 Matiwea wajatanya wanapiste wakama kwa wajatanya tewe nina, wa mou mou wajatanya tewe nina za 4 ga 5 4. Tk za 4 ga 5 4. Sayusti MGM Manakashymandi, ya maenulana nulangu na loratia. La ganda na kwa mou wajatanya mou hujumu ya wakamia. Sezi soulzi kwa wajatanya. Oka mezaan Frankarake Kaisu wa 4 ga 5 4. Moku na kwa wajata katia karnairo. I hope this is not going to scare those who have not come to Nairobi because we are going to style both the negatives and positives of staying in Nairobi. I am not alone here. I am joined by phenomenal people, very great people in the studio. We have Kaleche. I don't know whether I have pronounced it right but I love that Kaleche, I love Afrika names. And then we have engineer Ocholla, that is Andre. How are you guys? Fine. You're good. So you're going to tell us more about yourself starting with Kaleche. Thank you first of all for having me. Lucy Kaleche, I'm a journalist by profession currently working at Shoro FM. I'm a news anchor for those who listen to radio Shoro Maturaine from 9pm. Also I can say I'm a leader, a youth leader, sex gen, national youth congress. You said your name is Kaleche when I always say this Kaleche. Okay, the name Kaleche and Kaleche there are so many names depending on how you pronounce it. Because we still have kina kareken buki, we have kaluki, we have main Kaleche, we have Kaleche. So does it depend on where you come from? Ya, it depends. Okay, that's nice. It's rare to find a journalist who is also a national youth leader. Did you say national youth leader or something? Ya, we have the national youth congress and the secretary general. Wow. Maybe people have not known much about it but we are coming to tell you more about it. We will create a forum just for that so that you tell the world about national youth congress. So that Andrei can also just tell the world about you. Andrei, how are you? I'm good. It's month crush Monday, it's your day today and you're here to represent the man, the man of the house. So if this governor tell the world about you. Pleasure to be here. I really thank you for the invite. My names are Andrei Ochoala. I'm an engineer by professional electrical, plant electrical engineer to be precise. I have social media handles, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, everywhere. I'm Andrei Ochoala and I'm happy to be here for this topic of discussion. Okay, so engineer and journalist. I think you are the best people to tell us about Nairobi. How long have you been Nairobi Andrei? I've been Nairobi for roughly 12 years. 12? Ya, you have enough experience. How long have you been Nairobi? I can say for the last two years and also the other years coming, going, coming, going. But constantly since started working at Soro it's been two years. Oh, nice. Now you've heard everything that people say about Nairobi. There's a song that they will play at the end of this in Nairobi. I'm not sure about the words but there's a craze about Nairobi that people are complaining about during your two years in Nairobi. What peculiar thing have you seen about Nairobi that you did not see at Ushago where you were or wherever you were before you came to Nairobi? What I can say, just like any other city in the world, people go to the city in their countries because they have that notion you can make it in the city. And wherever you come from you come with your tabiasu za kule una pata za giji. So atomagari una pata imiandiku wa kijana Nairobi. Jotuna mwi ili na akili tabi utazi pata uku. Oh, wekuna tabi uli kujana u from Ushago. Not really. Uli kujakiwa pwatu. Nili kujakama mimi. Laki nipiwa una jua kuna this character development as a result of social na wale your circle wana influence who you become, what you are doing, mambuka mahaio. Oh, unwa ii potea na Nairobi? Of course nasiku uli zanji ya. How did you go about it? Una poteu una jifanya uja potea. Una zunguka una choka una wacha sasani ulize. After how long did you live in Nairobi? After nimi wana nimi me tembea sana. Jua nimi me waka kabisa. Arafume fika mahali kuna kawi. It's so quiet, akuna watuengi. Then wana yes niku na Nairobi. Laki nisi kama Nairobi. Wana unaka odd one out kwenyuna tembea. So wana uliza. And tell us about your experience in Nairobi. You've been here longer still. Yes, it's a lot. Ya, I really love the city to be precise. Nairobi is that city that it is heaven in hell and hell in heaven. What? I'm saying this to main a lot. For the first time when you're coming to the village, either a mother, everybody, a mother or a father will tell you that you're going to that city. Yes. Maybe when you're coming to learn or going to school, she will tell you that you're going to that city. There are a lot of thieves. I don't know, many things. So my experience, the first time I came to Nairobi, I landed at country bus. And then I had a bug. I had to tie the bug in my waist. Tie it like a rope. Ya, so that they don't steal it. If anyone comes to me like you pull it, you pull me together with it and I'll make noise. I have that mentality. Now when I went and sat there waiting for someone to come and pick me to be precise, my sister was the one who was coming to pick me. So I was waiting. I had no form. Like the one who dropped me the manamba. Yes. Told my sister that we delivered the package. Oh, you are like the package now. Ya. So I was delivered. So I came to the city. Like the dressing code was very different from what I was seeing in the city. What were you wearing? Like I just had some black shoes. Like putting it with a big jeans that is maybe faded. Tulkot na zita flair. Ni kuna mgukubua. Na t-shirt ya nambu. Na t-shirt maybe mi handikua Mr. Naisu. Ya, Mr. Naisu. Kitukama iyo. Alafu kuna ibelt. Kuna ibelt ni kuna choro apa. Maybe Bob Mali. Alafu budi naka kitambia thai. Ya, something like that. I can imagine. When I stayed in Nairobi, I learnt a lot. For the first time nili tokakwa nyumba kama na takakwa na kutembea, I only knew like two places like nili kwanajuwa Mali na itua Urupak na Kenkom. Those are the only places that maybe naisuwa say ma nili kwanajuwa personally. So I didn't know any route. So I decided to maybe walk. I walked along Thika Road. By then Thika Road was just two way before it tengenezuwa. Before it became super high. I walked straight from Thika Road from like Olsops that's Madare North. Up to town. Just walking. Why? Why were you walking? I didn't know where to board a vehicle. Nili kwa na sasa niki pandai ita nipelekawa api. Na niki nishukisha ntashukawa api. So like I was just going niki juwa niki, niki tembe aivi ita enda street nini yunguke town. So like ita trace nili kuja. So I went to town. I went up to Kenkom. Na nili tukakwa nyumba kama na kuja I again walked back home. So I learnt a lot nairobi while walking. Siku kwa na pandai gari. Na isasema one week. You were walking like a wild animal. So one day I got lost. Within the city? I got lost within the estate. Within the estate? The estate. Like where we were staying. Where were you staying? By then Madare North area 3. So I decided to walk along the estate. Now where I got lost was just behind the plot that you were staying. So I asked like najiwa plot ina itua I don't know, I can't remember the name but I asked for the name. So I had a small phone. Now you had acquired a phone? Ya. My sister gave it to me. Katululu. Ya. So someone told me pitiya pali pitiya the other side na wendu utad zungu kaivi. Now where I pitiya'd the place the guy showed me nili pitiya apu nika fika maali I don't know how the phone got lost. What? I don't know how the phone got. No one touched me. Yes. I just pitiya'd apu. What you know is that at some point you didn't have a phone? I didn't have a phone. Ya. So I learnt a lot that I won't pitiya this route again. So I went back then saw someone familiar. Ya. Nika fwata. Ya. Nika mwa nili mauna nika ma nika jirani. Nika fwata then I got nika samatwa I was just here. How did I get lost? It was really like very funny how I got lost nili pote aji na nili kwa tunumaii pili. So nika kuja nika realiza like changes in life like ukupen nili kusha nili sasa nika anza kushika antenna apu kuna wezi. Ya. So I realised that nili kwa na pitanana na watu kumbe the ones I was pitanana with these are the ones who like went to my pocket wakavu ruta simu while to cut na pitanana. It was a small bridge nia samu ya called Uruma. Yes. The bridge that connects Uruma and Madariya. Uruma and Madariya. So I was made to Zunguka the bridge coming to the place that I knew that this was the plot. But Nairobi welcomed you. Nairobi welcomed you. So you went with your case collector. It's like you came into good hands. She was left to survive and now that is the problem with how men are handles. When how boy child is handled and how girls are handled. You were left to fight on your own. She got some heaven. She landed in good hands. No, I have my own share of losing things unknowingly. Tell us. First of all it started in Nakuru. was working somewhere I met some guys bale kwa na watching movie adjfro so they were looking like this but when I saw them you said you will go to a shop so when I was passing them I was real short wepi wole kuna na kuhuwa chia adjfro? no me kwa street unatembea but when I watch movie shop I watch DJFro but the bakeisha is going to buy the little ones So kuna moja mbele mwengine nyuma, muna pita apokatikati. So when I was passing, ikaski anime guswa. Kido gotu, but kufika 3 steps, nika ona sinasimu, kwa angaliye, but then around your suspect, but sinai evidence, I walked away. Jupia atasimu ilu kwa imezimu. Pia, fana irobi. I bought some trouble because then I took my phone, I started to, I put it in the bag. Kufika kwa bus-having, lukwana hendapale Ray Lewis. Nyingi ya kwa busi bilasimu, si dwi ili pote aje. So nairobi wacha ni seime weziwa nairobi, they are experts. We are going to discuss that, we are about the weziwa nairobi. Let's start with the rash. You know people are saying that nairobi kila mtu ana kimbia, watu ana hendapale. And I contrast this with, there is somebody who was guiding journalists on how to behave in nairobi, but na seime time really doesn't matter in nairobi. If you are invited for a meeting, be one hour late and you realize that you've really come so early, so early. So how do you bury these things? Like people really rush, everybody is rushing in nairobi, akuna moja na kimbia, poli poli, kila moja dwi viadi, kiki kongana na mtu wilecha, sorry, sorry, na kuhenda, akuna explanation. Watu ana hendapale na nairobi, we start with you. Watu ana hendapale na nairobi, na muna watu ana cheliwa meetings, with all that rash. Nairobi being the capital city of Kenya, watu ni weiengi kutoka kila pembera inchi, na kila mtu ana shugulizake, so you are not there tiku angale wame pitarini, yame vanini, kila mtu ana tembera. So I think my opinion is, because people are hardworking and they are busy with their lives, that's why they work. You think Nairobians are very hardworking? Ya, people were there, they are people who are hardworking because there is someone rushing there, iu kupita na pita na nisimi amtu wame onanda na kimbisha, in the process, a kokazi in short. Kila mtu a kokazi a kimbia. No, no, the rash, the rash... The rash of the lateness. It has a lot of like meanings. Like when you in town, you can't walk slowly in Nairobi. First, when you walk slowly, one you might be a suspect by the police. Like kujakuliza eki gana, ukuna plan gana. Iku upi aidi. Ya, where is your... Especially if you have a bag. Like everybody is minding his or her own business in Nairobi. That's why the rash... Again, the rash, apart from the police and maybe the kajos, these are like... I don't know how to describe it. Like when you are in town, you can't say that you are a suspect by the police. You are a suspect. Ya, I am a suspect. This one we can really treat as a journalism. They will follow you. So like, when we follow a suit, like when I walk that fast, no one will mind me. No one will ask me to take a break. Brother, I will ask you. Can you help me in this? Like, you know, helping in this, kido go to, mtu ananda... Even if someone is serious like he wants this help, ya wukweli, no one will stop. Kilam tu sasa na henda tu. Sasa, iyo rashi na kujal like mtu ananda taka kumainu business, ya kia ananda taka, henda. No one. Na kuna rashi piya genuine like I'm late because of the traffic that was in Thika Road, Ili Kwaimin Shika, kumisa. It's a genuine rash. You are late, like with five or ten minutes at your workplace or either somewhere else. So they are genuine rashes and they are rashes that plus what kalei kaleichia say da, they are those rashes that maybe, mtu ame focus, eagle, eagle rash ya, mtu ananda kitu pali America ananda, vile ulesa polisi alis na chiwa simu kwa. Deman alit time kawana like, sasa na taka kweka ii piki-piki speeding in any rash. Sasa, the lifeguard in addition to that, iku tembe a tembe apole poli, na kakanga huna confidence, you are not sure where you are going. In the process, kuma alit tua tua kwa puku angali, na onhanya huna tembe apole poli, huna kuliza unhenda api, huna kukuliza, huna taka gari za api, ni ni ni ni. In the process, ya kuhongia huna putezas something you are carrying. Sasa, siji kama tuta ishi iwi. But umewa ikua kond, muna sama iwa, watu nika maona angali, watu tembe apole poli, waka waka kond. Kuna manyama, waka ikua kond between you. I've seen that but I've not experienced that. I've seen that happening to my fellow. I have a friend back in the estates. He's called Isaac. Isaac, he went to shop, to shop some clothes apagi komba. So I called him. Hey, brother ni komtanya. I'll be there in a few niko kwa gari. Then upon reaching the estate, an old man called him. An old man. An old man. Alimuliza direction. Nataka children somnya iko karibu. He gave direction and upon giving direction, ali jipata kama na pati ya na vitu zeya mebeba zote. Bag, simu. Even the remaining coin that he had, the twenty-seven. He gave that music. So after like ten minutes when I was calling him, he could not reach him. He was offline. Yes. Ali kuja, ni komuliza, hey, what happened? Aka ni ambi ni me koniwa. So what's the fun here? You say direction, how much to say direction? That's why it's tricky. You don't trust anyone in this city. Mi na heza sama, tumwa iko aniwa, but not me. Ni my friend ali ni peleka apo. Ruana awa tu kakwa kitebo, na makadita tu, na imuwa siji guza gani kona pesa. In fact, na angusyanga miyambili mebele, dunambu wokote, ukiletu na imuwa onyesha miyatano. Upewe hiwa. Siji upewe ni, unonesha miyatano. In fact, these people are very tricky. Ukenyesha miyatano na fa, by the way, kupei miyatato wukae naio. Ikae miyambili apo. Juhia liye kele miyambili. So my friend liye kele miyatano ya ke. Ukiwa naia. Naia ni mi naumpewa presa weka. Aka niyambili, naia ni kuwatuo cha. Tutuli kuwana he, ni kumambe kele atuana. Ako aka, kwa zalafu kuna isa kuli na zungu kanga, iwi kuna kwaanga tim, mumojiyendi ona kwa miyendi kuna mingine hi, sijiwa na badilisha nga na daki kanga pi. So miyatano liye potebe dho atu jaya miyana, it's kinda embarrassing. We don't talk about it much. We always say ma, ati wili niyanganiwa pesa. So like things like the ones she's saying, those are the things that maybe add the rush, the rush in the city. And they change you to another person in the city. Mmm. So you learn, the topic the question was, ni nini umewai learn from the, from Kanyro Institute of Character Development. Like ni nini, now people learn, people learn, like now where you know, when I do it, why would you do it now? You know you don't see people gathering, and they are speaking, then you go join them anyhow. There are a lot of things to learn. Yes. Like me personally, I've learnt that there are some routes, I can't pass dressing like this. And the same routes I can pass dressing like, there's a way of. Maybe suits. Yeah. Like when you go to places like in Madari and down valley, the moment you want to pass, you maybe you can see it is a shallow road. Yes. It's a very big road. Mmm. But now, these guys have an eagle eye. Yes. Someone has seen you there, and I say ma, is it clad in imzuri sana like, the way of dress is very good. So you might pass to that route, piti apu, ushtuki e, awuna ni wukauchi. Because they were calculating on, how they'll dress you and take everything from you. So I've learnt like, there are some routes, see where's the piti. You avoid. Yeah. I avoid some routes. For the sake of my life and maybe. For your own safety. For my own safety. Yeah, you just avoid those routes. And again, I've learnt Nairobi, you can learn, you can like, oneeza tengeneza, vitumingi sana. Nairobi ufungu wa kili. Sana sana sisi yutsa. Nairobi ufungu wa kili. Nairobi ufungu wa itzan, I open and maybe, a kili open. Awezi kakwaii city, kama awuna kenyuna fanya. That's why they say, nguvuna achama shambani, wukuna tumia kili. Awuna kuja na kili. Nguvuna ekali me wuko. Like to be precise, when I stayed with my sister, for a while, my sister made me a shopkeeper because by then, alikwana enda college, KMTC. He's a very good sister, ana pima kili watu sana. Uki jana tafanya nini. So, like, he started telling me, intak pati e blanda, nikuwam bivi lewana fanya, you make a juicer, then you sell. So, nili kwa na yo mentality like, I'm staying at her place, silipirant. So, the old money that I was getting, ili kwa tukwai, like unona, ujama na vaivi, na vizuri. Now I started changing your lifestyle, yushago nimi. Hata. Pressure. So, ujama na vaivi zuri na taka, jeans kama ii, viatu kama iizi. By then, there was this famous shoes called Supra. I bought Supra at 3,500. Na pesa ya juo? Yes. Because that money, nili kwa na juo silipirant. No, silipirant. Na mengia jiji. Fudiko. Io pesa mina an. It's mine. The business, I was told that ya shop na ya shop. But this ya jui, na ii niya kwa. Na yuza kwa esi tu niya angu. So, iu liyo bieshara angu ya kwa. Sa, ii pesa, the only thing I could do with it was like, niba ii viatu, maybe niya na tao, ni kule chipo na kuku because is only zile zile asiko diaspora. So, one day an eye-opena came, sista angu kanu liza, after 2 months, where apart from kuna nwa, is it viatu na angu, ni, you go to town like I was not even going to church back then. I could then, I scored them to church nima baby, a land chivi. I'm a Seventh Day Adventist. Yes. Niki fika tu church iwi ni kai kidogo, I'm lost, I'm in town. So, you kuna pesa? One day, one day I kanu liza, hi pesa niwa unapata hi. Ni ni konstaktivu siya fagina. Apart from, kuba isi ungo tu wewa, na kula kula tu. Ya ya ya. Ika ni ambia, from now hands forth, you'll be giving me this man. I'll only leave you with 200 shillings because there's no way you're going. You're not paying rent, you're not being anything. So like, I was, ali ni aiki a target. Pa month na tako ni pati e, kwa hi pesa niwa na tegneza. Daily niwa na tegneza roughly pesa nga api ni kamambia. So I was like keeping like 3000 every month. So did that make you change? Ya, it made me change because e 3000, she budgeted for me. Ali nuwa sufuriya, akanu nuwa gas na besheni. Then after, Aka kwa chakuna kwishi pekiya? Aka ni ambia, there is a house up here. I've paid for the house for 2 months. Ya ya. Utaenda kwishi apu uji tegeme. I don't know how you'll pay it after 3 months. How was your feeling? Now like, I was starting like, will I make it? The reality starts hitting. Is that when you started going to church now? Now I realized that my mother from home ali kwa nani ame mwambia. Umtoto, asikaya pusa na kuwako. Mfundishi atrehe vile, na isha iku umtoto. Nwa na. Now I started like, tozana ayupena. After the third month, yo sasa rentime isha niya li lipa. So like, ili kwa like. Yungun yo sasa mimi sasa. How much was rent? Rent was 3000. It was just a single room. It had no bed. I was just sleeping in the mattress. I laughed. Finally enough, aka endaka niitengizakitand. Kani ambi kitanda piya siya ako. If you can't pay for it, it is 8000 shillings. If you can't pay for it, I'll take it back. So I'm just giving it to you. Ki asitu. Hey, for the time being. Ya, utaru diisha. Do you have experience? Do you have such experience? Ma'im ma'im niwa waku handiliwa na velvet klansim kosa. Okay. I didn't say my other name. People call me that lady. I have learnt to solve my problems alone. So I'm relating whatever he's saying, except that in the part of that harshness of the nini. Of the sister. Ya, I had to work to get what I want. With whom did you come to stay in Nairobi? Ya ma'im li kuja kutukivi ako? Okay. I came alone because I don't have the family members. I don't have those people in the families. You can say who is who or an auntie to connect you somewhere. So it's you and what you believe in and you move on in confidence the way we are talking about the rash in Nairobi. Did you come to stay alone in Nairobi? U li kuja kwa nani? I came. Kwenji kwa kwa ya kwanza? Okay. When I came to Nairobi, I came because I was a student at Mount Kenya University. So I had to find a house. Oh, you came as a student? Along Vika Road. Ya. I was alone. Okay, so that's when you started making money on your own and all that? Ya, because... Or you were getting support from home? When I was coming, I left some projects to support me when I'm here. Because I was a student leader let me say 2020 we were being paid so I invested was selling shoes. Okay. You have a life. How do you guys tell me about Tamakin? Have you tamaked? Ya. What's your experience with Tamakin? It's a bit hard. It can make you like maybe lose hope in life. It can make you think of many things in the city, Nairobi. Like it's... When I finished like maybe college, I had a friend called Kevin. So my first job it was like an attachment. We ended up in Kamaambia. The company you work in hasn't been in touch with. Ya, it's okay. But for a few months Kamaambia 3 months we had 3 reports of attachment in Rudisha Shule. So I went there one of the company I went to Kamaambia and he told me I'll allow you Kujia attachment and he told me it's okay. And the place was like I was wondering how I'll survive with 4,000 per month. Where were you staying? Laki Samo. Laki Samo by then. Then Tumlolongu? So where were you at that affair? I was working as early as 3 I was working at the illegal town 30 Bob around 4.15 or so. And 30 Bob I was in Pandagari where my mother was. Oh. So again I went to Sabu and stayed in Lolongu there was a railway so up to where I was going to Sabaki was like 50 shillings. This 50 was in Mingisana so my idea was to stay in Lolongu for 30 so I stayed in Lolongu but past Lolongu is now 50. Oh. So in Lolongu I stayed in 50 and the guy gives me back 20 shillings and I just sit in the vehicle but I stayed in Lolongu to shuke I was in March and I was going to work. How many days were you staying? There is no day. I was just sitting. You were very lucky. Then I went to Tisha and I said I have made it. I have used 60 shillings. The only advantage that we had we were working on a field works easy to generators and power backup so like we were going mostly in Nairobi to look for a company coming to Nairobi sites. After the attachment like Kili Katika I had to start to ground zero again like tenakazingin I took everything that I had Kila Kitu Makampuni we will call you. I walked Come out and ask After every interview we will call you. You wait for that call forever. Up to now I am still waiting. I know I can count the companies that I went to. That we will call you after doing interview. I think life is harder for boy child than girl child. Do you also have such experiences? Have you ever termaked? I want to say termaking is very real it doesn't have gender it does not respect that because when what one enda shule both genders want to attend universities lakini hakuna job market they are for the ladies and these are there for the men. So termaking is real for everyone and that's why we are working at Dika Superhighway we used to go to work in Nairobi we used to go to work in Magani lakini Halipi Gari we used to go to Shkili we used to go home we used to go to school we used to go to school we used to go to school we used to go to school so termaking is real it's there the graduates kila siku ekonomi na flat na ho so the best thing is that you, the ukitoka nini don't depend on kanyu umesomea unless ppta kwa iyoshi de kwa termak na kuju na kazi you start thinking onakua innovative na other things because he said that Nairobi is a learning place we will learn you can survive on anything kia me soma engineering kia liandap kumeku juiz so you wonder why how engineering na juiz zina ingiana I wish we had a lot of time termaking will just be a whole topic one day here to discuss termaking it's a whole field that needs a lot of exhaustion ukona experience na begasi both of you are Christians from the place you are lighted to this studio I know you found so many beggas on there kuna hawa totally they can't work na kuna hawa ni blind of course you drop the coins as you work but kuna hawa mingiana energetic kumeku fwata tu na kiki kutia suti although ni kichafu you are age ments wa kukuleki gomba wa nga juo atu anu nuevi tu wa bebe yo mizigwa pelike kwa diari stage wapere fotibok ama whatever coins they are hustling kuna juo kuna mtu nezapata wu yu eniwa na nga gana siiichi na kwa mba pesa omoke ni for survival wu nenezampia kuna wu na patianga na patianga eniwa na kaa na kaa na di serve wu na watu na dani nijinu ni bega wu na wapere tu na juo kuna hii story li kwa nga kuna watu anu eka viwete kila kona alafu kote iso pesa alafu kila juo ni wana watu kua alafu wana pere wana tumishaara so iti like wana fanyi amtu kazi wapete pakuishi kwa onekana these people they mainly come from Tanzania not Kenyans majority are from Tanzania you also said you listen to me learn from Nairobi about beggars not that much also but me turn away manender kwa if you have it give them if you don't work na kama na kaka na guvu and these people have heard more than us tell us your experience with beggars in Nairobi the beggars practically I don't know who is genuine and who is not genuine at a point I was telling one of my friends job job kul is my good friend I had a story I was telling a job I was in town and I met a beggar like alikua na mugu kabisa mi ni kwa enda ni kwa drop like 50 shillings so when I came back from the same route with a lot of bottles of liquor the same guy the same guy he was drunk he was drunk so you felt like you felt like you felt like you felt like you felt like you felt like you felt like a scenario that happened I felt like I was drunk I felt like I felt like I felt like I was drunk I felt like in Nairobi in the city you can't know who is genuine beggar and who is not so what do you give what do you do sometimes I ask whatever we do we will be it's upon her or him na mugu ake tenda we manenda zako tenda we manenda zako and that's how you deal with beggars in Nairobi there's another thing that we can't live without touching on time it's already on our neck about the pyramid schemes those who say that on a fad message on a fad message that you can make they say you can make 3000 to 5000 in a week then do a senior of you join those how are online how are online I have joined one tell us your experience this time a friend called me and he told me that he is a mek he invited me just come and do I went 680 hotel mostly in Afanikanga and they called you in a very expensive hotel I went there maybe in Kata so like the way they were explaining this it was clear where we were I don't pay 2500 it's like a chain registration once you go the more you go the more you go the more you grow I went there 2500 the only money I have now where will I get this money again what were you selling which product were you selling there was no one selling any product oh you went the more you go you earn from it did you let out I couldn't do that because I had no registration money oh you didn't pay that I didn't pay I met others too but they were saying they came from Singapore and their registration was 20k you bring 20k then your friend when you go there and the chain continues a lot of people have evidence when you go there you came to me and sold the money you got it I sold it you went there and sold it I have recorded a video but I was angry I was worried and I knew that money would not come back as much as you wanted I was in a bad mood I was in a bad mood I didn't know na irobi moachongo a kafiki ria tu kilataha watu espatiali vili akuna makazi tuwambi iwi na iwi, they will fall for it so wana kuwanga it is real, it's happening and people will always continue to be conned because that is conning most of the time in fact they start by telling you wacha rana maso mo nipasangapi muna lipa yo university ama if you are working, they tell you maybe earning 20,000 the time you can take to make a million out of that say you are not saving so 20,000 will be multiplied by 12 months by one year they will calculate you to you and say by the time you will be a millionaire it is 157 years from today alafunona enyo apa kuna ukweli kuna kuna ukweli because it's numbers it's calculations we are like CIC maybe CIC amount and 2 million we are like they will send you photos alafu they have this habit of going to the airport to tunde get to a easy flight karebu karebu they take a photo there and be a juicy tuliko ehi tuliko ya ni awa tu na kwa tu na ujyanja fulani means in Nairobi i think we are going to finish with that kuna kuna wajima kuna pesa wana nda kwa big hotels na kuna watu ave burn kuna place wana nda zaku na fanya they are good hotels they say wana good restaurant inside where you work but there are people who still live wana nda kwa zile chapati zaku kata na kwa chafua have you ever eaten chafua in Nairobi i am not really sorry you see how girls are feeling good in Nairobi i am not a dynasty but i have not been there where you have been just eating in good hotels in Nairobi i thank god for that i am sorry very like what's your experience with kibandaski in Nairobi food is cheap cheaper than home cheaper than home food is cheap and nice food concerning where you live and how you take life i have taken you chafua kata maragwe kuchapati na supu i have friends even my brother my blood brother he is a doctor by profession alizo he is your life in Nairobi when i was with Kulamutura it was a surf sand so it was a place where you deal with those however, Kulamutura is different for you your life is different Kulamutura is good Kulamutura is described in other words Kulamutura is described na piya piya si misi Una kuna kwa shina, shina kwa giza si tamu mcha na utu na inataka apu na pilipe ni giza deka eriyo alafu kuna kwa shina kuna kwa kainzi apu kuna kwa kia si na toleo There is something good about food zavi manda yanyu na mesi isu food as itjawa yenge fridge nifood tuzi me toka market kwa saizu zi na kulwa saizu zi na isak jimi bitu vina pela kwa kwa kwa place yenge hiyo teli na kwa akuna teli apu What I'm trying to say nifibanda nifibanda in fact if I was to invest I look for a nice place and put a very nice kibanda provided it's clean with all that nipema jamata zi What I'm saying is this when God gets you out of something you stay out of it God will make you try your place you can afford the mother and the kibanda you go where you can Our time is much spent kaleche look at this camera this camera one and tell somebody who wants to come to Nairobi because we are 5'4 everywhere in this nation and beyond somebody new who just finished who just finished campus who wants to come to Nairobi Fundisha Ok bini gipenda kusema if you are there and you want to come to the city Nairobi ni mahali kuna watu kutoka kila kona ya inji kila amtu anata biazake unata biazen utakuja nazuuku but deep down there is that person in you and you know what you want in life because it is still in this Nairobi where people come when they are very fresh and polite ubutaji utumiyaji wadawa zakulevia Uizi piya yukohapa Ukahaba piya ni Nairobi mambomabaya mabaya the same place, piya Nairobi you meet people who are thinking just like you and you come up with an idea na muna endambali so if you want to come to Nairobi kujatuna confidence and put God first and things will work out for you Nairobi toeva uansu kam tu Nairobi, it's fokus. What is bringing you must have an agenda while coming to the city. Usi kujetwati nakuja kutembeli ya ki nanani ahuna fokus. Kam fokus. What you want to do, kamani shule, fokus kwa shule. Kamani biyashara, fokus biyashara. And I would encourage like, if you feel like coming to Nairobi, usi skezi stories enye, maybe kuna wezi, maybe kuna whatever thing. Kam and fokus with the life, real life situations. Nairobi will teach you a lot. It will explore you much. Nye ata uki tokawende kwa village, kumezwae, kamani life mumu uta komezwae pana Nairobi. Kamani aditigani uta komi iskiya pana Nairobi. Kenyoma ona na Nairobi. Ata ona kwingine taina. Nia patu Nairobi. Thank you. We called it Kanaero. That's how it's not nowadays. And we called it Kanaero Institute of Character Development. If you are weak, you will have a problem here. If you are gullible, if you can easily be cheated, you can have real problems in Nairobi. And if you are a glutton, when you are mezoya kukula saam na nyubani in sikuja Nairobi, kusaba mubu takufanja. But all in all, Kanaero is a nice place where you get everything and everything. This has been one in the morning. I know you have learned today was much educative much educative if you have been following. And right now after this, we are going to have Tano Kali by Pera Makena. So for now, we are going to post this on YouTube so follow us on all of the social media platform we are going to get everything so that you learn for now, salutes.