Showing posts with label CONVERSATING WITH.... Show all posts
Showing posts with label CONVERSATING WITH.... Show all posts

25.6.14

Conversating with The Wolf.

You know how I sometimes get a bug up my ass about serikali, ranting endlessly, foaming at the mouth and ef'thing?  And you know how you then ignore me?  Right.  So what I did was go out and rope in a fellow ranter, figuring, safety in numbers.  Woi...  This bugger takes it to a whole other level, and he does it with a bit of Latin thrown in, just because.  The Wolf needs no introduction around here, he's the lurking presence in my comments section, always ready to pounce on the unsuspecting half wit who has the gall to say something foolish in his presence.  He only ever snarls at me, for the record, and yes, I know what that says about my wits, but there you have it.  Ladies and gentlemen, may I present Howling Wolf, author of the brilliant blog, The Reluctant Kenyan.  With a name like that, it should come as no surprise that the content is somewhat unflinching, but don't let that scare you off, the man has poetry, and kickass music.  Assuming jazz and classic rock can be considered kickass.  Don't look at me like that, I'm not uncultured, I just don't think of kicking ass whilst listening to a trombone solo.  Do you?  Didn't think so.  In keeping with his love of random music, his pick for the soundtrack today, Fela Kuti's 'Shuffering and Shmiling' [see soundtrack], 22 minutes (almost as long as this post) of afro jazz funk soul.  You shall see the reason for this particular track in due course...

ALEX: So I was at your blog earlier, trawling through your archive, and my first question has to be, what the hell, man?

HOWLING WOLF: Is that a question or an exclamation?

Why have you stopped blogging?

Now the question! Why have I stopped blogging? Well technically, I haven't stopped, just taken a sabbatical. Indefinite.

Why?

Writer's block, among other things, if I may elevate myself to that status. And a number of other reasons mostly to do with the nature of blogging...

Did you not enjoy it?

No, I thoroughly enjoy blogging. Except it is a bit like one having fun with oneself, if you catch my drift. Especially where nobody but one or two fanatical followers are the only ones interested in what you're saying. It gets to that point you're never sure whether even those ardent followers are not just continuing out of a sense of obligation. Does that sound pitiful?

Not pitiful, but then again I may be the wrong person to ask, no? Hahahaha...

Insert wry smile.

Did it bother you that the followers weren't flocking to your blog? It sounds like you were disappointed with the reception you got, or lack thereof.

To be honest I don't know what I expected. I suppose I'd been pacing my mental room with all these issues/ideas/perspectives, which I needed to share with someone/anyone who would care to listen/read and engage me in an interesting way (or not at all). Then I started writing and I am not sure whether it is my style or the content or the timing or what, but I just didn't seem to resonate with many people, so my mojo kinda flagged. I'd always kidded myself that fame means two-bob, but fame and followership is kinda nice in a cheap sort of way. We all want cheap and nice, don't we?

Cheap and nice does sound quite appealing, but we know it's never that easy. So you were looking to engage, and you think you failed to resonate. I'm wondering, did you have an ideal in your head? A site, or blog, that you looked at and thought, 'That's my kinda shit, I wanna do that...' I suspect that offends every hair in your wolf fur, the idea of copying, but it's not meant in that sense.

No, no, no! I'm not offended in the least. I fancy myself as being open minded so I don't mind learning a thing or two from my betters and my peers. Here are two examples of brilliant blogs in my estimation, Deconstructing Myths and Naked Chiefs. Oh and how could I forget Gathara's World, the man is pure genius!

What is it about these that you like? The writing, content? Or the communities they have...

These guys ain't just mouthing smut. They think, then they write and then the writing is deceptively simple yet complex. Does that even begin to make sense?

It does. I follow two of those sites. Incidentally, I always notice the lack of visible interaction in the comments section, which is not to say they don't have traffic.

How sure are you about that? You have their stats?

No stats, it's an assumption I make based on how often their sites are quoted...

Ah. You see, one of them happens to be Charles Onyango Obbo, one of the most quotable writers on Planet Africa, and beyond. And he has a massive following from his regular journalism work. The other is Gathara. I think he has been doing this thing and doing it well for quite a while now. And he has maintained a sober and objective stance on issues regardless of prevailing fads. Perhaps one can still get the attention/traffic eventually. Even me. :)

You've just made my point for me. Ha! Both of them have profiles as writers, yours will take time to build.

That is the point exactly: I have no time. I am of the Microwave generation. Instant everything!

Are you willing to give us, raia, some time to find you? Well, them raia, I was one of the two fanatics you referred to earlier. :-D Hang on...so you packed it in because you couldn't be bothered to wait? Hahahaha...

Well maybe, I am stranger than fiction sometimes. Why you laugh Gawd only knows!

What's your take on our security situation?

There are many kinds of security: physical, social, economic, macro, micro...which one?

Pick one...

Physical! Mostly I'm scared shitless that some idiot is about to plant a bomb in my shopping basket in the name of an extremely intolerant God. Or shoot my little boy in the head... Or abduct my little girl and take her to some strange place in Cameroon where no satellite picture can pierce the canopy of the tropical forest... But worse, I fear that some cop, in the guise of smoking out a terrorist, will smoke me instead and claim that I have links with you-know-whom... Especially when I can't pay enough to leave me and mine well alone. Enough?

Continue...

Now let me tell you something about Social Security. It is in the hands of NSSF, right. That is just money I will never access. Money to build someone else's mansion with. So should I invest in my children so that they will wipe my arse when I'm ninety? Now that is expecting too much already, no? So should I buy plots of land which I will develop for income when I am old? Well, that's how to get killed by your own children sooner. Or Mungiki. Social security my foot and my five toes!

So no social security whatsoever then? And no physical security, and no economic security...

No SECURITY!

I'm going to go out on a limb and say you're not feeling too optimistic. But you have kids, my friend, a wife, family, all that good stuff, what happens to them?

When there is no security, you hanker down and let the bloody storm blow over. If it takes an eternity, so be it! See, I am not the one who wrought this madness called life and sat back to admire my handiwork. My role is just to live it. I try.

Can we talk about your family?

Thin ice that one, but okay. When I snarl, you back off, deal?

Deal, nothing too personal.

Everything is too personal with me. That's always part of the problem....

Everything? Woi... I shall tread most lightly. Let's start with your mother then, the post you did regarding Al Shabaab (Al-Shabaab – My mother was right). It takes skill to link your tough-as-nails mother with those idiots, but I guess yours was a comment on how badly the government handled things?

About the skill, thank you. Coming from the formidable Alex, that is high praise.

Hahahaha. Shut up...

Surprisingly, I have never blamed the government for bungling the handling of the terror attacks. Truth is, I don't know enough to judge and I come from the standpoint that the business of government is tough shit. We sometimes expect too much from government, when in reality the resources to be all that is non-existent. So I think I was ranting about Al-Shabaab mostly. And my mother. But I'll have to re-read to post to remember everything I said.

That's a surprisingly tempered view of government and its (perceived) inadequacies, do you think we've been too hard on them?

On Al Shabaab? NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!

No, not al s., on government. They've gotten a lot of stick on this one issue, not least from me.

This particular government has been bedevilled by so many issues/ills I can't even begin to recount. But this particular government has brought a lot of this shit on itself. It is not governing. It is playing at governing as if this is some kinda video game. The buggers think that they are in power to spin yarn, which they also do badly. Honestly, a more savvy government with oodles of statecraft could not have mismanaged every living thing and day like this one.

Now that sounds more like the Wolf I know. Thing is, you just said you don't blame them for bungling stuff, but you think they brought it on themselves, or is this too complex a problem to blame on one entity?

Yeah, I know that I sound like I'm talking from both corners of my mouth but I have a point. The thing is that, on a good day, governing is tough so if you want to govern a country, don't make it about proving silly little points about how macho you are. Firstly, these guys took the country hostage, knowing all too well what the ramifications were going to be. I will not even begin to discuss the legitimacy of their ascent to power. Then they start sticking their grubby middle fingers at everyone else both internally and externally. That is how you end up with pie on your face when a real crisis hits. You have effectively isolated yourself in your cesspool. So nobody supports you even when they'd want to or when it would ordinarily make sense. And even I can't support you because you're basically shit.

Nicely put sir. What was your mother like? You called her a hard woman...

Hard. And soft. Conflicted mostly. Which manifested itself as almost cruel. Give me consistency any day. Hard or soft. Not both.

But where's the fun in that? Are you much like her, cruel almost? You have (had...ahem) a blog that was not easy reading, unflinching I should say. Your description of her was almost a self portrait.

I don't know. Unhinged definitely. Cruel? My daughter is the one to say. But I don't crunch little insects underfoot just for the fun of it so I guess I'm not too bad.

But you can be quite scathing when you put your mind to it, I've been the recipient right here in my own house, because I had the audacity to celebrate (ha!). I guess I'm asking if you see some of her in yourself.

Scathing? Yes. My middle name is Scythe. So it follows. I see myself in my Mother. She loved nice clothes and flowers. And she had a wonderful sense of humour. Satirical, mostly. I think she was extremely intelligent as well.

Do you like nice clothes and flowers? I believe you once described your fancy suits...

Clothes, I like understated elegance. Flowers, I want to live in a garden. That is the dream. A lovely cottage in a colourful garden far far away from the madding crowd.

Did you grow up in the city?

Nope. I am a farm boy. Wolves don't belong in cities.

Where did you grow up? And might I point out the wolves of Wall Street...

Oh those, those are mutants. I grew up on a farm in a place called Londiani, which is in Kericho or Kipekllion County (not too certain which).

And the plan is go back there one day?

Highly unlikely. This is a tribalised nation now. Someone might be tempted to lobe off my head just for not being kosher. So I'd love to, but I'm wary. I happen to be the wrong tribe.

How long have you been a resident of this great city?

Donkey years really. Too long it seems to me sometimes. Most of my grown up years. And I am NOT a young man!

How old are you?

Let's just say I am about to start my second adolescence.

I have no idea what that means. Hahaha... This is the problem with you poet types, never speak plainly.

In a couple of years, I may find myself driving around in a red BMW convertible with the wind blowing my non-existent hair, as I ogle girls my daughter's age. Is that plain enough or must I write a number?

I'm contemplating the mental image of you in a red car. Hahaha... Ghastly. There's something you just said about not being able to go back. You don't think you could live in Kericho county, as a Luo?

I can live there. On the edge.

Why on the edge?

Because that is the only space available for anomalies like us.

Now that you need to explain further.

It's quite plain really. We live in a tribal nation. If you must live on a farm, best it be where all your neighbours speak your language or else you'll be blamed for crop failure and who knows what else, and who wants to know what they'll do to you with their machetes and poisoned arrows.

Is this something that happened to you, growing up?

No. It happened mostly when I'd already grown. When I was growing up, what you encountered was good natured ribbing which mostly went towards greasing camaraderie. Now things are more poisonous. What you hear/see/feel is hate. Which can quickly turn to your death.

You don't think things will ever go back to how things were, two, three decades ago?

Frankly, no. There is no incentive.

Isn't there? We're too widely dispersed to return to our 'proper' areas, we have to learn to get along again, not because it's a nice sounding kumbaya moment, by the way, but because there's limited space and even more limited resources.

In rural Kenya, I suspect it will only get worse with pressures on resources occasioned by too many hungry, illiterate people. Perhaps in urban areas. But they too are getting zoned along tribal lines, especially among the lower classes. So no, return to innocence, if ever there was any.

That's a bleak prognosis...

Cancer is cancer, right?

Lakini...your cancer is painful, man.

Tell me which isn't.

I don't agree, by the way. I choose to believe that in a generation or two things will be better, less vicious at any rate. The divisions will probably remain till the end of days...

On the basis of what? Your say so?

On the basis of everything I've learnt to date.

Educate me.

You need to understand, to a point I'm a city girl, brought up right outside Nairobi, for all intents inside Nairobi. I live with all manner of people, work with another all manner of people, but more importantly, I'm of what I'm told is a tribal majority. My perspective is very skewed on this, is all I'm saying...

Do you know where hope comes from?

...I've seen my shags go from 99.99% Kikuyu to...maybe 70% Kikuyu, and dropping. This is in my life time. Like I said, mine is a very urban experience.

That is NOT integration. That is commerce!

What is integration? Living together, working together, fucking each other...praying together?

So you think a guy who lives all his life next to an Asian family will be allowed to marry the girl in the Asian home?

Hold that thought one minute, and thank you for going there. Read this (Not Yet Kenyan). So integration is about intermarriage, mixing of bloodlines?

No, it is about mindset. Forget the fucking hardware, man. You can fuck a woman who is a cow for all you care. But until you begin to think of her as a unique and special human being who deserves everything you deserve then there is a problem. You're still pushing your angle and you're still hang up on your selfish superiority complex shit!

Equality, then...

Equality? Equality? That is too vague a word. What does it even mean? Even Marxists, who fought over it and killed themselves and other people over it, ended up just more confused by the concept. I am talking more about human dignity and respect. More woolly concepts perhaps but if I had a day I could explain myself quite clearly.

Equality in the most simplest sense, being able to see another as a person, like you said, and not a lesser being. We'll ignore all the rest for now.

Yeah, I see. I agree.

Can we get there, in a few generations, or is it a hopeless dream? You asked me what is hope, what is it?

I asked where does hope comes from?

A stubborn refusal to accept reality. Hahahaha...

Hehehehe!

And the grand delusion that we can change the future.

Well I think it is a combination of the two, no doubt, together with experiences that illustrate that what is hoped for is achievable. For me, mostly, I have not had those experiences. So I have stopped hoping.

Fair enough, but what about your kids? You family types are always telling us how it's all about their future, so what happens when you stop hoping?

What about my kids? Indeed, what about them? I'll strive to feed them, protect them, house them, give them my two cents worth about this and that and hope to God they fare better than me, but I will not go as far as imagining that just because they will be adults at a future date they're guaranteed a better life. There is nothing in the works today to even remotely suggest that.

You are intent on killing all my hope, but it's okay, that's why it's delusional. :-D Now tell me, have you read the 'Not Yet Kenyan' post?

Oh yeah, I read the beautiful post. Very touching in a jarring sort of way. Makes you understand the Asian Kenyan psyche a little better. And other things as well. Like how we'll never really integrate.

The reason I brought it up is, in many ways it reminded me of your blog, your first post, Being Luo. That 'not yet Kenyan' theme runs through your writing as well. Have I read you wrong?

You have read me right. Not yet Uhuru! Not yet Kenyan! NOT BLOODY YET! Maybe NOT EVER!

Thing is, and this is why I have been pestering you to have this convo with me, to the rest of us (read Kikuyu's), we have no clue how that feels, not really. The idea that some people in this country feel less than is as alien to us as...anti corruption.

Well, there is a way a suburban white man views racism. It is the stuff that pops up in his head when he sees an old black lady being molested by neo-nazis on TV. Then he asks himself a few academic questions and even manages a passing comment to his children about treating fellow humans right. Then he goes back to his insular smug life and forgets that there is a black hell called the inner city, where everything you do including how long you live is predicated upon the colour of your skin. This white man's perception of reality is the privilege of privilege. You need to live in the black inner city to care enough about racism, because it touches you and yours viscerally. The same applies, mutatis mutandis, to this being Luo thing. You need to be Luo to begin to understand what the fear of GSU is like.

Mutatis mutandis?

With the necessary changes.

Aha. Stop getting legal on my ass.

I'll try to be kind to you, my dear unschooled one.

Thank you, sir. Being Luo, describe it to me, if you would. "Somehow, I got the impression that to be Luo was considered intelligent and stupid at the same time." That's off your post.

Can I describe what it means to be Luo? Mostly you want to apologise for being who you are. Then you realise that the people you want to apologise to are not even worthy of the dirt you walk on. But still they think the world would be a better place without you. And they make it so hard for you to be anything useful just so they can prove to themselves that their hypotheses were right. In other words, you feel fucked most of the time...

Is this how it feels right now, in this day and age of enlightenment? I'm being a bit sarcastic, of course, but we'll come to that in a bit.

I was about to ask you what enlightenment? We are all barbarians driving second-hand Prados in silk suit's….

What I should have asked is, do you feel this way today or was this something you felt growing up?

In a nutshell, now more than ever before!

So even as you live in our allegedly cosmopolitan capital, still fucked?

Let me tell you what would happen if I was to try and run for the Chairmanship of our Estate's Association, I'd lose. You know why? Because it will turn on which tribe I belong to. Oh which reminds me. I had a worker in my employ who was at one time overheard cussing at Luos and suggesting that they all go back to Kisumu to fish. Do you catch the irony?

Your employee was cussing you and yours out? Hahaha! Clearly not a genius, that one.

But still didn't stop him from thinking himself superior to me, no?

I must play devil's advocate. Could it be that an inferiority complex colours your interactions?

So a girl is raped and then we ask: Could it be the size of your bottom got you raped?

I'm not blaming the victim here... Well, I am, but I'm trying to prod you a little. Same way you have a bunch of idiots walking around with a misguided sense of superiority, could it be that we have another bunch with misguided inferiority?

It is easy to misguide yourself into a sense of superiority, but what is there to be gained from beating yourself into an inferiority complex? Just pain! Barring sadomasochists, pain is not something a rational human being seeks. This is something that someone else has to do to you.

We see these arguments being floated all the time, in relation to racism, why can't these blacks stop being so...black? What you're saying is Kikuyus, and the rest of the majority (is there anyone else?) are just as ignorant in their privilege?

They have starved everyone else of everything and then they accuse everyone else of not having enough of anything.

Is it purely about tribe, or does class have anything to do with it?

Is it not? The class argument in our country at this point in time is sophistry. Let us deal with the tribe monster first. It is the elephant in the room. We don't need to look at the mouse hiding behind it...

But the tribe argument puts you and me on opposite sides by default, and I'm not sure I want to be put on the side of the great oppressor, not when I'm feeling quite oppressed myself.

Yes, we are on opposite sides. You may not be interested in war but war is interested in you. That is the nature of war. You have to define the enemy in simple terms. Oh, that was partly Leon Trotsky.

That's a relief, talk of war right now will have the internet police on our asses shortly. :-)

Hehehehe! I suspect you are right. Do you know why in military parlance they say things like, "The target has been eliminated?"

Leaving the human element out of the conversation?
Precisely. If you want to hurt anyone or dehumanise them, first depersonalize them. So call someone a kehe and he is fair game...

Kihii. Look at me correcting you like I'm an expert, I barely speak the language. Ha! So you reduce me, (not) Alex, to a member of the evil tribe and that makes it easier to write me off? Same applies to me, reducing Wolf to just another Jaluo...

Welcome to Kenya.

This brings me back to hope. Is there any?

No. There never was. And now there never will be especially after Mpeketoni. We have crossed the Rubicon...

Have we?

Is that a question?

It is. That's a hell of a thing to say, 'crossed the rubicon'. Meaning we can't go back, the end is nigh...

Or not. Things just won't be the same. Whatever tenuous web held us together in the form of a nation is broken. We're now officially a bunch of tribes trapped in a fish bowl. The bigger fish just eat the small ones as the cat watches from the outside bidding it's time. Enough said?

Not really. Hahaha. What do you think of this terrorism saga? The attacks, the responses from serikali...

Which one? There was NO terrorism and I repeat NO terrorism. It was just local politics...

Woi. I need to cut that part of the speech into a GIF, play it every time they scream terror from now on. So, not a fan of the government line then?

So there is an attack today. It lasts all of several hours. Tens are killed in a wanton orgy of violence. You show up late - like back-up cops in B movies - well after the hero (read villain in our case) has done the job. Then you tell us you know who did it and why but you are also still investigating. Rather confusing, no? Then you order a couple of guys suspended for dereliction of duty whereas you are the chief of security. Then you send in the army with body bags and the Nation Newspaper with banner headlines. Like I said what the fuck? Oh, and now Luos are being asked to leave Rift Valley...

I read something about that, is that the media being silly as usual or is this really happening? It bothers me that I second guess the papers these days. Sorry, that was a detour.

The leaflets are real enough. How come we have not sent a contingent of the army to guard Luo interests in the Rift?

Luo interests? Surely you jest... :-)

See, even you can't believe we have interests. :)

Hahaha... Just toeing the party line, sir.

Hehehehe!

Government doesn’t seem to care about protecting Luo interests, but I haven’t seen Luo politicians shouting about it, have they?

About what? Should they have to say something for the rights of the Luos to be protected or do we deserve our rights as a matter of course?

Assuming that the government feels nothing, and it looks like it does in fact feel nothing, do you think Luo politicians should be pushing a Luo agenda? In this case demanding the rights not being given to you?

Luo politicians may not even get the point I am making... I don't entirely trust politicians, whatever their tribe. That is why I've always craved for something higher to believe in, like a Constitution that is respected.

But Mr Wolf, the government is run by politicians, politicians who suffer the same complexes as the rest of us. Do you think the government as we know it respects the constitution?

Now you get why I have officially given up, don't you?

That's it? Really?

Really as in, you don't get? Like I'm chicken or something?

You make a particularly inflammatory comment earlier, 'we've crossed the rubicon...' and then you've given up?

Inflammatory? Who you working for?

I'm trying to get you to retract it. Hahaha. I might get shut down, my friend. Seriously though, you've put me, and people like me, to task for our privilege. Fair enough. But what about you and yours?

I'll say this. I have always longed for a just society where more than anything, the content of my character would be what seals my fate. That is verily what I desire for my two little children. But I have lived most of my life with the mirage of this utopia beckoning from a distance like a shameless temptress, only to have the unattainability of it grind my hope to ashes. Now I've come to terms with the fact that within this one lifetime, many things will not be possible, including that very society. So do I curl up and die? No. I wait for my rightful time to die, whenever and however that will be. Meanwhile, I do my best in the circumstances without working myself into dementia with false hope purveyed by all and sundry at every turn. And I hope my children don't make the same mistake of hoping as I did. I hope they just learn to live with this shit and smile through their suffering.

I'm not sure there's anything I can, or should, say to that.

Last bit. I'm looking for a clip I want your comment on, one I suspect you know well, it's the speech from 'Network'.  In the words of whatever his name is, about 2 minutes in, “I'm not gonna leave you alone, I want you to get mad!

I'm mad as hell, I'm not gonna take this anymore! Question is, nitado?

That's what we need to figure out. What are we gonna do? 'Nothing' hasn't worked too well for us, has it?

You are an incorrigible romantic aren't you? You refuse to believe that it is all lost yet it is. Because in the grand scheme of things, you and I are really nothing. Really. The best you can do is avoid as much pain as possible, but do not expect joy or edification or any of that nonsense. The system wins.

I am incorrigible, romantic is yet to be seen. :-) I can't accept that all is lost, sir, if I do then it means there's no point to any of this.

So your credo:

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Is all I'm saying. :-)


3.3.14

Conversating with a poet.

This month's willing accomplice (read victim) is Jodo, the man behind the Writers Club, the man I have been known to stalk on occasion.  Yes, I stalk the man, but only in the nicest way possible, and by that I mean I may have fawned over him in a most embarrassing fashion, such as I do.  Don't look at me like that, I gush and I'm proud of it, so there.  Ahem.  I could write some long winded explanation of why I love what, and how, he writes, but instead I'll tell you a story.  You know how I keep saying I don't get poetry?  Last month, he did a post called Kitendawili, a poem three lines long, three words in each.  I asked him what it was all about, all casual like, not wanting to look like a complete idiot, and he replied with three lengthy paragraphs, schooling me on bibi, babi and baba.  Ten words, three paragraphs.  To call the man fascinating is an understatement.  To wit, this conversation.  Heads up, if you don't speak Kiswahili, or sheng, you may need a translator.  I would have done it, but I'm lazy, and not particularly fluent in either.  And besides, I like how he sounds, the man has a flow about him.  Ladies and gentlemen, meet the poet. 

ALEX: Are you up for a little poking into your mind?

JODO: Poking...isn't a polite word. ;)

Hahahaha... No it isn't, but I couldn't think of a better one. How are you this morning?

Nimeamka poa. Niliamka na tune ya 'My Way' - Frank Sinatra [see playlist] ndio iko on replay.

I'd never have guessed. Sinatra?

Yes. Frank. Louis Amstrong, 'Wonderful World' [see playlist], it's a good morning.

When did you get into Sinatra, et al? It's not something I hear many people talking about, I was half expecting you to say Nas or something such like.

When? No date, used to listen to my father's tapes of Jim Reeves, na pia I explore expression after. Sijawai kutaka kua 'many people'. Nas pia is on my play lists, ana poetry. Umeamkaje?

Niliamka poa, nothing playing yet, listening to the church across the road.

Church is good, ata kama church kills God.

Church kills God? Are you an atheist, sir? Or just not a church goer? Hahahaha...

Haha. I believe in God. God is Love.

But church isn't? Love, that is.

Zii. Church ni social gathering. Pia sio building, Christians wanajua 'the body is the temple of the holy spirit', unapata? God is love. Love haiwezi kua church. God si church. Christians husema the church is the bride of Christ.

That doesn't sound like the churches around these days.

What does it sound like ?

These days the building seems to be bigger than God himself. Churches seem to be all about the physical, material, love I don't see too often. Hahahaha...

It's what it seems. God resides ndani ya kila mtu, but hakuna kitu mpya chini ya jua. Si unajua, ama unakumbuka, story ya Jesus Christ akiturn violent? Love...you don't see often. Juzi nilikua napitia sermon on the mountain - blessed are the pure in thought, they shall see God. Ile story ya beatitudes, Matthew 5 hapo.

So God, faith, is important to you?

:)

Why the smile?

Hio swali imenichanganya. Yea, faith ni muhimu.

Do you consider yourself a moral person? Don't ask me what moral is... :-)

Hahahahaha. Kali. I try, but no.

I ask about moral because of your job, you've written about it several times.

My job is immoral. :)

But you've managed to reconcile it with your morals?

Kitu kama hio. Sijui ata morals zangu ni zipi, tuseme principles...what's the difference?

I have no idea, to be honest, I suspect they're the same thing. Morals, principles...a code you live by. What are your principles?

Hehe...eish. Sijawai kaa chini kuzijua kabisa, but nathink kuna vitu siezi fanya, like taking advantage of an intoxicated woman. I think nilitoa hio kwa movie, but sijui.

Hahahaha... That's honest. The job, are you part of the system? 'Hii system ni ya majambazi...' I dont know where that came from.

Honesty ni principle, ama? Yes, I'm in the system...'part of the system' unamean?

You talk about the job, serikali, with some distaste, like you see how rotten it is, but then you're in it, and you seem to like the work. I guess I'm wondering if you're conflicted...

Nathink 'the system' ni ile report ya jana, that % kubwa ya wealth, or more, iko na watu politically connected. Watu wanafaa kujua serikali, but ni watu wanafanya country isonge. Serikali sio kitu, ni watu, serikali ni mimi na wewe. Watu wanahold the reigns of this thing inaitwa government, ndio wanamisgovern. Conflicted, yes. Sijui kusema adequately vile itaeleweka...samaki huoza ikianza kwa kichwa. Inaitwa civil service, but hakuna service...na kama iko, sio civil. Unanipata?

You're an optimist, Jodo.

Really?!!

Yes, really.

Nimeona umerefer to Mashifta...

What happened to them, or am I the one who lost touch? Hahahaha... Probably.

Haujapoteza touch. Hizi siku hawako sana, but wanafanya stuff. Niko eternally grateful to Kalamashaka nikiona Juliani, and the vibrant entertainment scene.

What do you think of the music coming out these days? Who do you like?

Nimetry kufikiria artistes wengine, but nimeona ni songs moja moja zao nalike.

Let's start with Juliani then, educate me, I only know a couple of tracks, and even then kijuujuu... Is he as good as they say he is?  I keep reading that he's the real deal, ki Kshaka, conscious music, not kapuka like akina Prezzo. Then again, Ksouth had a track called kapuka so...

Kapuka serves a need. It is from the Ksouth song that baptised some songs as so.

Really?

Yea. Now am feeling low.

Why? What did I say, man?

Nimethink tu 'consciousness' haiko valued, na more knowledge more grief. Nimeamua kusikia 'Loliwe' ya Zahara [see playlist].

Beautiful song.

The lyrics pia ni fine tu sana. Simple. Ulikua unaulizia music...

...to figure out your writing, you reference music constantly.

I write to a beat. :) My heart beat.

Brilliant line. I will steal that. Hahahaha. Speaking of heartbeats, two women feature on the blog, recently at least. Your grandma and an unnamed woman. :-) Do you like writing about love?

Love. It's all I write. :)

This is why I like talking to you, never a simple answer.  

That's a simple answer. No?

No, it's a poet's answer.

Remember that Dylan quote - a poet is a naked person...

Bob Dylan I'm guessing. Writing about love, in all its forms, is it a poet thing?

Sijui about poets, najua tu there are two kinds of writers – poets...and liars?

Now that you have to explain. Hahahaha... Are you saying truth is poetry, or is it the other way around, poetry is truth?

Hehe. I picked it up from an old movie. Sasa umeamua za logics, design ya akina aristotle... Jesus aliulizwa na Pointius Pilate, 'What is truth?'

Na akasema...

Alinyamaza.

Hahahahaha... Talk of truth always reminds me of Jack Nicholson, 'A Few Good Men', “You want truth? You can't handle truth...”

Kabisa.

Luo. The elephant in the room these days it seems. From what I've been reading, being Luo is complicated. There's a Luo renaissance going on. Part pride, part anger, part shame...

Renaissance... I like that word. How is being Luo complicated?

Now you man, si I'm asking you?

Hehe.

Is being Luo any different from being Kuyo, or Kenyan for that matter?

Haven't been a 'kuyo'. :) And there is nothing like 'Kenyan', tutafika tu one day. I think sisi wote tuko different, individually na culturally. Kuna vile we perceive things as a group, and as we are percieved... But stereotypes pia ni a sort of laziness... Nikiparaphrase 'Up In The Air', it's faster na easier.

So, is the renaissance I'm seeing, reading, an attempt to refute the Luo stereotype?

OK. The Luo kuna vile wamebebwa na vile wamejibeba. Ukieza control mind ya mtu, utamcontrol.

Hang on, wamebebwa na wamejibeba?

How wako perceived and how they perceive themselves, kitu kama hio.

How do they perceive themselves?

Is it not evident in how 'they' carry themselves? Pride. How they are percieved - arrogant. Hio tu nasema ni juujuu, but there is more to it than that, unafaa utafute sociologist aseme. It is presumptuous of me to claim kua authority.

It's not about authority, I'm asking your opinion because I think your opinion is valid, useful. Why is it so hard for us to talk about tribe?

Hapo sasa. Nilikua nikuambie, now you can't avoid politics.

Why should we avoid politics? We both spend a fair bit of time throwing stones at politicians no?

Inarudi kwa kitu nilisikia kama wa Kshaka akisema, 'Kabila ni mbili tu - maskini na mdosi'. Politics is too important a thing to be left to politicians. Tulianza kuongea system na wealth inafuatana na power, mostly political. Unacheki ni cycle tu. Haufeel fire flani ndani yako? Truth si kitu easy. :) Uliquote Hollywood, 'can't handle the truth'.

You don't put much stock in tribe do you? From the Kshaka quote, sounds like you see past the myth.

Tribe ni muhimu from the point of view ya identity, a sense of belonging. Tukiongea ata kilinguistically, hii kilami tunaongea i.e. English, ni mother tongue ya England, French - France, German- Germany, Chinese – China... Think Maasai. Think names.

Traditions?

Hio ni part ndogo tu, but it all adds up kua culture ya mtu. Think Jews, Orthodox or non practising.

Now that's tricky. Their culture is entwined with their religion, actually, the religion is what binds them together. European, African, American...all Jews, but different cultures.

OK, that's tricky, true, but even within hizo communities wanaishi, kuna vile wako different na wana associate to each other as one. Religion yao kwao is a big part of their culture.

It's an all the time thing, not just on Sunday like the Christians. :-)

Hehe. Una ubaya na Christians.

Hahahaha. Uchokozi.

Eddie Griffin hulike pia kuwachokoza. Christianity ni kama convinience, ama ya kuandikwa kwa C.V.

You know. I'm bothered by people using religion as an excuse for...foolishness...

Foolishness is a human right. :) What sort of folly?

The folly of being passive, refusing to question, forgive and forget, love thy neighbour. What if my neighbour is a thieving idiot? Hahahaha. We have digressed... Tribe, identity, culture. Are we doomed as a country to remain separate but equal? Kila mtu na chake and God for us all?

It's not a country thing, it's human. Cry, beloved country? :)

Why cry when I can mock endlessly? :-) Any thoughts on Boniface?

Boniface Mwangi. Yule alisema 'ameretire' from activism juu ya selfishness yetu, watu wa kenya? Thoughts...about nini haswa?

About his 'activism', retirement, selfish Kenyans...

He played his part. Kuna ile poem ya lauryn hill, 'Motives and Thoughts' [see playlist]. Story ni yeye ndio anajua nini alikua ameset out kuachieve, hadi aka choka. Siri ni ya watu watatu, 'shetani, mungu na wewe'. The backstory. Ametushow that activism ni choice.

Do you think of yourself as an activist? I know its become a bad word these days, but I mean it in the simplest sense, agitating for change. :-)

Yes.

Have you always been?

I want to believe I have.

How old are you Jodo? And do you play bball? Hahahaha...

29 in may. No, I don't play bball.

You can't be called Jodo and not play ball, that's an...oxymoron? I'm from the Michael Jordan era, clearly.

Actually jodo ni martial art, ama ni a short bamboo stick inatumika kwa martial art ya Japan.

Are you a karate expert?

I'm no expert. An admirer of arts. Nilijoin karate club in high school as a buffer for bullies.

Born and bred in Nai?

Nairobi born and bred.

Eastlands?

Hapo sasa.

You've done a couple of posts about the other side of the highway, is there a divide in our lovely city? :-)

:) The city in the sun.

Because other cities have no sun. Ha! We are quite special, us Nairobians.

Unique. We feel special...or think we are.

Pride. Seen as arrogance. :-)

Hehe.

The divide, is it east and west, or rich and poor?

Ni universal. Nikiendeleza what umesema, east - china- poor - bad...west- good- rich...

But west has poor too, and east has rich.

True. Kuna place ya the rich na the poor everywhere, like birds of a feather.

Our governor, any progress being made?

Nice traffic lights...

Hahahaha. Very fancy, no?

Uliniita optimist. Fancy. :) This is a city!!

Not a city, THE city. In the sun. With a park.

Hapo sawa. Haha. Progress...sijui. Ama hana PR machinery poa.

Unlike Alfred?

Phd in journalism, but at least kuna steps made. Hata hivo, swali ni expectations zetu ni nini, as Wanairobi.

That was my next question, what are you hoping for?

Better days. :) Clean city, clean streets. Security. Planned developments. I want more. Traffic iwe better, affordable housing for all, maji...and so on.

Do you know who your ward rep is?

'Mbunge wangu simjui/ alidisappear after election/ lakini najua zikikaribia zitareappear kam christ resurrection!' - Kshaka

Hahahahahaha...so true. I know my MP...

:) Good, knowledge is power. I know my president.

...nilimwona TV kule Kisumu akishughulikia mambo ya party elections. :-D Ward rep I have no clue.

Hahahaha. Pole. Inaitwa democrazy.

I blame myself...

Don't. Why do you?

Kidero invited the public for consultations for the budget, but I'm too busy, no? Then I complain I wasn't consulted, na consultant simjui? My fault.

It isn't a coalition government, inakaa kwetu it's just an attempt for show. It's all our fault, our leaders are a reflection of us. However, I want to know that what I say will be taken seriously. Ati mwanamume ni effort. Tsk.

How to get heard, that's the issue. Pull a Boniface with foam babies, or Omtatah with chains. Or Jodo with poems...

First, true revolutionaries do not flaunt their radicalism. They cut their hair, put on suits and infiltrate the system from within." - Saul Alinsky. Second ni the education, na the unlearning of all we've heard of. Politics as politricks...is a dirty game. It. Is. Not. A. Game!

But a cynic would argue that life is all a game, pata potea.

It is. But then again it isn't. :)

Hahahaha. It's complicated.

We need to redefine what 'politics' is.

What is politics, issues or competitions?

Politics, sijui ni nini. By definition, wanasema ni vile tunaeza get kugovern, vile power inaeza tumika kushare resources.

But we can't all govern, can we?

We can all govern. We all govern. The basic unit of government is the family. Our contribution iko from nyumbani, to shule, to work na hivo.

So, rethink our politics, infiltrate the system, rebuild from the bottom up, as well as top down?

Haha. By any means necessary. Rethink ourselves and the role we 'play'. ;)

Last question. What question haven't I asked, that you want to answer? 

Haha.... Naskiza Susan Boyle singing 'I dreamed a dream' [see playlist].

Your playlist is bloody amazing, so random. :-)  Continue...

Sijui swali ipi hujaniuliza na ningetaka uniulize.

I have one, why do you sound like two different people?

Huh? Aje hivo? Hehehe.

On the blog you're the Queen's English spouting poet. On email, and now chat, you're the guy from across the way. You're bilingual. :-)

Hehe. Nikiwa campo, ata nishawai kushow, when a friend heard me speak English alisema ni kama am speaking in tongues.

Is what I'm saying...

Hio swali sina jibu.

I know, that's why I asked. :-) Thank you for your morning sir, it's been really good.

Imekua poa, thanks sana. Blessed. Something random, a prayer: God bless the work of my words.


31.1.14

Conversating with a sheep.

So I've been thinking, rather than trying to coax you useless buggers into conversations you don't want to have, why not go out and find the conversations my own damn self?  A new year, new things, yes?  No?  Ah well, it was Woolie's idea, he says what will really get you all engaged is reading about one of the many characters that squat at the bottom of my page, like you do, once in a while (more like never, but let's not split hairs).  He then volunteered himself, all humble like.  Yes, I did see the set up, but I'm in the middle of a nasty case of writer's block right now, I'll take whatever I can get by way of inspiration. That and I really like to ask questions, so...  Ladies and gentlemen, a new category, conversating with...

ALEX: Before we get into it, I need a soundtrack. What's your jam, Woolie? Pick wisely, my friend, I feel very strongly about these things...

WOOLIE: Stand by me, Ben E. King.

Classic...very nice. Why?

I listen to it when things are a bit bumpy.  It reminds me how fortunate I am to have really good people around me.  People who have stood by me when the seas were a bit choppy.  It makes all the difference.

Aaaaawwww...  Can't really argue with that can I?  Now Woolie, tell me, what's the story with the sheep?

There's no story really, what you see is the real deal.

So you're a sheep, a real sheep? :-)

I prefer to think of it as a humane sheep. I have the soul of a man...

And the fingers...

Sorry, I don't follow what fingers? :-)

Well you type quite well, can only assume you have digits, rather than hooves, or are your hooves digital?

I see what you did there...

Clever, no?

I have to use a voice recognition bit of kit to put my thoughts into words. You must have noticed the delays...

I thought it was the hooves...

I agree it is quite unusual...

That's not the half of it. Ha! I've always wanted to ask...

Yes, please, ask away....

Where exactly are you, are you here in Kenya or over yonder?

In a field far far away, out of Kenya. A sheep in exile, someone once said.

Diaspora?

Funny you should say that... I have never identified myself with that word, diaspora. What does it mean? Who decides who is or isn't in diaspora?

I've never thought to google the definition, but I've always assumed it refers to a national living outside the motherland.

Originally the term referred to Jews as they had been scattered around the world following the sacking of Jerusalem....

Haiya! For real?

Yes, the term was specifically referring to that. It was modified (in Kenya) to mean peeps living outside the motherland.

So why don't you identify with it?

What does it mean? A collective noun bunching together who?

Anyone outside...

Call them expats. But even then what possible similarity do they have other than the current national anthem they are listening to is not Kenya's?

So your objection is the random grouping? Expats sounds temporary to me, like a two year posting in Kazakhstan. Emigrant?

The objection is to the collectivisation. Woolie has little in common with the the young lady now living and working in Berlin who drives a green BMW, or the young man in California who owns a used car lot. It seems silly to bunch all these random types together for a simple short hand.

Thing is, Woolie, we need a term to refer to the collective. It's not that we're saying you're all the same, just like calling us all Kenyans doesn't make as a homogeneous entity, diaspora is simply a distinction between those of us here and those of you out there.

I totally understand that last point, the distinction, that is.

Is the distinction relevant?

Is the question. The trouble with making distinct groupings is the mischief making that then follows.

Mischief?

It is no accident that people feel the need to divide us - those in Kenya and those outside. Unfortunately the human condition remains dynamic, these people that would sit neatly in little boxes marked A,B,C or D are constantly on the move, making the diaspora tag almost meaningless.

Do you think your view on Kenya and our madness differs from that of mine, because you live outside?

Not at all. My view on Kenya and our random eccentricities is informed in part by living in Kenya and also by observing Kenyan behaviour away from home.

Why the ambiguity, on the blog?

Ambiguity about....

I mean, why do you write like you're in Kenya?

Oh I see. That is deliberate.

Deliberate?

Hahahaha! Yes.

Are you trying to deceive us, Woolie? Hahahaha... Is this part of the sheep persona, wooly and mysterious? Does wooly have one or two l's, by the way?

Woah! I agreed to an interview, not 20 Q's. :-)

Deal with it...

Right, there was plenty here. When I said deliberate, I meant that the post dictates my location.

It's part of the story, you mean?

Yes. Should a writer's location really matter?

If your location colours the story, so to speak, doesn't it matter?

Woolie will be in Kenya if the story warrants it and in the UK when that is what is called for, I let the reader work that out for themselves...

So Woolie is a jet set sheep then? :-)

I would have said un-tethered. :-)

Nicely put.

An excellent question deserves an answer, no?

Thing is, if today Woolie is on the farm harvesting a bumper crop, and then next week he's playing detective on Broadmoor island, we have to wonder what this Woolie bugger does for a living.

If the reader can identify with either of these two scenarios or indeed both.

The reader identifies with Woolie, but Woolie is all over the place, literally.

Then Woolie being here, there or anywhere becomes immaterial and is just a fantasy...

He's a bit like Tintin...

Nobody has questioned that Woolie the sheep writes, see?

I did, right at the beginning. :-)

So travelling between two points is a piece of cake. You like things neat and orderly, I think

everything in its proper place...

I like a thread I can follow, logic...

...sensible but restricting - like a bra. Am I allowed to say that?

Hahahaha! You just have.

Your people will edit it, no doubt.

No edit, save for the odd typo. What does a sheep know about bras?

I have my moments, shall we say. :-)

You favour fiction on the blog, one true love of yours?

I like fiction. It is liberating, it defies definition.

An escape?

An escape perhaps or a rejection of conformity. Here is the deal: I often wake up to conflict, who am I, what am I doing here? Just like everyone else. At such times, I feel extremely affronted that anyone could chain me up and put me in a box marked X, Immigrant, Ethnic piece of .... Asylum seeker, Diaspora, space hopper....name it, even aliens sometimes. :-) In fiction one gets to write the rules. You choose the location, the story, the weather... as you say a temporary escape from insanity.

And Woolie being this amorphous creature in time and space, that's part of the fantasy?

Ehe. A talking blogging sheep - who survives from one chriso to the next. It is a fantasy and a bit of a cover story.

This sheep story is most complicated, wouldn't it be easier to just let Woolie be a man? Strange man, but man nonetheless...

Only if one wants to complicate it. There are layers upon layers but I feel a human is able to handle that quite well. Children's TV thrives on this sort of duplicity.

True. Do you see your Woolie tales ever making it to a screen?

Woolie the sheep writes stories about his adventures with Babu and others....this could easily be adapted. Of course you would not see Woolie as a sheep then. :-)

You've been blogging for almost 7 years, how?

If you enjoy doing something, and it is not illegal, immoral or fattening...

Where do the stories come from?

Situations - you spot a comic moment, or hear about a tragic event. There are as many stories out there as there are people, places and events. As I say, I like it because it is not something that I have to do, I am not compelled to do it.

Something you love to do, right?

Does it sound cliché...I love to write... That is bullshit – oops, sorry...

Hahahaha!

I like to tell a tale or two. Do we like the sounds of our own voices? Of course, helps to drown out the other voices in our heads, competing all the time for space and influence.

Do you ever get tired, or frustrated? It's lonely this blogging thing, or at least it feels that way to me sometimes.

Hahaha! It can be tiring when one is trying to shape something and it just won't work. It can be frustrating when you sound like a lone voice, but I have never found it lonely. The words on the page - when you get it just right - they comfort one. Like a letter from a lover....

That's quite brilliant sir, I'm a bit lost for words now. :-) Tell me about your audience, who are they? Do you know? Do you want to know?

The audience is varied and is essentially Kenyan given the nature of my ka blog. I respect the comments of three that speak and the silence of the millions of others. Beyond that...all is well.

Millions, eh? Hahaha... Has your audience gotten smaller over the years?

It waxes and wanes...I think on the whole it has probably lost. By that I mean every year a whole fresh lot of kids attain the age of maturity, the blog should really be growing in readership injecting fresh outlook and reflecting the cultural changes of our time.

But even as a fresh bunch is coming in, the old lot are drifting off, no? Do you feel like you need to evolve, appeal to the younger audience?

I do sometimes...it is a horrible sensation, the need to keep running so as to stay on the same spot.

Spoken like a geriatric bugger.

Indeed. I have no qualms about ageing gracefully.

You have to admit, your blog appeals to a similarly geriatric bunch, what with tales of hair dye and all... :-)

I do not hold that against my readers. I have spoken of issues such as hair dye and been pleasantly surprised that it touches a cord with some younger twenty somethings. You have to remember Alex that age is a very temporary thing....I will not be 27 forever....so to speak.

But that's not something a 27 year is ready to grasp, is it?

And they should not have to. Live each year as a permanent residence.

How old are you, Woolie?

I'll be 49 next birthday...

For real?

Yes, I have the scars to prove it.

:-) So what are you doing perambulating all over the interwebs at your age? Is that ageist of me?

I think it is a relevant question. The search for answers did not begin with the phenomenon now called ICT. People through out the ages have sought answers to their questions, answers that would offer them fulfilment. The interwebs arrived at the best time for Woolie, he would otherwise be stuck at the British council library....with 'not for loan' library books.

Does it bother you that the interwebs is seen as a young man's game? I don't know of many bloggers past 40, not Kenyan anyhow...

It doesn't bother me at all. I do wonder though that one can hold such a view, sincerely, it would mean of course that there is nothing that an over forty could possibly have in common with holder of such a view.

Let me put it differently then, do you find that your age puts you at some disadvantage, online? Locks you out of some of the conversations?

If there is a certain age - a tipping point where one loses all relevance - I have not been made aware of it. One may not enter into certain websites where certain discussions are held, but I hardly see that a disadvantage.

What do you like to read, online?

I read all manner of things - blogs covering enough topics across a wide spectrum, I read a bit of poetry and I am subscribed to several audio book websites... In a nutshell, I do and certainly many people my age do exactly what everyone else is doing online...

Everyone else is reading gossip and surfing porn. Hahahaha. Sorry, inappropriate.

I will not stand here and throw stones. No, it is not inappropriate, porn is the most visited genre online, that is just a plain fact, sad but fact.

Do you have any favourites?

Favourites of what?

As tempting as it is to ask about porn, I won't.  Hahaha...  What are you reading currently?

I am reading a Khaled Hosseini book, 1000 Splendid Suns.

Ah yes...you put me onto Kite Runner, still haven't forgiven you. Ha!

That was put onto me too and finishing that it was inevitable that I moved to the suns. I'm also reading a book of shorts by Roald Dahl.

Online reading, links you recommend?

Go to audible.com and also booksshouldbefree.com, I found many classics there...

What's your favourite classic?

A Tale of 2 Cities.

Dickens? I'd never have guessed...

Yes...I like the idea that even today you can go to Plumstead and follow Shooters Hill on the A2 road...

Eh? Hahahaha...

The book begins with a stagecoach going to Dover. The coach is overtaken by some riders and the passengers are scared thinking they have been jacked... The opening lines...immortal. It was the best of times it was the worst of times. Just like now, today. :-)

What do you think of the discussions Kenyans are having, in the forums, blogs, twitter...

Hahahaha!

Don’t laugh...

I am amused because there are so many aspects to what is going on in this so called "social media space". Kenya was catapulted from an age of censorship right into an age of free speech without a half-way house, it has taken a long time for people to recognise that free speech does not give you the right to shout 'Fire!' unnecessarily in a crowded cinema. Free speech means responsible speech.

Do you think we've learnt that yet, going by what you see on the forums?

We are coming of age....but take 100 babies born on the same day, they will not all walk on the same day. There are positive changes...and also some pretty nasty challenges.

Are you active on 'social media'?

I'm not that active, but I like a good tweet, and follow a few interesting tweeters. I guess the term social media...is a put off of sorts. :-)

It is, no?

It is certainly not social...this media.

It is most definitely not. Hahahaha. Wait, I should ask why you say that...

Why social media is anything but social? Perhaps a definition of social would be in order. People have called facebook and twitter and others social media, I view them as people traffic. Just like the bunch of cars all together on Msa road, nothing social at all about that...it is just loads and loads of people going somewhere.

Social to you means a community...

...with something that binds them together. I grant you, it is a loose term so how can it be binding?

What about the forums? Those are a community of sorts.

Forums bring people with special interests together. There a good ones and not so good ones...

Do you have any time for them?

Definitely. I think we all do. Every time we type a search term, "my butt in the car has died" we get results from forums. :-)

Butt? Typo, Woolie? :-)

I meant battery, Alex....

I should hope so, otherwise you've taken to killing people in your car and then talking about it on the interwebs.

I will let that comment slide... I am no killer but your point is made. :-) I once changed the whole toilet in my bathroom from a forum. There are extremely useful forums for all types of subjects under the sun. I have plenty of time for them and participate in them myself.

So the niche forums you love, as we all do, I suspect?

We all do. The bathroom post was done by an elderly gentlemnan in his 50's, a former plumber. The no interwebs for over 40's movement is still-born.

Hahahaha! You wont let that slide, will you? Apologies, Woolie, I was just being a mchokozi.

Just saying, he posted videos and shi.. Stuff the 20 somethings would have no clue with whatsoever.

You steer well clear of siasa on your blog, why?

I choose to, isn’t there enough siasa about? Some say too much. There are many wonderful political blogs out there and if I feel the urge to say something, I will do so there.

Are you apolitical?

I am not apolitical. It is just that... We discovered this beautiful medium just the other day, why do you want to give it up to the politicians?

They've taken everything else, no?

I used to be a listener of talk radio when there was nothing else about. All political blogs are full of polarised ranting and all manner of bigotry and tyranny. Anyone with a contrary view is a stooge, or worse.

Even the liberal ones? Allegedly liberal ones?

I am afraid the liberal ones are the worst. Politics is that ....poly tricks. A dirty game... How will you wrestle with swine and retain your dignity? There is nothing worse than a person with a conviction, in my humble opinion. This world has been around for 4 billion years and we been area for about 40k years. All the skulduggery that you see today has been around before...and will be around again, full circle. So no, I eschew politics kabisa.

You write on social issues though, often.

Like every one else I have a conscience that wants to say something every now and then.

Do you find it easier to talk about serious stuff, like violence in families, through fiction?

Yes. Fiction has the advantage that it can be used to discuss anything. :-)

Is your audience receptive? What do your stats tell you, are the stories on heavier issues popular, well read?

The audience is there for some issues...but my comments sometimes suggest that I have shocked the reader...they did not expect it, sort of thing.

You do like to shock us Woolie. :-)

It is a useful tactic, when one wants to confront a disturbing issue, head on. I will say one thing here, I have a particularly strong feeling about domestic violence...

Why?

It is something that sadly I have experienced in my own childhood and later on in my line of work. I have seen the horrible scars that it leaves on all the people involved. I have seen that it is the single biggest social ill that cuts right across the divide of the classes, and I have seen that there is little to suggest we are dealing with this problem as effectively as we would like to think.

Are we dealing with it at all, I wonder?

All the government agencies and NGOs think so...but I don't know.

Is writing about it cathartic?

Cathartic?

Is writing your therapy, so to speak?

It helps to get one's thoughts in some sort of order. But I do not think there is a self-help therapy, when things are this bad only professional help will do.

You don't like therapy?

I worry about self therapy, is it not just...bottling it in? Saying mwanaume ni kujikaza?

When you explain it like that, it does sound like a load of malarkey...

There there, I am just saying...

On a lighter note, what's your favourite meal, to cook? You like to show off on the blog, pies and stuff...

I will say, I am fond of so many dishes...nothing though comes close to me like ugali, with a nice chicken stew and some lovely cabbage. That is me. Cabbage made simply, a touch of curry powder added to some softened onion and tomato...heaven on a plate.

Cabbage? Woi... Hahahaha! What does the clan Woolie go mad for?

Clan Woolie prefers I do my favourite chicken and mushroom pie, which they now swear by... :-)

Wise people your clan. We'll be waiting for that post. :-) Thank you, Woolie.

It has been a pleasure.... :-)