My sweet mama is now 75 years
of age. I thank God for her life; the God of Kirinyaga has preserved her life
since she was born years before the State of Emergency was declared in Kenya.
She was unique; a ‘white girl’ with black hair. Many a young man would come
from villages far and wide to see this ‘white girl’ who had black, long, shiny
hair...oh was my mama beautiful? She was not tall and not short, she had
a beauty gap in between her teeth on the upper jaw…probably now you understand
where I borrow some features from (wink). Oh mama, the woman who brought
eight of us, my siblings and I, to this world. Today, we are six out of the
eight, who mama gracefully carried in her womb and raised amidst all the
challenges of motherhood and hard economic times. One thing, however, happened
as she later narrated to me when she was sure I had grown up enough to
understand.
One day, she carried her 3 year old
third born child, a son whom she had named after my uncle from my baba’s
side; they went to the shamba, to tend to her arrow-roots near the river.
That day my eldest brother, her second born son, had gone to school, he was in
nursery school; mama was determined to educate all her children despite
the fact that she was denied education. Yes, her mama, my grandma,
decided that mama would not join school during the Emergency in 1950’s because
she feared that mama’s mind would get ‘corrupted’ by the ‘white man’;
she preferred that mama stayed at home and helped her fetch water. Despite
this, mama clearly understood the importance of education. Therefore,
when she enrolled her second born son in school, mama was left with no
choice but to always bring along with her the youngest son to the shamba.
She did not have anyone else to look after the young boy.
As usual, she put the boy on the
ground, in the shade of a tree, and went to tend to her arrow-roots. It was a
beautiful sunny day, rain had poured two days earlier and the arrow-roots had sprung
back to life. Their leaves, very green, were swayed from side to side by the
morning breeze, a motion that revealed the sparkling drops of water, which
resembled ice-crystals in the morning sun. The nearby Kiwe River was full
of life as the clear waters collected from rain and various springs uphill made
their way down hill and smoothly swept every bend in the canal. The water was
clear, as clear as rain water...this was a rare sight because Kiwe River
passes through some lands that have brown loam soil, which dissolves in the
water during the rainy season and turns the water brown; actually, my mum
always avoided fetching water from Kiwe River until two weeks after a
heavy downpour. For those two weeks, she would use the water she had trapped from
the rusty roofs of our house into her black plastic container.
A bright day can be mistaken to be a
day of fortunes and when the opposite happens, we tend to draw a lot of conclusions;
we suspect all types of causes…evil people who do not wish us well, malicious
beings who are after our happiness, whose aim is to cause us bad luck and
misfortunes. I must say it takes a strong God-fearing heart to know that
sometimes things happen, not because of malicious people but because of God’s
will, natures will if you prefer. One day my mama told me, “sometimes,
it is nature’s only way of teaching us some real difficult lessons, other times
it is God’s only way of taking back what He had given to us, for each one of us
has a purpose on earth, the purpose of which only the Creator knows.” She went
on, “None of us knows when their purpose in the world is complete.”
According to mama, my brother who I never got to meet, cried and cried, he did not stop crying no matter what mama gave him, he was rushed to hospital but he was not sick, the doctor could not prescribe any medicine, the boy cried up to midnight when he finally stopped…up to this day. The following day, mama sort answers and could not find any, her friends and relatives came up with all sorts of theories, but none could be proven, none has ever been proven up until this day. Despite the pain, mama learnt to accept some happenings the hard way; she accepted that her son was gone, that she would never hear her son cry again, that her son would never make noise for her to listen while she tended to her arrow-roots at Kiwe River.
According to mama, my brother who I never got to meet, cried and cried, he did not stop crying no matter what mama gave him, he was rushed to hospital but he was not sick, the doctor could not prescribe any medicine, the boy cried up to midnight when he finally stopped…up to this day. The following day, mama sort answers and could not find any, her friends and relatives came up with all sorts of theories, but none could be proven, none has ever been proven up until this day. Despite the pain, mama learnt to accept some happenings the hard way; she accepted that her son was gone, that she would never hear her son cry again, that her son would never make noise for her to listen while she tended to her arrow-roots at Kiwe River.
This story saddens my heart every
time I think about it. However, it teaches me a big lesson, which I very much
appreciate, that each one of us has been created for a purpose, the purpose
which we never know when it is accomplished, and only then, after fulfilling
our purpose does the creator come back to take that which is His.
I remember listening to Dr. Myles Munroe a few weeks before he passed on, as he passionately talked about living a purposeful life on JKL Live in one of Kenya’s Television channels. His words moved me and from hence, I decided to determine my purpose in life and fulfill it. A few weeks later, when Dr. Munroe passed on I was shocked, I fought back tears; this was a man I had listened to three weeks ago and now he was no more, I had woken up that morning to news that this transformational man of God had died in a plane crash. Then, I realized just how short life is; I appreciated the reason for living a purposeful life as I fondly remembered when Dr. Munroe declared on national television, here in Kenya, that he was completely emptying himself to fulfill the purpose for which he was created on earth; with these words Dr. Munroe had prophesied his end time.
I remember listening to Dr. Myles Munroe a few weeks before he passed on, as he passionately talked about living a purposeful life on JKL Live in one of Kenya’s Television channels. His words moved me and from hence, I decided to determine my purpose in life and fulfill it. A few weeks later, when Dr. Munroe passed on I was shocked, I fought back tears; this was a man I had listened to three weeks ago and now he was no more, I had woken up that morning to news that this transformational man of God had died in a plane crash. Then, I realized just how short life is; I appreciated the reason for living a purposeful life as I fondly remembered when Dr. Munroe declared on national television, here in Kenya, that he was completely emptying himself to fulfill the purpose for which he was created on earth; with these words Dr. Munroe had prophesied his end time.
Today, however, I ask myself, “How
many people get a chance to prophesy their end time?” As this question lingers
in my mind, I remember that my late brother, who passed on at the age of three,
who cried and cried for hours until midnight did not prophesy his death,
otherwise mama could have been psychologically prepared to accept
whatever befell her. I write this article with a grieving heart, this is not
because I have lost any loved one, a favor which I cannot forget to thank God
for. Believe me; crossing over to a new year, safe and sound, is not a mere favor,
glory, glory, to the Most High. But look, it saddens me that even at this time
and age, many a people have not appreciated nature’s will, that each one of us
has a purpose on earth, and once the purpose is accomplished, despite one’s
age, the creator shall fold our old skins, work tools, and carry us to a place
neither of us has been to before; a place where we shall leave and never return
to our loved ones!
I refuse to be convinced otherwise!
I strongly believe in creation, the Supreme God, nature, and purpose…otherwise,
only the poor would be condemned to die at a tender age and the rich to live
forever. Money does not buy life; only the Almighty, who most of us believe in,
knows the day and the hour, and when He decides that your purpose in this
paradise is accomplished, He folds your work tools and whisks you off to
another place where you live with angels happily ever after!
To all the
souls that have left us, “May you Rest in Eternal Peace”
Happy New Year
readers…I wish you abundant blessings in this New Year 2015!
An article by
Gladys Muthara.
Congrats Gladys. This piece is deep, and challenging. I too have decided to determine my purpose in life and fulfill it. I will empty myself to fulfill the purpose for which I was created on earth.
ReplyDeleteMay God bless you, and may He bless me, that we shall live purposeful lives, everyday.
Thank you Juddy Gitahi, I am humbled that the piece has challenged and encouraged you to continue living a purposeful life! Blessings
DeleteThis is a great piece. May you live to fulfill your purpose in life.
ReplyDeleteAmen. May live to fulfill your purpose as well on earth. Blessings to you Stephen Machua
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