This is a story inspired by Episode 2 of The Men's Group Debate Series, held on June 6, 2026, at Savelberg Retreat Center in Nairobi , under the theme "The Men Nairobi Raised Are Not the Men Nairobi Needs." --- There is a particular look some men develop after life has taken a sledgehammer to their plans. Not immediately afterward — immediately afterward, everybody becomes dramatic. There are emergency meetings, prayer requests, lawyers, concerned relatives, and WhatsApp groups that suddenly become more active than Parliament during a scandal. Advice arrives from every direction. Some of it is useful. Some of it is generated by people whose own lives resemble a building under demolition. No. The look arrives later. Months later. Sometimes years later. It is the look of a man who is functioning yet uncertain. The look of a man who pays his bills, attends meetings, answers emails, services the car, renews his insurance, and remembers birthdays — yet quietly wonder...
This is a story inspired by Episode 2 of The Men's Group Debate Series, held on June 6, 2026, at Savelberg Retreat Center in Nairobi , under the theme "The Men Nairobi Raised Are Not the Men Nairobi Needs." --- There are certain men Kenyan parents absolutely adore. You know the type. The ones whose names appear in church fundraisers. The ones introduced at weddings with lines like: " Meet Benard. He has done very well for himself." Nobody ever explains what it means. "Very well" is one of those uniquely Kenyan expressions. Like "We need to talk." Or "I'm almost there." Or "Let's meet and catch up." Everybody understands the danger, but nobody can define it. Whatever it meant, Benard had achieved it. By forty-three, he owned a house in Syokimau, a second piece of land never called land but always "the investment," a respectable SUV, a consulting business that could occasionally be described a...