has caused the disruption of normal heart activities and he needs urgent open heart surgery in India and guys are contributing towards this course. For more info check out A Heart for Adush on facebook. We can’t afford to be just friends when there is laughter to be shared or goat to be roasted. We can stand together and be counted, we can choose to remember where we came from and help Adush stay alive. And the great news is that it’s within our powers, it can be done and it will be done. 

Just like we believed we could eat nyama without even having a sufuria or the courage of Wekemeu of  shoving his way  past men who had bricks for biceps cause he was walking alongside me………………and Dimitri………..and the others too.

Barrack obama did it; again…………………………we can too.
. 


Saturday, 27 October 2012

What’s your message?




You use to floss me to your pals
Now you just toss me like a fifty kg bag of cement
Sometimes you avoid me as plague
Other times you embrace me like keg

A month ago we were the perfect sync
Dotting on each other like a hen fusses over the chick
Holding hands in public, texting all week
Missing each other immediately we hugged bye

You used to meet me coz u were in sheer awe
Now you do so out of utter owe
Do you want me to fight for you
Like rams over a ewe?

Ma heart races every time I see you
You still have that tight hold on me
Dangling both the carrot and the stick
Teasing my mind to click

Never for once having a fight
Just being each other’s light
Finding the flow, rolling on the floor
Whispering the promise of a grander tomorrow

How couldn’t have I seen this coming?
So engrossed that I swallowed the bait whole
Should have seen the subtle hints
And taken the opportunity to scuttle our bond

It wasn’t rocket science
That my docket in the alliance was untenable
Should have seen the writing on the wall
The moment I hit the wrong gong

Oh my Esther, as sweet as an ester
Couldn’t you have padded my fall
Not to land from erect to eject
To wail over my tail which still ail


Mzee Varaq 2012

Monday, 8 October 2012

The School of Men


There is stereotype that Luos are proud and headstrong individuals who see themselves as far above other communities in the cadre of ranks-never mind that Forbes or our dear Steadman have not posed the question to some two thousand four hundred respondents for determination. They don’t need their approval-one would say. After all you don’t have to be told that you are bright for you to believe that the one above gave you something between your ears.

The Luos it’s said have a unique and entirely conspicuous way of life. They don’t just do things for the sake of having them done-they do them with a bang. I will not allow myself to be dragged into confirming or denying these allegations not least coz they existed before I was born but because the least said about it the better. Who knows what other Luopeans may to do to me bearing in mind that one good judge of Luo descent recently declared Mr. Omar El Bashir a persona non grata in Kenya. 

But that’s beside the point. If you think these of the Luos I don’t know what you would say of Maseno School alumni. Yes, the lucky man who had the honors of going to the only national school west of the Great Rift Valley. That may not hold weight any more bearing in mind that each county has a national school now. We can however use the ‘we are the original’ line and still eat our cake. The only school that was eligible to participate in provincial fetes at two different provinces-after all neither of the provinces could claim sole custody. You might be wondering why the results got posted under Nyanza. The Luos live there, remember? I remember we used to wake up in the southern hemisphere, go for breakfast in the Northern hemisphere, attend classes in Nyanza province and go for games in western province. No, we didn’t have tuk tuks or boda bodas in school; in case you we beginning to wonder.

But it wasn’t just the physical location at the foot of the Emabungo Hills that gave Maseno the bragging rights. I remember during one instance at the provincial drama festival gala, the provincial director of education made the unforgivable mistake of calling Maseno High school as the overall winners. He was stunned when instead of ululations; the students only looked at each other. His mistake, you guessed it right-Maseno isn’t a high school; it’s just Maseno School.

The list of the great men who passed through the school is boldly embedded in the schools dining hall. Barrack obama is an alumnus of Maseno School! Not Michelle’s husband but Sasha and Malia’s grandpa. Those who went to Maseno School will no tire of telling you how they sat in the classrooms where Jaramogi conceived some of his brilliant ideas. The Rock of Ages, the school chapel is where Tinga was baptized. I won’t mention others like the speaker and myself –you should appreciate am not a proud man.

In Maseno School, there were no boys-only gentlemen who had been refined by the hardest of circumstances to the smoothest of men. I remember during my first assembly, some tall hugely built master gave us a speech on how we were going to be transformed over time. That man as I later realized was the principal and he needn’t do anything to instill fear. He cut the look of an  imposing master and I do remember when he spoke the school was silent save for the occasional quacking of the monkeys.ooh and if I dint say it, the population of monkeys and lizards in the school far surpassed the student population-not that an to be taken seriously of course. No census was done to that effect.

Another thing that a Masenonian (that was how the ladies called us then) couldn’t just let you go without letting you in was the houses-those that you called dormitories in your high schools .I remember the first time I got my admission letter, what I lost for enthusiasm in not getting my first choice Starehe I quickly replaced with the thought that I was to be a resident of Willis House. It sounds exotic, right? That was my first instinct as well .My good brother who in the years before had had the honors of passing through this factory found it amusing. Why he found it so I soon figured out myself and let’s just say it wasn’t a pleasant surprise. It’s true what they say, British sounding names doesn’t necessary translate into palaces.

So here I was an unimpressed tenant of Willis House with the greatest of stories not least among them that the house assembly rests on a tree that has spurn over a century. I remember, the old boys especially the form twos had been compelled to false hospitality. For one term they fetched us water from a huge tank with another fancy name-the Jacobs well and later stole the same water themselves. But if there is an invaluable lesson we learnt was how to survive and live us brothers. 

Nothing spread faster than a juicy story. By the time it made an entire lap; the owner of the story would be impressed by the pool of creative talent. Some of these rumors eventually turned out to be true. Whatever you did, don’t just hog the limelight coz there were hyenas to deal with those who asked to much questions. The student leadership was a powerful force to be reckoned with and remaining in their good books was a ticket to safety. The most frequent threat was,” if you value your jaws…”.This would make sense to you if you realized just what a plate of nyoyo meant. Of course you couldn’t crash the maize and the few beans without a complete dental set!

And now that am talking about food, it is only fair that I let you in on some of the culinary interests that were unique to this chosen few. There were delicacies such as fish and chicken. The latter was served albeit once in a while to motivate the students. As for the former let’s just say that the school procurement officer always missed the big fish and in most cases we had to settle for the smaller version-omena. During those every meal could be successfully paired with bread, mandazis or samosas, be it rice or beans. The value of six bob was 'metronomical’ then .Don’t ask me what that means, am not sure ,I just got it from another article and thought it would do my piece some justice.

 Being broke was a bitch but we devised ways to get by. After all isn’t necessity the mother of invention? We acted as if we just needed an extra bob to purchase these precious commodities and the people with loose change were just eager to be of help. Ten friends each contributing a bob to this noble cause would ensure you have two mandazis sometimes even living more lavishly than the donors. It was however, mutually benefiting as you would be the one doing the coin dropping next time unless of course you were those guys who had ‘fixed’ money any time.

And how could I forget the trips. If there was ever a motivation to be neat then these were. Those who didn’t have the necessary apparel such as ultra white shirts or nice shoes didn’t let this minor inconvenience come between them and the lasses on offer. They either resorted to buying or borrowing. Stealing was of course an offence and being the model students that we were ,we just borrowed from the washing lines and returned it dirty and creased after it had outlived its usefulness .This was referred to as involuntary  temporary borrowing. The other form, permanent borrowing, where an individual kept the ‘borrowed ‘merchandise for eternity was however rare and frowned upon. It went against the basic code of brotherhood. 

This was also a God sent opportunity for juniors (forms 1 and 2) to adorn long trousers. This was believed to   exponentially increase their net value an opportunity they seized with both hands. And if they spotted the same deodorant then your guess is as good as mine. The only thing that could be trusted as genuine in a Maseno man was his face and the brain behind it. Never mind that Baby J Mogz, the hockey maestro enjoyed success in his muddy grey short and his umoja slippers. The skills that he used are however encrypted. I will however seek his permission to release such classified info in my next post.

I remember that we learnt that there wasn’t much we could do about tomorrow; therefore we lived each day to the fullest. I remember we laughed at our common misfortunes instead of mourning over them. I remember the concept of brotherhood –everything save for toothbrushes and undergarments belonged not just to you and your immediate cycle of friends but others you didn’t love as much . Even in the trickiest of circumstances we still found a way out. 

That was Maseno School for you, a school that taught pride and self belief even before the curriculum.