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Archive for August 11th, 2010

For the married, those thinking about Marriage and the Divorced: REPOST

Posted by Administrator on August 11, 2010

A Married Couple Holding Hands

A Married Couple Holding Hands

MARRIAGE

When I got home that night as my wife served dinner, I held her hand and said, I’ve got something to tell you. She sat down and ate quietly. Again I observed the hurt in her eyes.

Suddenly I didn’t know how to open my mouth. But I had to let her know what I was thinking. I want a divorce. I raised the topic calmly.

She didn’t seem to be annoyed by my words, instead she asked me softly, why?

I avoided her question. This made her angry. She threw away the chopsticks and shouted at me, you are not a man! That night, we didn’t talk to each other. She was weeping. I knew she wanted to find out what had happened to our marriage. But I could hardly give her a satisfactory answer; she had lost my heart to Jane. I didn’t love her anymore. I just pitied her!

With a deep sense of guilt, I drafted a divorce agreement which stated that she could own our house, our car, and 30% stake of my company.

She glanced at it and then tore it into pieces. The woman who had spent ten years of her life with me had become a stranger. I felt sorry for her wasted time, resources and energy but I could not take back what I had said for I loved Jane so dearly. Finally she cried loudly in front of me, which was what I had expected to see. To me her cry was actually a kind of release. The idea of divorce which had obsessed me for several weeks seemed to be firmer and clearer now.

The next day, I came back home very late and found her writing something at the table. I didn’t have supper but went straight to sleep and fell asleep very fast because I was tired after an eventful day with Jane.

When I woke up, she was still there at the table writing. I just did not care so I turned over and was asleep again.

In the morning she presented her divorce conditions: she didn’t want anything from me, but needed a month’s notice before the divorce. She requested that in that one month we both struggle to live as normal a life as possible. Her reasons were simple: our son had his exams in a month’s time and she didn’t want to disrupt him with our broken marriage.

This was agreeable to me. But she had something more, she asked me to recall how I had carried her into out bridal room on our wedding day.

She requested that every day for the month’s duration I carry her out of our bedroom to the front door ever morning. I thought she was going crazy. Just to make our last days together bearable I accepted her odd request.

I told Jane about my wife’s divorce conditions. . She laughed loudly and thought it was absurd. No matter what tricks she applies, she has to face the divorce, she said scornfully.

My wife and I hadn’t had any body contact since my divorce intention was explicitly expressed. So when I carried her out on the first day, we both appeared clumsy. Our son clapped behind us, daddy is holding mommy in his arms. His words brought me a sense of pain. From the bedroom to the sitting room, then to the door, I walked over ten meters with her in my arms. She closed her eyes and said softly; don’t tell our son about the divorce. I nodded, feeling somewhat upset. I put her down outsidethe door. She went to wait for the bus to work. I drove alone to the office.

On the second day, both of us acted much more easily. She leaned on my chest. I could smell the fragrance of her blouse. I realized that I hadn’t looked at this woman carefully for a long time. I realized she was not young any more. There were fine wrinkles on her face, her hair was graying! Our marriage had taken its toll on her. For a minute I wondered what I had done to her.

On the fourth day, when I lifted her up, I felt a sense of intimacy returning. This was the woman who had given ten years of her life to me.

On the fifth and sixth day, I realized that our sense of intimacy was growing again. I didn’t tell Jane about this. It became easier to carry her as the month slipped by. Perhaps the everyday workout made me stronger.

She was choosing what to wear one morning. She tried on quite a few dresses but could not find a suitable one. Then she sighed, all my dresses have grown bigger. I suddenly realized that she had grown so thin, that was the reason why I could carry her more easily.

Suddenly it hit me… she had buried so much pain and bitterness in her heart. Subconsciously I reached out and touched her head.

Our son came in at the moment and said, Dad, it’s time to carry mom out. To him, seeing his father carrying his mother out had become an essential part of his life. My wife gestured to our son to come closer and hugged him tightly. I turned my face away because I was afraid I might change my mind at this last minute. I then held her in my arms, walking from the bedroom, through the sitting room, to the hallway. Her hand surrounded my neck softly and naturally. I held her body tightly; it was just like our wedding day.

But her much lighter weight made me sad.

 On the last day, when I held her in my arms I could hardly move a step. Our son had gone to school. I held her tightly and said, I hadn’t noticed that our life lacked intimacy.

I drove to office…. jumped out of the car swiftly without locking the door. I was afraid any delay would make me change my mind…I walked upstairs. Jane opened the door and I said to her, Sorry, Jane, I do not want the divorce anymore.

She looked at me, astonished, and then touched my forehead. Do you have a fever? She said. I moved her hand off my head. Sorry, Jane, I said, I won’t divorce. My marriage life was boring probably because she and I didn’t value the details of our lives, not because we didn’t love each other anymore. Now I realize that since I carried her into my home on our wedding day I am supposed to hold her until death do us apart.

Jane seemed to suddenly wake up. She gave me a loud slap and then slammed the door and burst into tears. I walked downstairs and drove away.

At the floral shop on the way, I ordered a bouquet of flowers for my wife. The salesgirl asked me what to write on the card. I smiled and wrote, I’ll carry you out every morning until death do us apart.

That evening I arrived home, flowers in my hands, a smile on my face, I run up stairs, only to find my wife in the bed – dead.My wife had been fighting CANCER for months and I was so busy with Jane to even notice. She knew that she would die soon and she wanted to save me from the whatever negative reaction from our son, in case we push thru with the divorce.– At least, in the eyes of our son— I’m a loving husband….

The small details of your lives are what really matter in a relationship. It is not the mansion, the car, property, the money in the bank. These create an environment conducive for happiness but cannot give happiness in themselves. So find time to be your spouse’s friend and do those little things for each other that build intimacy. Do have a real happy marriage!

If you don’t share this, nothing will happen to you.

If you do, you just might save a marriage.Many of life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.

A CHRIST-CENTERED MARRIAGE IS A MARRIAGE THAT IS SURE TO LAST A LIFETIME.

-A Repost from Facebook

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Wedding bells and whistles on a train

Posted by Administrator on August 11, 2010

Francis Waweru who leased the 1923 train from Rift Valley Railways. Photo/LIZ MUTHONI

Francis Waweru who leased the 1923 train from Rift Valley Railways. Photo/LIZ MUTHONI

You can now have your wedding aboard a moving train. Alternatively, you and your family can have fun using the new services aboard a vintage locomotive.

Weddings on the vintage engine will cost about Sh200,000. “The couple can choose to sit at the foot plate (driver’s cabin), or in front of the engine (from outside) on a historic seat known as the “cow catcher”, says the curator of the Kenya Railways Museum, Maurice Barasa.

Mr Barasa explains: “The seat was used by former American president Theodore Roosevelt when game hunting. “He would sit in front of the engine as it moved and shoot animals in the wilderness,” he adds.

Such couples can be accompanied by their guests in an 1899 vintage couch for the ride and photo shoot,” says Mr Francis Waweru, the proprietor of Mawenzi Gardens, the hotel that hired the engines.

The leisure rides on historical steam engines are here courtesy of Kenya Railways and a hotelier. The two engines, Class 3020 and Class 2409, have been hired and started working last weekend.

Families will be boarding the steam engine at the Railway headquarters for a 50 kilometre ride to Athi River, Embakasi, Thika or Limuru.

The first ride last Sunday was met with excitement when more than 60 families took the “slow ride” to Athi River. “It is a great treat. I thank dad for bringing me here,” said Janet Akinyi, 11.

Her classmate Eric Kamau, 12, said he had never been so close to a train. “I only see them in pictures. I like the slow speed as I am able to watch things outside,” he said as the locomotive roared towards Athi River.

Colonial period

Records show about 62 such engines found their way in Kenya from England during the colonial period to boost transport between Mombasa and Kisumu. “We have seven coaches that can be mounted on the engine, and each has a capacity of 72 comfortably seated passengers,” said Waweru.

Mr Waweru said Nairobi residents love unique things. “More parents are reserving Sundays for families. I wanted a family day out that does not have to be in a bar,” said Mr Waweru. The engines move at 25 kilometres per hour. “It is meant for leisure and sight seeing, so there is no hurry,” said Mr Barasa.

A music system has been mounted, the seats are clean and there is someone to teach riders the history of the 1896 Kenya-Uganda Railway, then known as Victoria Lake Railway. “We also want to teach people how the railway line was built in Kenya,” said Mr Barasa.

Mr John Mwangazi said he brought his two sons aged 10 and 12 to have fun and learn something about the history of the country. “I used trains to and from school in the 1980s and I have an attachment to railway transport. I also want the children to enjoy the ride and munch snacks,” he said, and added: “For me and my wife, the ride is romantic.”

According to a schedule the Nation saw, a 50-kilometre ride will cost Sh1,700 for adults and Sh1,300 for children. After South Africa, Kenya is the only other country in Africa to adopt a leisure steam locomotive.

Source: Daily Nation

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Ministry on the spot over envoys

Posted by Administrator on August 11, 2010

The government was on Wednesday put on the spot over political appointment of ambassadors.

MPs said the procedure was not transparent as merit was put on the back burner in such instances. MPs also criticised as wanting, the Foreign ministry’s procedure of buying and disposing of property.

Debating the Foreign Affairs ministry’s Budget Vote, MPs demanded that the appointment process be more consultative. They said political patronage only served to demoralise career diplomats.

“When you bypass career diplomats in favour of a few relatives and close associates of politicians, you send a very negative picture of the country’s foreign policy,” said Higher Education assistant minister Kilemi Mwiria.

Dr Mwiria called for regional equity in such positions, citing his ministry which he said had started a campaign to reflect this.

Nominated MP Rachel Shebesh (ODM) called for an increase in the number of women ambassadors, saying they were grossly under-represented.

Mr Nicholas Gumbo (Rarieda ODM) accused some ambassadors of lacking professionalism, resulting in some “speaking like enemies of Kenya.”

“Transparency and merit must be the key consideration in these appointments,” said Energy assistant minister Mohamed Mahmud Maalim.

Foreign Affairs minister Moses Wetang’ula defended the political appointments, saying the practice was also common in big democracies like the US.

“The ambassadors are carefully chosen and vetted after which they undergo intensive training,’’ he said.

The House approved a budget of Sh3.8 billion for the ministry in development and recurrent expenditure for the current financial year.

Source: Daily Nation

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Kenya could adopt American school model

Posted by Administrator on August 11, 2010

Kenya is considering adopting an American model of managing education following the changes brought by a new constitutional order.

In America, each state manages its schooling system at all levels, but curriculum development is left to the federal government.

With the restructured provinces and districts into regions and counties, Kenya will need major changes in running the education sector.

Decisions will have to be taken on whether to retain the single national examination body, how free schooling money will be distributed and who will be responsible for school inspection.

Posts such as the current provincial directors of education and district education officers will have to be restructured to comply with the new system.

Under the new constitution, counties may now have to manage their education, but curriculum development and exams become the preserve of the central government.

This is among items a team led by Education PS John ole Kiyiapi, and composed of experts and officials from the US will be looking at to provide a new way of running the education system.

“We are currently engaged in making sure that all adjustments in the education sector are done to align with the new constitution,” Education minister Sam Ongeri said yesterday in Nairobi.

He said the process would entail looking at all education policies such as the Sessional Paper 1 (2005) and the Education Act to amend them to conform with the new law.

Education secretary George Godia said a pilot system will be developed for two years until 2012 and soon after fully rolled out if found tenable.

“We will look at how the devolved education system will work and put in place provisions for the new era,” said Prof Godia at the Kenya Educational Staff Institute.

Prof Godia forecast that it may take up to five years for the country to comprehensively carry out the plan. “Not only shall we be studying the current policies but we shall also develop new ones to fit in with the new constitutional framework,” he said.

He allayed fears that education officials at the provincial and district levels will lose their jobs. “Just like the provincial administration, they will have new supervisory roles,” he said.

Source: Daily Nation

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Conceiving just after a miscarriage ‘better’

Posted by Administrator on August 11, 2010

By AFP

Women who conceive within six months after a miscarriage have a better chance of a healthy pregnancy without complications compared to women who wait longer, according to a study released Friday.

They are less likely to have another miscarriage, and are also less likely to experience a caesarean section, deliver prematurely or have low-birth weight babies, the study showed. The findings, published in the British Medical Journal, are likely to be controversial.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends that women who experience a miscarriage should wait at least six months before getting pregnant again, and other medical authorities suggest holding off even longer.

To get a clearer picture, researchers led by Sohinee Bhattacharya at the Aberdeen Maternity Hospital in Scotland reviewed the medical histories of more than 30,000 women in Scotland who had a miscarriage in their first pregnancy and then became pregnant again between 1981 and 2000.

“Our research shows that women who conceive within six months of an initial miscarriage have the best reproductive outcomes and the lowest complication rates in a subsequent pregnancy,” they concluded. “It is unnecessary for women to delay conception after a miscarriage.”

The results held true even though the women who conceived within half-a-year were, on average, two years older than the women who waited at least 24 months. Differences in socioeconomic level did not affect the outcome.

The study pointed out that delays in getting pregnant were perhaps more of a issue in wealthy societies, where women often choose to wait until they are older to have children.

“Women over 35 are more likely to experience difficulties in conceiving and women aged 40 have a 30 per cent chance of miscarriage, which rises to 50 per cent in those aged 45 or more,” the study noted.

An earlier study of more than 250,000 Latin American women found that an interval of six months or less between pregnancies was linked to a higher risk for the mother and the late-stage foetus or newborn, including maternal anaemia, low birth weight and premature delivery in the next pregnancy.

But the study — the basis for the WHO recommendations — did not distinguish between induced abortions and miscarriages, which could have affected the findings, Bhattacharya said. On average, approximately one in five pregnancies ends in miscarriage before the 24th week.

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The dilemma of lesbian schoolgirls

Posted by Administrator on August 11, 2010

Lesbianism in schools

Lesbianism in schools

By Dorothy Kweyu

Rose* burst into tears as she poured out the suicidal thoughts overwhelming her in the counselling room in an upmarket suburb.

The 19-year-old schoolgirl with five same-sex partners — one of them 15 years her senior — was at her wits’ end. She could no longer stand her lesbian lifestyle, which was at odds with the norms according to which she was raised.

“How do I get out of this?” she asked clinical psychologist Dr Gladys Mwiti, the CEO of Oasis Africa, who says that Rose’s case is not unique. Rose couldn’t seek help from her parents, hence her trip to the counsellor.

Through a course of cognitive behavioural psychotherapy and religious guidance, the young woman was able to overcome her lesbian lifestyle, proving, according to Dr Mwiti, that homosexuality and lesbianism are not genetic, but learned behaviour.

“We know from behavioural psychology that what is learned can be unlearned,” she says.

Mwiti says that homosexuality and lesbianism are learned behaviours, which are validated in much the same way as people given to alcohol or drugs come to consider themselves alcoholics or drug addicts.

But while alcoholics and drug addicts can seek help through Alcoholics Anonymous and other rehabilitation programmes, “Homosexuals are taught to believe that they are normal”.

Living spoke to Dr Mwiti after a claim by Ms Loice Noo, a professional counsellor and Anglican Church of Kenya Sunday school teacher, during a different interview, that lesbianism was on the rise in girls’ boarding schools.

She blamed it on a crowded, mean-score-driven syllabus that denies children time to burn their pent-up sexual energies. Expressing concern over “the mean-score mania”, Ms Noo stressed the importance of recreation, including physical education and sports.

She noted that, in pursuit of academic excellence, schools were ignoring the physical, social, spiritual, and emotional aspects of children’s development, opening up avenues for sexual experimentation.

Ms Noo’s and Dr Mwiti’s sentiments are shared by Mrs Regina Wanderi, a family life counsellor with the Catholic Archdiocese of Nairobi. However, she attributes increasing lesbianism among schoolgirls to lack of awareness of their sexuality and how their bodies work.

Mrs Wanderi said that the girls seeking help from her tell her that they got into the habit to avoid Aids and pregnancy, but also because “It’s fun; I like it.”

The experts say it is quite normal for teenagers to feel sexually aroused, “especially when they are ovulating,” Mrs Wanderi adds.

A 13-14-year-old who does not feel sexually aroused would be considered abnormal, Dr Mwiti says. At such times, they are likely to become infatuated with males, and sometimes, with same-sex friends.

In boarding school, the attraction and infatuation may be directed towards other girls simply because they are there.

“At this tender age, every girl needs training in managing her sexuality,” Dr Mwiti says, “starting with the affirmation that her feelings are normal, and encouraging her to practise self-control.”

Ms Noo says that when a child of seven years who has been inducted into some value system, especially exercising self-control, does something contrary to what she was taught, she is caught in a crisis.

She harbours self-hate for going against her conscience, but is also captive to the pleasure she derives from indulging her sexual urge.

The catch 22 psychological crisis that marks such girls’ situation accounts for a sizeable proportion of teen counselling time. Young people need repeated reminders that they can act responsibly when they feel aroused. Girls, especially those sent to boarding school when they are very young, are often inducted into lesbianism by older girls, who tell them that they are lesbians.

But the fact that they are going for counselling shows that they realise that something is amiss.

“A voice from within tells them that what they are doing is not normal,” Dr Mwiti explains, adding that her clients talk of their guilt, helplessness, and other addictions such as pornography, and even drugs.

Many girls visit Dr Mwiti in a suicidal mood after a series of broken relationships.

“There is hardly any permanence is such relationships,” she notes.

The answer, she says, lies in teaching children to exercise self-control, not just in matters of sex, but in tackling other addictions.

“The more you practise self-control, the stronger you become,” she asserts.

“We need to teach our children that self-control goes together with self-respect and self-worth.” Dr Mwiti says, adding: “Let’s not treat the matter lightly. I’ve seen enough broken people.”

She argues that lesbians and homosexuals are not stigmatised, at least, not the ones who seek her help.

“Nobody is stigmatising them because nobody, not even their parents, knows about their sexual orientation,” she explains, calling on parents and society to tackle the problem head-on.

Mrs Wanderi notes that parents might inadvertently be driving their children into same-sex experimentation. “Parents like it when they see their children with same-sex friends, oblivious of the insidious side of such friendships,” she explains.

She also attributes homosexuality and lesbianism to rising cases of separation and divorce, which create cynicism in children.

“They don’t see anything to attract them to the opposite sex,” she explains.

Thus, while the family should be the child’s first school of virtue, “You can’t give what you don’t have,” says Mrs Wanderi, echoing Dr Mwiti, who says: “A mentor needs to be a role model.”

Dr Mwiti, whose agency has helped girls in boarding schools, has insights into the genesis of the habit. Children as young as 11 years are inducted into the habit by older girls in “gang recruitment.”

One girl told her of how the group would spin a bottle, and the one whom it faced would be the partner of a designated older girl. Refusal to cooperate would be punished.

A child brought up to have self-respect “feels dirty and guilty” after such an encounter, Dr Mwiti explains.

Forcing little girls into lesbian relations is one way older girls use to bully newcomers, Dr Mwiti says. “It’s part of the ‘monolisation’ process and devastates the victims.”

However, some girls go to boarding school with their innocence already shattered. Fathers are sexually arousing their little daughters, not necessarily through penetrative sex, but by fondling their breasts and touching their private parts, the counsellor says.

She gave the example of a girl who went through such treatment between the ages of 11 and 13, and who later fell easy prey to an older woman, and sometimes, older men.

Dr Mwiti attributes lesbianism in boarding schools to poor support for girls, saying some teachers don’t know what is happening to the students.

“In our days, we had parents and teachers who mixed freely with us, but today, are we supporting and caring for children in the family?” she asks.

Borrowing from the biblical verse saying: “Train the child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it,” Dr Mwiti states that training the child is not just a Christian imposition but is also part of our traditional heritage.

Some experts attribute lesbianism and homosexuality among children to media influence, which drives youngsters’ appetite for pornography.

They say that lesbianism is one of the main reasons teenagers are seeking psychological counselling.

Source: Daily Nation

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