Toastmasters Series: My Reflection on a Speech by Prudence Sembua When I first met her, she had a sparkle in her eye. Not the loud kind. Not the kind that scans a room demanding recognition. This was a quieter brilliance—an intellect muted by observation, patience, and an almost disciplined reading of the room before she ever chose to speak. There was a humility about her, almost demure, the kind that shows someone is listening deeply long before they decide to be heard. That was Prudence Sembua. Before I place her story in context, a few things matter for you as a reader. Prudence is a Toastmaster, and a relatively new member—a cub—at Simba Toastmasters. But don’t let the word new fool you. Prudence is an exceptional achiever. In 2018, she was the Best Lady Graduate in the CPA program in Kenya. She has received multiple excellence awards in her workplace, a blue-chip organization. Her track record stretches back years, and comments from those who’ve worked closely with ...
Toastmasters Series: My Reflection on a Speech by Ebenezer Makori Why is logic so tricky to understand? It’s a question I often ask myself. Not because logic is abstract or complex, but because true logic demands something very uncomfortable from us: humility. It requires us to differentiate what feels true from what is actually true. For most of us, that separation challenges our identity, our coping mechanisms, and the stories we’ve been telling ourselves for years. As a young boy, I often wondered why my parents had to be away. I was left to face a world that asked too many questions at every turn. On the surface, my life seemed normal. I was sheltered, fed, clothed, and protected by parents who were almost obsessively determined to escape poverty. And I later realized that obsession was not accidental; it was inherited. My father was the son of a widow who raised twelve children during one of the harshest droughts of the 1950s. Poverty wasn’t a phase; it was the air they ...