She Is Not the Only One

She Is Not the Only One

The Story of a Kenyan Woman Who Lost Herself, Then Fought to Come Back Stronger By Adoshee 

She arrived in Nairobi with one bag, big dreams, and the quiet hopes of her parents tucked into every  corner of her suitcase. Born into a family where coins were counted before bread was bought, her  journey to university felt like a miracle. Her parents had done the impossible – sold a cow, borrowed  from neighbours, skipped meals – just so their daughter could have the chance they never did. 

University was supposed to be the beginning of everything. 

But Nairobi, with its noise, speed, and harsh reality, was not the home she imagined. The city didn’t  care about her dreams. It asked for rent, food, bus fare, data, and books. Her parents had done all  they could – but how could she ask them for more, when they had nothing left to give? 

The Man, The Promise, The Fall 

He seemed like an answer. Older, charming, well-dressed. He called her “intelligent,” “beautiful,” “a  queen.” And most importantly-he promised to take care of her. Pay her rent. Help her go to class. Feed her. For a while, it worked. Her life became manageable again. Until it didn’t. 

The pregnancy came quietly, like a shadow. 

He stayed-for a while. Then came the fights. Then the silence. Then one day, he left, and didn’t come  back. Her rent was due. Her stomach was growing. Her name was still on the university list-but her  body was somewhere else entirely. School faded into the background. Her world was now about  survival, not dreams.

 

 

The Shame 

She stopped answering her parents’ calls. 

What would she say? That she had failed them? That their sacrifice had gone to waste? That their  daughter, the first to enter university, had dropped out and was now a single mother in Nairobi? 

The shame was louder than hunger. 

She moved into a single room in Eastlands with a leaking roof and a crying baby. For income, she  borrowed space in a friend’s mitumba stall at Gikomba. She fought the cold mornings, the pushing  crowds, the daily battle to make a profit. Her hands got rough. Her back ached. But her child needed  to eat. 

She didn’t talk much. She just worked. And survived. 

The Spark That Refused to Die 

One afternoon, as she packed away unsold clothes in the fading sun, she overheard a woman  speaking to a group of young girls. The woman was educated, confident, and kind. She spoke of her  past-how she once sold vegetables, was abandoned, and still made it back to school. Something  inside her stirred. 

That night, after her child fell asleep, she searched through her old bag and found her university  admission letter. She cried. Then she folded it neatly and placed it beside her pillow. 

She wasn’t done. Not yet.

The Climb Back 

It wasn’t instant. It took months of saving. Selling more. Joining a chama. Asking for help-a kind  neighbour watched her baby during evening classes. A local church contributed to her fees. A market  woman gifted her her first full bale to start her own mitumba stall. 

She re-applied to school. 

Balancing motherhood and lectures wasn’t easy. There were days she wanted to quit again. But now,  something had changed. She had seen the bottom-and survived. She had cried all her shame out. All  that remained was strength. 

The Return Home 

The day she graduated, she wore her gown with trembling hands. Not because she was afraid-but  because she had waited so long for this moment. 

She boarded a bus to her rural home, baby in one hand, certificate in the other. When her parents  saw her, they didn’t say a word. Her mother hugged her and wept. Her father stood back, eyes wet,  pride etched across his tired face. 

There were no long speeches. No explanations. Just one phrase that meant everything. 

“Welcome home, daughter.” 

She Is Not the Only One 

This is not just one woman’s story. It is the story of hundreds-perhaps thousands-of Kenyan girls who  come to the city with hope, stumble through hardship, and rise again with grace.

She almost gave up. Then she didn’t. And that changed everything.