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BREAKING THE CYCLE: ADDRESSING ABUSE AS A COLLECTIVE RESPONSIBILITY

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In a society that is woven by the threads of relationships, the disturbing prevalence of abuse is a lot more than just unsettling. Often, the responsibility to address and mitigate this behavior is seen as a personal or private matter, something for the two involved to address; but the reality is that it is a collective responsibility. The real issue at hand is not just the act of abuse itself, but the silence and inaction of those who could intervene – an incitation.

The role you play in addressing abuse is pivotal. In a diverse way from what you do professionally to who you hang around when you’re off work; we all have a unique opportunity to challenge and change the narrative around abuse. Because you see, the abusers are also among us, from our friends to workmates to even family, and this unique placement makes it your duty to help, a social responsibility. By actively standing against this behavior, you can set a precedent, demonstrating that abuse in any form is unacceptable. But it’s even more important that you understand that this is not about assigning blame but about recognizing the power of influence. When we choose to speak up and act against abuse, it sends a powerful message that resonates throughout the community, it inspires more to do the same.

But perhaps even more importantly we need to acknowledge that abuse takes many forms – it’s not always physical. Emotional, psychological, or financial abuse; with each of these forms being equally damaging, often leaving scars that are invisible but profoundly ached. Understanding and recognizing these forms of abuse are crucial steps in addressing the problem. It’s important to acknowledge that abuse is not limited to one gender or age group; it affects individuals across the spectrum and while the conversation of prevalence and safety among specific groups is key, addressing it as a problem that risks the safety of the entire community is left out.

The Impact of Inaction

The consequences of ignoring or enabling abusive behavior are far-reaching, like a boomerang, the chances that it will directly come back to bite you increases. It not only perpetuates the cycle of abuse but also normalizes such behavior in society. Children who grow up witnessing abuse, whether direct victims or not, may come to accept it as a norm, which can lead to a perpetuation of this cycle in future generations. Therefore silence while your friends are abusive means that their children get affected; their interaction with your children further instigate it just as an example. Inaction contributes to the culture we are trying so hard to abandon, one where silence, stigma and ridicule are louder, making it harder for victims to seek help and support. You become as guilty as the abuser if you are aware and choose to do nothing about it.

Taking Responsibility: Beyond Family Ties and Friendships

Taking a stand against abuse requires courage, especially when it involves going against family ties or friendships or even in a work setting. However, prioritizing the well-being of the community must come first because the community encompasses a lot more than strangers but an extension of ourselves and those we care about. This means actively having difficult conversations around stories of abuse, intervening when witnessing abusive behavior even reporting to people who are able to do more, and supporting victims in seeking help. It’s about creating a culture where respect and safety are paramount, and where abuse in any form is unequivocally denounced. Wouldn’t you like it if you didn’t have to worry about your safety or respect? Wouldn’t you want the same for your family and friends?

Creating Safe Spaces and Support Systems

To effectively combat abuse, it’s essential to create safe spaces where victims can speak out and seek help without fear of judgment or retribution, through how you speak and your thoughts on these topics, actively cultivate that your friends are welcome to seek help from you. Support systems, including counseling services, legal assistance, and educational programs, play a critical role in helping victims heal and rebuild their lives.

In the ongoing effort to effectively combat abuse, it is crucial to establish safe environments not only for victims but also for those who have perpetrated abuse and are seeking to change. These safe spaces are essential for allowing open, honest communication and assistance without fear of judgment or hostility. By how we communicate and express our thoughts on these sensitive issues, we can foster an atmosphere where friends and community members feel comfortable seeking help.

Equally important is the development of support systems that cater to both victims and abusers. For victims, these systems, including counseling services, legal assistance, and educational programs which are vital in facilitating their healing and helping them rebuild their lives. For abusers, these support systems should offer rehabilitation services, imparting knowledge and skills that encourage positive behavioral change and personal growth. This acknowledges the complexity of abuse and recognizes that effective solutions require addressing the needs of all involved parties, promoting a healthier, more compassionate community, and not one that rushes to shun and punish .

The fight against abuse is a collective responsibility, one that requires the active participation of everyone, yes you included. By breaking the silence and taking a stand, we can help dismantle the structures that allow abuse to thrive. It’s about creating a society where respect, empathy, and kindness are the foundations of every relationship, and where we all feel safe and valued. Let’s work together to break the cycle of abuse and build healthier, happier communities. The more involved you are around these conversations, the more your impact, the safer the community. Let us know what you think in the comments below.

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Cover Story

Growing up while caring for aging parents

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You’re in your twenties or early thirties, still renting a bedsitter or sharing a one bedroom with a roommate. You juggle two side hustles and a job that barely covers rent and data bundles. Your salary comes in and half vanishes on fare, food and airtime top-ups before the month even starts.

Then your phone rings.

It’s Mum. Her voice is softer than usual.
“The knee is paining again. The doctor said I need new medicine but the bill…”
She trails off because she doesn’t want to finish the sentence. You already know what comes next.

Or its Dad, the man who once sent you pocket money while you were in campus, now asking quietly if you can send something small for electricity tokens because the prepaid meter is blinking red again.

Your chest tightens. Not just because of the money (though that’s part of it) .But because suddenly you hear the clock ticking louder.

They’re getting older. The strong hands that carried you. The back that bent over charcoal stoves to cook for you. The feet that walked kilometres to pay your school fees. Those hands shake now. That back is curved. Those feet tire faster.

You’re supposed to be the one helping now. That’s how it’s meant to go in our families. You finish school, get a job and start sending money home. You lift them the way they lifted you.

But what if you’re still drowning? What if getting it together feels like a finish line that keeps moving further away every year?

The fear is heavy.

You lie awake calculating. Rent is due. An M-Shwari or Fuliza loan repayment is pending. Your own medical cover lapsed last month. And now Mama needs money for a specialist visit. You send what you can. Perherps two thousand shillings and feel like a failure for the rest of the week.

Every time they say, “Pole, it’s okay. God will provide,” it stings more than if they had scolded you.

You start avoiding calls sometimes. Not because you don’t love them, but because picking up means hearing the tiredness in their voice and knowing you can’t fix it yet. You scroll job sites at two in the morning, apply to everything and pray for one breakthrough that will let you breathe and send real help home.

But the breakthrough is slow in coming. Meanwhile, arthritis is winning, blood pressure is rising and the village clinic queue is getting longer.

The fear

There’s the fear that they’ll suffer in silence because they don’t want to burden you. . The fear that you’ll never give them the easy life they sacrificed for.

And the deepest fear of all; that they’ll leave this world thinking they failed you, when really you feel like the one who failed them.

Even in the middle of that panic, there are small truths worth holding onto.

What keeps you going

Your parents didn’t raise you to be perfect. They raised you to try. They know you’re hustling. They see the late nights, the side gigs, the way you stretch every shilling. When you send one thousand instead of ten thousand, they don’t see failure. They see effort.

You are not late. You are in process. The economy is brutal, opportunities are few and the cost of living keeps rising but that doesn’t mean your love is small. Love shows up in the five hundred shillings of airtime or M-pesa you top up and in the weekends you go home empty handed but stay the whole day washing clothes, cooking and sitting with them.

One day, maybe sooner than you think, the season will shift. You’ll land the better job, clear the debts and start sending consistent help. You’ll take them to that private hospital, buy the good medicine and fix the leaking roof.

But even before that day arrives, you are already honouring them by refusing to give up.

Your parents didn’t keep score when they were raising you.
They won’t start now.

Keep going.
They’re still proud.
You’re still becoming even if it’s taking longer than either of you hoped.

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Cover Story

The version of you that only exists at home

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“I am an adult everywhere, except at home.” If that line hits with a mix of recognition and quiet discomfort, you’re not alone.

You step through the door of your childhood house or the family home you still visit. The capable adult you have become starts to fade almost instantly. Your shoulders drop. Your voice softens. You apologise before anything goes wrong. Suddenly you feel twelve again. You scan for approval. You brace for the familiar scorecard that lives only in this kitchen.

Why this happens

This is not pretending. It is regression wired deep. Family homes are the original emotional operating system. No matter how far you have come with therapy, career wins or independence, certain smells, sounds or sighs trigger version one of you. Old scripts replay automatically. You hunch at a particular sigh. You rush to prove yourself. You laugh too sharply at an old nickname.

The patterns formed when your nervous system was still developing. In homes with inconsistent love, high criticism, unspoken rules about emotions or where you adapted early to stay safe or seen, those survival strategies became muscle memory. Love felt conditional. Mistakes brought shame. You learned to read moods and shrink yourself. When the original cues return, the body remembers before the mind does.

The family’s role

Often the family has not updated their view of you either. They still see the child who spilled juice or the teenager who slammed doors. Two outdated versions try to connect. Instead of ease you get glitches. You feel too much and not enough at once.

Finding your way forward

Awareness is the turning point. Naming it steals half its power. You can observe the old role without fully stepping in. You can choose new responses. Even if they start silently, you can think, “I am not that twelve year old anymore.”

Some people carry the home version forever. That is okay if it does not cost their peace. Others learn to visit as adults. They love. They help. They do not hand over their selfworth.

The most healing path happens when the family updates together. A parent says, “You have become extraordinary,” and means it. A sibling drops childhood jabs. The house stops feeling like a courtroom.

Until then, know this. Shrinking a little when you walk in does not mean you are broken. It means you are human. You are wired for belonging even when belonging stings.Next time the throat tightens, breathe. Look around. Whisper to yourself, “I am an adult everywhere. Including here.” .

Watch how slowly and stubbornly the younger ghost steps back.

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Mental Health

Why Celebrating Small Wins is Better for Your Child’s Mental Health

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Children don’t progress in large or uniform strides; they move in small, jagged intervals. Those moments mean a lot to their development and growth.

When parents acknowledge the little successes, children feel valued, which in turn supports their emotional well-being and contributes to enhancing their confidence over time.

Successes, however small, create confidence

Making their bed on a rough morning, having another try after a mistake might be a small thing, but they represent big wins for your child. They don’t have to be perfect to succeed when their effort is noted and appreciated. Their confidence grows from trying and being their true self, not just from achieving the desired results.

Reduced pressure leads to reduced anxiety

When we emphasise big wins, children can feel afraid of failure and give up. Observing their victories, however small, sends a different message; mistakes are part of the learning process.

This evens out your pressure and helps you calm down. You notice this same idea in your children’s books: try new things, make mistakes and just keep on going.

Progress doesn’t always follow a straight path

Children show progress, withdraw, and move sideways, sometimes all in the same week. A child can have a happy school day one day, the next day be sad or angry, and not want to wear their school uniform.

When parents recognise something good even on a rough day, it helps them to know that one bad moment doesn’t make all the other good moments go away. That perspective can support a healthier mindset.

Recognising skills allows emotions to grow

If a child pauses to react, names a feeling, or asks for help, they are learning. Acknowledging these moments helps cope healthily. With time, children learn how to regulate their emotions and manage them effectively.

Some children find small successes important

For children with anxiety, neurodivergent or low self-esteem, progress can sometimes feel like a difficult task. Acknowledging any of their accomplishments can help them realise that every effort counts.

It can help their mental health for a long time at a later stage.

A small acknowledgement can have a big impact

Celebrating wins doesn’t have to involve a gift or a pat on the back.  At times, a smile, a word of reassurance or a moment of pride is enough. The critical thing is that the child feels truly seen.

Having fun together deepens connections and intensifies motivation.

When parents make small celebrations, children understand that growing up is more important than being perfect. They realise they are worthy of value for who they are becoming, rather than what they do.

Such an understanding builds emotional resilience that will remain throughout their entire life.

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