Running

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Saturday, March 28, 2020

Third IKM International marathon – the run that never was… almost

Third IKM International marathon – the run that never was… almost

This run had been handed over to TT on a silver platter.  It was not going to happen.  Repeat, the IKM International marathon for March 2020 was not going to happen this Friday, March 27, 2020.  You need to read part one of this story to understand this ‘rivalry’ between TT and I.

“I give you this one,” I told the computer screen.  It was just about 1.00pm.

“You ‘thing’ whose name I cannot even mention,” I retold the screen.  Not wishing to call out Corona Virus Disease of 2019, COVID-19, by name.  I had resorted to calling it ‘the thing’, ‘TT’ in short.  I did not want it responding, lest it hears its name and looks around.

I was not just yapping at the screen for nothing.  I was viewing the JHU corona dashboard page and the statistics were worse than I thought.  537,042 worldwide infections, 24,110 deaths and 123,268 recoveries.  This were stats of one o’clock.  

Seven days ago, same time, we had 244,610, 10,031 and 86,033 as the numbers.  All figures had more than doubled in just one week, despite the many precautions that we had put in placing, including work stoppage, social disruptions and foregoing many things that make us humans.  That is why I was not calling TT by name.  You get me?

I was not just talking to the screen for no reason.  Two days earlier, and the government of the republic had issued a dusk-to-dawn curfew.  No one was to be found in the streets from seven in the evening to five the next morning.  This was a thorn in the flesh of our runs.  

Our international marathons usually end around six-thirty, with another one hour to freshen up, take some refreshments before being ready to leave for home.  There was no way a run would be done and finished and freshened up and refreshed up and runners be back home by seven.  Impossible!  The run was off.

“You get one win, you… you… you TT,” I told the screen.  The time was just about one.

That would mean that TT would have one win, while runner would have three.  3-1 was not that bad.  However, you do not want to give TT any chance to gain on you.  Once it gains, it does not let go.  Believe me, you do not want to give TT a chance, even if you are already 3 wins up.  

This ‘compe’ started last Friday, when the employer directed staff to work from home and disallowing any visitors to the starting line – the generator.  This decree rendered evening runs untenable.  However, I had vowed on that same day that I shall do everything in my power to win over TT, and started the competition on who shall win over the other – the so-called Runner versus Co-runner, sorry co-rona.  My advisory then was simple, ‘take full advantage of any time that you have before TT strikes’.  That remains the advisory.

To level the playing field, sorry running field, the benchmark for runner and TT were set.  The expectation was that there should be three runs in a week.  If the runner gets to run, then the runner keeps the win.  Should the runner fail to run the three runs in the week, then TT takes the wins.  Simple, clear, transparent rules.  I had already done my runs on Friday, Monday and Wednesday.  That had given me my three wins.  I was enjoying the streak.  TT had nothing.  But not for long…

TT had conspired with the powers-that-be to ensure that the runner cannot make it for the third IKM international marathon.  It had done this by ensuring that the time window to run in the evening was so limited that there was no way of running in such a constrained time duration.  TT had also ensured that runners cannot access the starting point at the generator – though this was easy to resolve, by just changing the starting point to somewhere ‘outside there’.  

TT had introduced this social distancing nightmare of keeping a distance of at least a metre between folks.  This was however being greatly ignored in most social settings such as travel, shopping and markets.  For the runners we could work with this, by just running in a file, each runner a metre apart.  All these were tricks by TT.  TT was just introducing roadblocks – called ‘cheating’ to give itself wins.  Unfair wins, I may add.  
Winning by doing nothing – winning by not even hitting the road!  
Winning by introducing roadblocks.  
Who wins by cheating?  
That is not the spirit of true sports!

“I give you one win… I still have three,” I told the screen.  I told TT.  The time was 1.00pm.

I even went ahead and headlined my draft blog article – ‘TT takes one on the runner’.  I was not looking forward to publish this, but a runner cannot lie.  The truth was that the run was off, and that meant that TT had got one win… by doing nothing.  By just introducing all manner of roadblocks.  By cheating!  Who wins by cheating?  Not the runner.


I was resigned to this fate when things took an unexpected turn.  An email message soon got into my inbox reminding us that the national curfew was on and that it was real deal.  Due to this, ‘staff shall leave at three…’.
“Say what?”
I re-read… staff shall leave at three.
“Leave at three?”
I re-read… leave at three.

“What shall I be doing from three?  At home?,” I asked that email message… and it responded or rather, I formulated my response from it.  I realized that ‘the run window’ that TT had reduced and made impossible to utilize for the run had just ‘miraculously’ been increased by 90-minutes!  I now had one and a half hour extra to squeeze in this run, that would otherwise had been impossible to execute in the reduced timeslot, considering that there was ticking timebomb of a curfew at seven.

My mind was made.  I was going for the run.  I was starting it early.  Three was early to start a run, but I now had the opportunity to start the run as early as three.  I was not going to give TT the satisfaction of winning without breaking a sweat.  Winning by doing nothing.  Winning by cheating.
“You cheating TT,” I re-read the JHU stats, “I am not giving you this win!”


I left for the run at 4.18pm, despite planning to start at four.  Time just flew, and I found myself starting off at 4.18pm.  But, nothing to worry.  I had a maximum of two hours to execute the third IKM international marathon, March edition, codename ‘Easter-run-before-Easter’.  I just had to bring myself back to the finish line by 6.30pm.  I could beat the seven o’clock curfew if I was finished by six-thirty.

I was tense as I left.  I really had to finish the run in two hours, and even then, I would have less than thirty minutes to get out of the premises and be home.  It was a narrow window, but I was just going to squeeze through it.  I started the run with tension gripping my whole body.  Many ‘what-ifs’ were running through my mind.  Running is not an exact science.  No two runs over the same distance turn out to be the same.  You could run some distance in an hour, and do the same distance in one-hour-fifteen some other day.  

There is no exactness.  You go for it wishing for the best, but many factors come to play – the weather, the condition of the road, the traffic, the crowds and crowdings, the way the body feels on that day, running solo or in a group, running with slow pacer or fast pacer.  All these play into how your run turns out to be.  

You may replicate your timing on the distance.  You may as well not replicate – that is the most likely scenario – you may not replicate.  It may be worse, a worse outcome during such a curfew.  It may be better, the better during this curfew.  I was tense as I ran.  The real test would be the time when I start my downhill at Gitaru market.  That is where my mind was now focused.  I was too tense that I could not even partake of the water that was on the half litre bottle that I had carried along.

The weather was great – some sun, albeit evening sun, which was not so hot.  The highway crossing was already busy, with many vehicles from town heading out of town, probably due to the curfew that would take effect in another two and a half hours or so.  Few people walked the streets.  The Ndumbo market was full and busy as usual.  

Vehicles using Kanyariri road towards Gitaru were more than the usual at this time of day.  It could have been related to the curfew, with all running, rather driving home.  The thought of the curfew at seven increased my tension.  I kept going, not noticing much in my surrounding.  I just wanted to circle Gitaru market and start my way back.

I really wanted to circle Gitaru market so that I could have a glimpse at the time.  

Finally, I circled Gitaru market and glimpsed at the time.  It was 17.27.  I had upto one and a half hour to finish the run and be home.  It was a tight window, but doable.  I took a sip of water for the first time.  The run was doable before the seven o’clock curfew took effect.  The rest of the run was generally on a downhill, until that last hill towards Ndumbo market.

I kept my downhill momentum, occasionally sipping up the water.  I would be surprised to meet marathoner Nick at ‘the elevated tank’.  We said our ‘hi’s, maintaining the social distance by being on the extreme edges of the road – I was running downhill on the right edge.  He was running uphill on the left edge.  The distance was over six metres apart, across the vast Kanyariri road.  

I knew that I now just had that last uphill to Ndumbo market… and the run would be done.

And surely, the run would be done soon, when I reached the finish line in a time of 2.05.11 for 25.34km according to the Endomondo app.  I was unable to get the Runkeeper to this run since the phone that had that app decided to show me that dreaded 1% battery level just when I was about to start off the run.

I hardly had any time to even take some ‘good’ amount of water, since it was already just about 6.30pm.  I just had to hit the shower and be out of the premises by 6.45pm to beat the curfew, that would find me at my doorstep at exactly 7.02pm.  

The verdict – “Runner - 4, TT - zerooooo!” 

The streak continues, even as TT having already infected 585,040, with 26,819 deaths and 129,812 recoveries as per the 9.54.13pm stats from JHU.

WWB, the Coach, Nairobi, Kenya, March 27, 2020

Saturday, March 21, 2020

Runner versus Co-rona – who shall win?

Runner versus Co-rona – who shall win?

Our monthly marathon was meant to be on Friday, Mar. 27.  It had already been publicized in January when we were formulating the 2020 calendar of events.  I had already sent a reminder to marathoners at the start of the month, just after the Beyond Zero marathon, that the March 27 run was on.  We already had it code-named ‘Easter-run-before-Easter’.

However, a series of turns and twists would come to bear on this run.  It started when the government of the republic ordered all schools and colleges shut by eighteenth, through that communique of Sunday, March 15.  The same advisory asked employers to consider asking their workers to work from home.  All this was as a result of the international spread of the Corona virus.

It would get worse when the employer actually went ahead and issued a ‘work from home’ directive, effective eighteenth.  More was yet to come when a moratorium was imposed on all visits, official and personal.  There was no way that any runner was going to get to the starting line aka ‘be generated’ on March 27.  The goose was cooked… but I doubted if anyone even had an appetite.

The Corona pandemic cannot be underestimated.  It is the most serious situation I have experienced in my lifetime.  We should not be taking it casually.  If anything, we should be speaking about it in hushed tones.  It was traditional to talk about ‘bad’ things in hushed tones or changed names during my childhood.  I have grown up with that etched in me. 

This is a monster!  You should not even be mentioning it by name, lest it hears and responds!  This viral disease, in the family of the flu, is spread through droplets.  And do not think of droplets like rain droplets – nope.  Droplets means the air exhaled from an infection person to the person nearby.  Contaminated surfaces that bear the droplets can infect someone else if these viral particles can be picked out from these surfaces to find their way into the mouth, nose or eyes.  The disease is not airborne; luckily, hence the infection is mainly confined to person-to-person or contaminated-surfaces-to-person. 

Once it afflicts someone, the signs must show in a fourteen-day incubation period.  That fact has led to quarantine requirements whenever one suspects of being in contact with an infected person or situation.  The fourteen-day quarantine eventually leads to either getting it or not getting it.  The treatment or rather no-treatment takes about the same period for the symptoms to go away.  

The symptoms are principally a dry cough, shortness of breath and a high fever.  These should go away on their own within the fortnight, but those with other underlying medical issues are likely to require hospitalization.  These symptoms also hit different people in different ways – with others suffering severe distress more than others.  Admission into hospital or need to take some medicine may be required by others, while others may survive the distress without medication.  Full treatment could taker longer depending on the health complications that would result.

The Corona virus disease of December 2019, COVID-19, is not a small matter.  It has spread throughout the whole world, from the original patient-zero at Wuhan city in Hubei province in China in December 2019, to the current situation, four months later, where almost all countries in the globe have a reported case.  The John Hopkins University and Medicine has a Coronavirus Resource Center, accessible online to the public.  On that site they publish the stats of how the virus is spreading worldwide, with total confirmed cases, total deaths and total recovered.  It is a nice and scary dashboard.

It was a Friday.  It was March 20.  I was looking at the dashboard.  I had already had a long run on Tuesday, three days ago.  That two-thirds of a marathon run had really drained me.  I was completely out of shape on Wednesday, and was just about recovered on Thursday.  I did not have any intention of hitting the road again until the new week.  

But things were happening.  Staff were already working from home.  I had early attempted to attend a meeting at our main hall – the very hall where we can park 600 seats.  On this Friday I was turned away, hardly five minutes after the start of meeting, because the hall ‘was full’.
“What do you mean full?”
“You cannot get in,” the sentry had repeated in a whisper, “Just look and see”
I looked through the door.
The place was full alright – with about twenty people seated.

This came about due to the requirement for ‘social distancing’.  The seats were so sparsely spaced that even fitting twenty was a miracle.  They were so far apart that it looked like an exam room than a meeting room.  I would instead have to tune into the meeting online.  Social distancing and reducing exposure were the main reasons for the now ‘optional’ compulsory advise that we work from home.  Additional precautions were emphasized, being sanitization of hands and surfaces at all times, at all places.  Greetings and hugging had already been abolished like a week prior.


Distancing
It is the social distancing thing that was still puzzling me.  A one-metre gap was needed between people at all times – be it in offices, in walking situations or in meetings.  Thinking of it, now I do know why the hall had like twenty people.  Meetings of more than ten had already been abolished.  The hall in use was actually two halls combined into one for this occasion.  It qualified as two distinct rooms.  Technology made the speaker appear in both at the same time.  Of course, the middle separator had also been removed.

Social distancing – being a metre apart.  I kept thinking about this while watching the proceedings online.
Social distancing… wait a minute!  I had earlier on, on this selfsame morning been in a matatu to Westlands.  I remember being packed onto the fairly small seats on the 32-seater, for the whole 30-minute travel.  There was no metre separation for sure.

Social distancing… I kept thinking about it, since I had used another matatu back and had to seat with the rest of my country people next to one another.  At Kangemi market I had observed how densely parked the market vendors and buyers were, as they jostled on the small footpath besides road.  That footpath had been made worse by the road construction that destroyed almost all available walkway.  Now it is a real struggle for survival between the vendors, who have laid out their wares on the small footpath, and the pedestrians who have to walk-through. 

The story does not end there.  We still have to deal with the buyers who have to stop on the same narrow path to negotiate, look and buy.  That is not all, we have the nduthis that believe that they can pass-by anywhere, anytime and that they are entitled to right of way.  That is not all, we have the wheelbarrows, that are used by vendors smack in the middle of the footpath.  They occasionally get compelled to wheel them back by half a meter to allow people through, before they return them to the road to block it once more.

Social distancing… my mind went back to the other events of just this selfsame day.  I had even been to the local supermarket, where the shelf isles as so narrow, that you literally have to front-hug or hind-bump someone to go past them while moving from isle to isle.  We paid by queuing on a tight-knit fashion at the cashiers.

Social distancing… I am taken aback to the same morning when I had to do some mobile money transaction.  I went to this Uthiru chemist where about six of us were crowded Infront of the grill barrier.  Three of us struggling to get MPESA going, while another three talking to the pharmacist, almost in unison, to get some drug or other.  More people kept coming in and blocking the doorway, waiting to be served.

Social distancing… I thought.


The stats
It was now in the afternoon.  I was seated facing the JHU dashboard.  It had grim statistics of the effects caused by this severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus version 2 (SARS-CoV-2).  This wretched virus!  The same virus that someone called ‘this thing’ on a YouTube video.  His reason was not because ‘it may respond to being called’ but because the content managers at YT had been pulling down videos of ‘the thing’ whenever mentioned by real name – COVID-19 or Corona.

I was at the dashboard – 244,601 total confirmed cases.  That is massive! 
10,031 deaths – a 4% mortality rate. 
86,033 total recovered – 35% recovery rate as at Friday, March 20, 2020 at 12.43.03pm! 
These were bad stats. 

But that was not all, as my ear was still tuned to the AJZ channel, where major cities in the world were on lockdown.  And lockdown means you are locked into your house, without any chance of enjoying the freedoms that you take for granted like taking a walk or doing a run.  London was in lockdown.  Paris was in lockdown.  New York was in lockdown.  

Even Rome was in lockdown, having suffered the most deaths of just over 3k in that 10k figure of mortality, overtaking China, which also had a figure of just over 3k.  The same AJZ that was also breaking the news of the deaths of my favourite musicians in the name of Aurlus Mabele and Kenny Rogers.  Bad news was everywhere on this day!

I was still looking at the dashboard.  I kept looking at it. 
I was listening to stories of ‘the thing’.  I kept listening to them.

‘The thing’ had already caused a ‘work from home’ directive.  The thing (TT) had even caused a death to an innocent Kenyan, who was lynched by the mob for just coughing out loud on the street, with the mob accusing him of having the thing.  TT was bad.  TT was not something to take lightly.  TT had already forced people to start avoiding handling of currency notes and money in general, saying that those papers are breeding grounds for SARS-CoV-2.  What else did TT want from humanity!  What else does TT want from humanity!!

I kept looking at the dashboard.  At this rate, the whole world was going to be infected!  At this rate, we shall be having a lockdown ourselves over here!

“Lockdown!,” I said out loud, unconsciously. 
The prospects of a lockdown were unimaginable.  If social-distancing was already causing us all manner of trouble.  How about a lockdown?
“Lockdown!,” I found myself repeating, shaking my head.

That is when the light-bulb flickered.
“Why can’t I just make the best out of the situation while ‘the thing’ has not yet arrived?”

That question quickly saw me preparing for the evening run that I would otherwise have been taking a breather from.  The March 27 run was already off, but the March 20 run was not yet off.  I would keep running as much as I can, for as long as I have, before TT takes over life as we know it today.


That marked the start of the streak between Runner and Co-runner, I mean co-rona.

I left the generator at 4.45pm and was surprised as to how energetic I did feel.  The pains of the Tuesday run were gone, and my strides were quite energetic.  I intended to just do a mock run on the 21k route and just confirm that it still existed.  I would also take the opportunity to ‘check out’ how other country people were being affected by TT. 

Life seemed to be continued as usual.  I still met groups of people walking, especially around Kabete Polytechnic – groups of three, four or even five – walking together, talking, holding hands, calling each other ‘babe’ or ‘bae’.  Taking shoulder-to-shoulder selfies and generally oblivious of any care in the world.  The motorbikes continued carrying two or three passengers unbothered.  The matatus kept on their business.  The bus stages were still full of crowds standing next to each other.

At Ndumbo, the market was still full, with sellers and buyers.  That nduthi stage, just before you take the left turn on Kanyariri road was still packed with parked motorbikes.  The riders were still in deep animated discussions – shouting and laughing, occasionally ‘sss-sss’-ing a passing girl.  Kanyariri road thinned out after the market area.  From there on the road was a bit deserted.  I occasionally found the young people walking around, holding hands and even once saw two of them dancing in the middle of the road, cheered on by four other colleagues.  I shook my head as I raced up Kanyariri road.

The Gitaru matatu stage was full as usual.  Matatus were beckoning passengers onto their vehicles, as they cashed-in on the evening demand.  I would soon circle around the market and be back to Kanyariri road.  The down-road was smooth and quick.  The international route remained what I expected – the same old route that gives you a 10k of hill, then a 10k of downhill. 

I did another Vet loop on my way back, as the energy reserves on this day were just top notch.  That ‘take full advantage of the days before TT strikes’ must have filled my body with adrenaline.  I was fast and I was energetic.  Despite making hay while the sun still shone, I did not want to destroy the hay in the process and hence I had to put an end to the run and plan for another run on another day.  I would stop my timer on a time of 02.05.03 for 24.17km, averaging 5m10s per km.

I was just settling down after the run when I saw this ‘1000-Miles-1-year’ title on one of my webpages.
“What?,” I studied that title puzzled.
I was taken aback. 
I had all along thought it was ‘1000-Kilometers-1-year’ challenge?
“This is not going to happen at all, with TT hanging over my shoulder?”
Nonetheless, I shall keep taking advantage of the run opportunities as they arise, whether it is for 1000mi or 1000k or to beat TT.  It does not matter!

The verdict…

For round one – I give it to the runner.  I hope that the runner can enjoy a long uninterrupted streak before TT takes over through an affliction, a quarantine or a lockdown.

WWB, the Coach, Nairobi, Kenya, Mar. 20, 2020

Sunday, March 8, 2020

Beyond zero that almost become zero

Beyond zero that almost become zero


When I was traveling back from TZ on that Monday after the marathon, my mind was still grappling with the possibility of running another competitive marathon hardly six days after the TZ full.  This was against the background of a chatter, that I had already had in the shuttle, that the folks were ‘not boarding’ this run.  They were giving it a wide berth since this run brushed the wrong side of their political convictions.  

Their stand was that it was the government that should be in charge of medicare, and not the runners!  Of course, this type of debate is hard to win.  After all, doesn’t every run have a cause that the government should be in charge of, but we still go for them?  Ndakaini for water, Stanchart for ophthalmology and Mutuini for literacy?  

However, believe me when I tell you that you cannot win an argument over political convictions.  The other argument that you cannot win is one on religious convictions.  I have learnt to respect these two philosophies according to points of view of the people involved, and would change the topic in a hurry when these topics come up.

So there I was, seated on ‘jampu siti’, listening to the backbenches saying that the BZ marathon was a no-goner.  As already stated, I did not wish to join in.  From my point of view, the only reason why I was likely to miss this run was just because I was tired from the Kili.  My political view on this event was hidden from view.  

Due to the various points of view, this marathon was therefore not mentioned much on our WhatsApp discussions.  It was as if all were afraid to talk about it.  I kept my quiet too, even as people shared all manner of things on WhatsApp including some meme about some football in EPL, which is responsible for many lost bets.

I made a final decision to participate in this marathon when that SMS that beeped on my phone on a Feb. 26 came through.  The deal was just too good…
Register before Feb. 28 and have your running kits delivered for free within Nairobi… 
 
Imagine being seated at Uthiru and you see that BZ rider coming your way with a kit – without even raising a leg!  Who could resist such a do nothing at all, free delivery of the kit?  Not me!

Little did I know that there was a catch to this message?  The catch came about when I registered online, paid up by card and had to make a choice on how to get the kit.  And as sure as the sun rises from the East, there was no option for ‘free delivery’.  What we had on that website was a choice of either ‘collect from KICC’ or ‘collect from AK Nyayo Stadium’.

“Liars!,” I shouted loud while looking at the computer screen, two thousand shillings already deducted from my card.
“These lying #$%@,” I could not resisting vitrioling. 
I almost called my bank to have the transaction reversed, but what had been done had now been done.
I had egg all over my face as I painfully selected ‘collect from KICC’.
“KICC indeed!,” I could not stop.

However, that was not the end of it.  I was not going to take this lie lying down.  I went to the contact pages of the BZ marathon as indicated on the website and called the telephone number provided of the organizers.  The phone rang answered.  I called the second number listed on the page.  It rang and timed out.
“For crying out loud!,” I cried out loud!

Finally, I got to one of those ‘fill the form below to contact us’ website sections and filled it up, stated to the IMG organizers that they had promised delivery of kits and they had no choice but to deliver the kit to my address in Uthiru, which I indicated on that form.  I went further to tell them that I would be expecting that kit by the time I am would be back to the city.  I left my contacts in case they had a rejoinder….


But… Here I was, traveling back from TZ on a Monday.  There was no response from IMG or BZ.  Then… Then it just occurred to me that I could as well collect the kit from KICC, now that my shuttle would be dropping me at their city centre’s office near Jeevanjee.  

I would lose nothing by walking the 1km to the KICC collection point, though I was still feeling cheated, even as I guided my footsteps through Muindi Bingu street, then City Hall way before getting to KICC.  I passed through security and was at the KICC grounds to collect my kit.

More bad news awaited….
“I have come to collect my kit, and that of my colleague Barbara.”
“Let me see, let me check,” the lady at the 21km registration desk started on the list, four other eyes from her two colleagues following suit.
“Sorry, your name is not in the list,” she said, “Let us try Barbara’s.  What is her other name?”
I told them.

They repeated the routine of looking at the list.
Two minutes later, “Sorry your names are not on the list.  Did you register?”
“Why would I be here?,” I thought of responding.  Instead, my good nature took over the conversation, “Of course.  See this confirmation from Beyond Zero,” I showed them the phone screen, where the email confirmation was already open.

They did another check, and another “Your names are not on the list.”
That is when the lightbulb hit them and they asked for new data, “We need the reference number that you got from Pesapay.”
While mine was one email down my inbox, I had to call Barbara and wait for her to respond, which took about ten minutes.  However, she got me the long reference number.

That would not be the end…..
“What cause are you running for?”
“Are you people for real?,” I almost shouted.  I do not know why that shout did not come from my mouth.
“But I already provided this information during registration?,” I said, surprised that I was this restrained.
“Yes, but we do not have the registration details.”
“You people are messed up!,” why I failed to say this statement of truth still makes me wonder upto now!

They would finally read this information from the same message that came from Pesapay.  And just when I thought that I would have a good ending….
“There goes,” she handed me a Tee and a number, “that is for Barbara.”
I held it, in a manner of to confirm the two items.
“And that is your,” she handed another duo.
 
I remained put.
“Anything a miss?”
“Yes!,” I responded, “Where are the bags?”
The three looked at each other.  Can you believe that they just said a casual, “We do not have them yet.”

I left KICC vowing not to participate in this run.  Enough was enough!


Barbara would later send me a message that she was looking forward to yet another marathon with the very coach.  But the clincher came when Beryl sent a WhatsApp message that we shall be running on Sunday to compensate for the IKM ‘running for love’ marathon that she missed. 
That does it!
 
I was going for this run.  I could not let the gals down.  This run was happening….


And happening in did, when I woke up at five on this Sunday morning and took an early breakfast.  I had hardly slept for five hours, having gone to bed around one.  It is the alarm from the two phones that got me out of bed, cursing.  The phones were so far from my reach, and were set so loud, that I just had to get up and be sober by the time I had managed to silence them.  I just had to be read to leave. 

I left the house at ten to six and walked to the Nakuru highway to get a vehicle to town.  I was in a matatu by five past six.  The vehicles traveled smoothly until we got to Westlands, when we faced the traffic jam.  I already knew what it was… road closure.

I disembarked at Villa Rosa, as all vehicles were being diverted to the left, onto the road next to that Villa.  The time was just about 6.40am.  The road towards town, just after Rosa, was free of any traffic.  I would soon start meeting up with the runners as all walked towards Nyayo.  

I would soon start jogging towards Nyayo, a distance that turned out to be four kilometres.  I should however be thanking that jog, since I reached the starting line at 6.58am and hardly had any time to settle down before the run started at exactly seven.  And the start was without any fanfare, just a countdown and off we left.

The weather was cool, following the previous night’s rains.  The run started on Uhuru highway outside the Nyayo stadium and we started running on the way back towards Villa Rosa. 
“I should have just have waited there!”, I thought out loud. 
 
We ran on the overpass at Museum hill roundabout and were once again down onto Uhuru highway to run back towards Nyayo.  Two runs within the city centre, at Parliament road and Haile Sellasie avenue made up for some distance, before we were back to Nyayo stadium to take a left turn on Bunyala road, all the way to Jogoo road, and back to the stadium via Lusaka road.

There was plenty of water available to the runners at the various water points along the route, each point about five kilometres from the previous one.  The weather remained cool.  The weather remained good.  Back to Uhuru highway and we had to take some bit of Mombasa road upto Belle Vue and back.  It was quite a relaxed run, and I did not feel any strain at all.  The run was just pure fun, no pressure, lots of company, lots of water…. And of course, the very fine weather.

I would finally get to the finish point at Nyayo stadium, clocking 1.38.08 for 21.46 (4.34min/km pace) according to Endo, while Runkeeper gave me a 1.38.15 for 21.24km (4.38min/km pace).  As per convention, pick the worst of both world to get your final stats – so 21.24 in 1.38.15 it is! 
Let me see if the official results shall tally. 

Apart from the tight security within the stadium, where runners were hardly being allowed to stay around, all seemed well and all finishers were jovial.  However, one thing was still missing…

“Where do we collect our medals?,” I approached some lady at the stadium, who was adorning a nametag in a manner to suggest that she was part of the organization of the marathon.
She looked at me, unsure.  The response did not surprise me, “Eh… Ah… I also do not know!”
Some runner would soon appear within the stadium with a medal hanged on his neck.  He is the one who directed me to get out of the stadium and get the medal ‘somewhere out there’

WWB, the coach, Nairobi, Kenya, Mar. 8, 2020

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Kili 2020 – even the corona could not stop this run


Kili 2020 – even the corona could not stop this run

This was a Kili with a difference.  I was as ready as I ever could, with two international marathons in the bag, while I was having a second attempt on the same route.  I was surely as ready as I could.  However, two team members of the ‘usual’ Kili would be out of the run.  Fay was in bereavement, following the death of her father a week prior, while Edu was away on mission during the weekend of the run.  

We had already booked our accommodation, thanks to Charles, our TZ counterpart who had offered to help us out.  His own participation and availability would soon fade, when he also pulled out of the run to attend to a family emergency.  We were on our own – though he had done all that he could to get us the accommodations and provided alternative contact persons.  JV handled the local logistics and ensured that we had our tickets costing KShs.3,400 return more than one week in advance. 

That is why we were now seated in the Impala Shuttle by 7.45am on this Saturday morning, the last day in February.  The 22-seater shuttle left the Jeevanjee Gardens stage at exactly 8.00am for their Silver Springs hotel stopover to pick some other passengers.  From there we picked some two other passengers on Mombasa road, before joining the Isinya-Namanga road

There was some vocabulary to learn as we picked the last person on Mombasa road, who turned out not to have a ‘real’ seat.
“Where will I sit,” he asked the driver, as he got in and scanned the bus for any empty seat.  There was none
Bana wewe, sisi kesha ongea na afisi.  Wewe kesha kaa tu kwenye jumpu siti.

He was hesitant, mostly from not understanding what had just been said.  I was with him on this.  Either for a lack of an alternative, of whether he surely understood what was expected of him, he did settle on the second to last row in the bus and unfolded the corridor seat.  That is where he sat.  Making a row of four people on that particular place.  He must have done the right thing, since the driver checked his hind mirror, nodded his acknowledgment and engaged the bus into forward motion.

The rest of the trip was uneventful.  I enjoyed a nap through the three hour journey to Namanga.  We alighted for immigration processing, where we started by washing our hands before getting into the ‘one stop’ border crossing building.  Someone would soon whisper that the hand-washing thing was a ‘corona thing’.  In the absence of any other explanation or notification, we stuck to that whisper as the truth.

I did wonder last year and I was wondering a second time as to why this one-stop crossing, which was supposed to be efficient and seamless, took so long to get through!  We started with a queue for an exit stamp at the Kenyan side – and that queue was long – like an hour-long.  We then did queue once more on the next window, being the TZ entry processing.  

There I was processed by a toothpick chewing immigration officer, who felt nothing.  And I have observed that they like being distracted by other things going on behind their backs.  They would be serving you in a moment, then just leave the process in the middle and start cracking some joke with a stranger who would have appeared on their back.  They would then resume attending to you, by probably restarting the process.

I left the immigration queue at 12.30pm and moved to the next door, where I had exchanged KES to TSHS last year.  I intended to do the same this year.  The bank outlet was open but ‘temporarily closed’, as we observed the one cashier out of the two available counters proceed to count lots of currency, at his own pace – without giving the three of us on the waiting bench any notice.

Finally, a fourth person would join us on the waiting queue and would momentarily approach the counter.  He seemed to be an acquaintance of the cashier.
Kaka braza, utaweza nibadirishia hera?” 

(*I would like to exchange some money)

The cashier momentarily stopped gazing at this computer screen.  I had noted that he would gaze on that screen with full concentration for over a minute, as if there was a strange phenomenon going on that plasma.  He is not alone.  I see lots of users, notoriously banks, abuse the screen by gazing at it as if there is an interesting movie going on – maybe they have been watching movies all along, come to think of it!

He looked up from the monitor, “Jambo kaka, wataka badirisha hera ngapi?” 

(*How much?)
Kaka naomba nibadirishe dora hizi,” he exposed some dollars.  About five new notes, from my observation.
Basi naomba ungoje kidogo, dakika kumi hivi kaka.” 

(*Wait some ten minutes)

The person who was to exchange the dollars did not seem to have the ten-minute patience.  What was wrong with him?  We people had been waiting without a word from the cashier for almost 30-minutes and were not even complaining.  The ten extra minutes would be over and he would finish whatever he was doing and beckon me to approach.

“I would like to exchange Kenya Shillings to Tanzania shillings,” I told the NMB bank staffer.
He looked at me briefly, and without a care in the world said a casual, “Hatuna pesa za Tanzania, zimeisha.” 

(*We are short of Tanzania shillings)
Can you believe this guy?
I have been waiting for a whole forty-minutes!  How can a TZ bank lack TZ money!  Isn’t that a contradiction?

“Wasted time,” I murmured as I walked out towards the external of the building to where our ‘flight’ was parked.  There is where I was advised to just visit a road side currency exchange point and get sorted.  That is what I did, just matched across the fence of the immigration compound and got a ‘wakala’ kiosk.  They did not even want to see a form of ID.  They just picked the KES, did a quick times 22 on their calculator and would soon be handed over a bundle of notes worth 88,000.00.  I have never handled such a large sum of money!

Our bus left the border post at 1.40pm for the trip to Moshi.  There were fewer vehicles on the TZ side.  At some point we would hit that standstill called ‘50’ speed limit.  The bus slams the brakes and starts moving at snail pace.  And soon enough we got to a police check, with the cops seated on the right side of the road, just looking at the traffic as it moves.  We maintained this standstill speed for another ten minutes, before the driver accelerated back to normal.  

I was just about to resume my nap when we come to a standstill.  We had been spoken at a police check.  The two cops in uniform spoke to the driver.  The one in plain clothes came towards the passenger door.  The driver, who operated the doors from his position, momentarily opened the passenger door.

The cop man, radio in hand, stepped into the bus, “Mikanda mmefunga?” 

(*Have you put on your seat belts)
The mostly Kenyan passengers kept their quiet.  They probably did not even understand the question.
Ndio mkubwa,” the driver looked back and responded.
The cop gave the bus and its passengers a casual look, then stepped out.
Ahsante mkubwa,” the driver told him once he was back out and standing outside the driver’s door.
We left.  I saw through a road sign that Arusha was still 77km away.  I took my nap.  It would take us another 90-minutes to cover this distance.

I woke up with a start to see that ‘Simeon road, Uzunguni’ junction.  I knew this junction.  Once we get through the traffic lights and turn to the right, then we shall be going to Impala hotel just two hundred metres down the road.  I became fully awake.  It was soon time to take a short break – fifteen minutes, they called it.  Thirty minutes it became.  

We left Impala just in time to give way to something like a brass band.  I could see band members, seated behind a pickup truck, playing drums, trumpets, cymbals and trombones.  They are loud as they passed by our bus on the main road.  Our bus let them through before following them slowly.  The procession then had a second car, a pickup with camera people.  Soon it was clear from the third and fourth vehicles, decorated with garlands and decorative linen, as to what was going on exactly.  The only ‘new’ ingredient to a ‘usual’ fest was that brass band. 

Our bus would follow the procession to the main Arusha – Moshi road, then we would turn to the right, while the procession turned left.  We were then faced with the 80km journey between the two towns.  While Mount Meru stood 4565m tall within Arusha, we are heading for the real behemoth in Moshi at 5895m. 

We reached Moshi at six, taking two hours on the 80k stretch.  We then started dropping off the various passengers at their hotels.  I soon realized that most of the passengers in the bus were having one agenda – the Kili run.  We would be dropped at MUCOBS at around seven, having dropped others at Mississippi and Zebra.  MUCOBS is a residential establishment managed and located at the Moshi Cooperative University.  This was our residence and coincidentally, it was in the same compound where the starting point of the run was located at the University stadium. 

 
In suits
We checked into our ‘suites’.  Our rooms had already been pre-booked and prepaid, thanks to Charles, our TZ contact.  I would however like to forget the MPESA experience when sending the cash across to TZ.  I had calculated that I would just send KShs.1,700, exchanging at 23, to take care of the TShs.38,500 bill over there.  That was not to be.  The cross-border transfer exchange rate would turn up to be 21.75.  However, that still got me the prepay for night-1, even as I made alternative arrangements to pay the balance for this deficit.

I got suite 4, and the key was appropriately labelled as ‘su-4’.  The suite was a detached building of 4 self-contained rooms and an additional shared kitchen as a room in between the block.  We had to walk about one-hundred metres from the main block to get to the suites.  The accommodation was quite cost effective for that charge.  I had nothing to complain about, bearing in mind that this was a bed-and-breakfast arrangement.  My suite turned out to be a full house.  It had a living room with a reading table with chair and two lounging chairs.  It even had a small fridge and a 14-inch flat screen TV. 

The bedroom had a big 6x6 bed, though a shabbily fixed mosquito net hanged above it.  There was a cabinet on one of the walls, and a washroom on the left side of the room as you get in.  However, the suite was in dire need of maintenance.  It was livable, but it could have been better.
  
While I was able to get the bedroom light switch, I could not find a way of switching on the living room lights.  The two switched next to the door did not seem to work.  One was definitely controlling the external security light, while the other one did not seem to do anything.  I had to call the caretaker to assist me switch on the light.  I was surprised to see him walking straight into the dark room, upto the opposite wall and grope around the wall next to the window to finally find a switch and flick it on. 
“Why would you place a switch that far?,” I thought out loudly.

After he had left, I switched on the boiler and started waiting for the water to get hot.  I had already been to the washroom and noted that the bathtub was a bit dirty, as if it had not been used for some time.  The shower head was missing from the flex, as if something had cut it off.  I was now imagining how a shower from the broken pipe would be like.  There was no soap, no tissue and no towel, though the caretaker would come back momentarily and bring me a towel and a tiny soap. 

The TV was working by virtue that it could be switched on – and that was all.  The remote was not working and hence it was not possible to flip through the channels.  The manual buttons did not seem to work.  I switched it off.  There was a socket inside the wardrobe.  I was still wondering why a socket would be positioned there, even as I plugged my laptop on that particular socket. 

I observed the big safari ants in their twenties zig zag the bedroom floor.  I noted them in the sitting room too.  They were harmless enough.  We could coexist.  A black cricket stayed put on the door frame of the washroom.  I ignored it, even as a lizard ran through the same frame and settled somewhere above the frame.  I ignored both.  The suite was too big for all of us.  The paintwork on the bathroom wall was completely flaked, I guess from the effect of water splash on the wall.  It was just an eye sore, but the taps were functional, so nothing to worry.

I was just about strip and try out the bath in case the water had got hot by this time, when there was a knock on the door.  I cursed as I went to the door.
Kaka naomba nikutoe kwenye suti hii, uende suti nyingine,” the caretaker pushed himself through me and into the sitting room. 

(*You need to move out)
“But, lakini…. Why?”
Kaka unajua hii mambo ya ku-buki rumu.  Mara huyu amebuku, mara yure amebuku.  Ina rete utata, rakini tutakupatia suti nyingine.  Suti yako ni nambari mbiri.”

(*Due to changes, your room is now number two)
 

It took me a few moments to process what was going on.  I could see a couple waiting outside the door.  I soon picked up my bag and threw all other items that I had already unpacked onto a side bag and was soon out of su-4, with a pending shower that would now not be.

Suite 2 was just identical to where I had left, three-doors away.  Same TV that did not have channels, at least the remote worked and for sure there were no channels showing anything.  The big black ants still roamed the floor in their twenties.  I let them be – they let me be.  Surprisingly, even a new cricket was available in this room, but next to the bedroom wardrobe.  The only difference in su-2 was that the previous occupant had already decided to take a nap, before being moved to another room, judging from the crumbled bedding. 

The flaking in the bathroom was worse, though the flex at least had a shower-head.  I let status quo prevail, even as I switched on the water boiler ready for a shower.  The shower would not be, since by that time my colleagues were already knocking on my door so that we can go for dinner.  The shower would have to wait.

We walked to the kiosks just next to the main stadium, the very stadium where our run would start in less than ten hours.  We walked around the kiosks looking for a place that could offer us ‘something good’ for a final dinner before a run.  

We ended up getting a ‘ntilie’ type meal, where you get servings from different pots.  In my case I got some little rice with some little beans for 800 shillings and downed it with a 350ml Mirinda for 500 shillings.  We had already been informed by the caretaker that there was no chance of getting breakfast at six, since they start serving at seven.  I therefore bought a 500ml bottle of juice for 1,000 shillings with some two cakes for 400 for breakfast.  A cold breakfast would do.

After dinner we did trace Beryl and got our running kits.  She is the only one whom I know that drives a Kenyan car into TZ and back during such a marathon.  I wonder how she survives the stubborn road sentries and unreasonable speed limits.

I was handed over a sleeveless T-shirt and runner number 467.
“And coaches… surprise….,” Beryl drew my attention to what she was holding, still seated on the passenger front side of the car.
I looked to see what she had. 
She had a runner number with the same yellow background colour like mine.
“Mmmh, mmh, say something!,” she prodded.
I was still seeing double.  I had to adjust my specs.
“Say it, common, say it!”
“You are not!  Are you?,” I said.
“Yes I am.  Surprise, surprise!  I am doing a 42!”


I took a shower around ten-thirty.  It was rather a trickle of hot water coming from the shower head.  I survived the prolonged shower.  I was in bed by eleven.  The earliest I have slept this year.  The room was hot, but there were two wall mounted fans, one in the living room, the other in the bedroom.  The windows were also completely open, with the wire-mesh screens being the only barrier between external elements and the inside.  I was too tired to think about these.  I just wanted a cool environment for a good sleep.  I was soon in slumber land, with my fate now left to the alarm set to wake me up at 5.30am.

Sometime in the dead of the night I heard the whistle.  I immediately knew that it was the cricket waking me up.
“It is not yet morning!,” I talked loudly in the direction of the wardrobe. 
As if it had heard, the thing stayed quiet for a moment.  


Then….
It just resumed its loud whistle as if it was in charge of things in that suite!  I could not hunt it down!  Surely it was in charge, since there was nothing that I could do but to sleep with that loud whistle in the background.

The unmistakable chime of the alarm was loud and clear at five-thirty.  I did not hesitate.  I was out of bed in one step.  I opened the fridge and got out the juice and the two cakes.  I was soon munching out and sipping in.  I was to sip only 300ml of this liquid – and that is what I did, ensuring that I did not over-drink.

I left the suite at six-fifteen.  By then the announcements from the stadium were loud and clear.  I was in the stadium by six-twenty.  The run that was to start at 6.30am would now start at 6.45am.  I started looking around for Janet and Beryl whom we would be pounding the tarmac with.  I would trace Janet first, very ready for the long run.  I could not trace Beryl.

Then….
“Urban swaras?,” I looked at her T.
“Another surprise, I have joined the swaras!”
“But… but when did you defect from NMM2?”
“Long story,” she brushed off the most significant discovery of the day.

 
Ready or not...
The 3-2-1 countdown was without fanfare.  It just happened, and we started the run at 6.45am from within the tracks of the stadium.  We exit the stadium as we stumbled upon the many other runners of the 21k and 10k categories who had filled the road.  We struggled through and got out of the campus compound.  The run was on.

I was doing this run for a second time.  First time was a scouting mission.  This time it was a real run.  As usual, the 42k starts on the 21k and that is the mantra that kept me going for the first 100 minutes.  I just needed to make it to the 21k, then face that 10km hill that starts from 21k all the way towards 30k.  The first 21k were uneventful.  I met Onyi past the loop at his 11k, while I was on my 10k.  At that speed he would surely crack this run in under 3hours, since he was not far behind the leading pack. 

After the loop on the way back I met Janet on the opposite side.  We said our
hi’s before we went our different directions.  Beryl would not be far behind as we exchanged greetings.  In front of me there are two guys who have been outpacing me since the 5km.  Now at 11k, they both just stop, stand beside the road and in unison unzip and pee into the drainage next to the road.  They are just next to the runners’ path.  They do not seem to mind the runners, and the runners do not seem to mind them.

Later on, around the 15k, someone spits noisily onto my upcoming footstep and blows his nose loudly onto the air in front of my approach.  With corona fear in the air, this is not great.
“Gross!,” I say.
He looks at me in a manner to ask, ‘what’?
“Great,” I repeat, as I pass him and increase my pace on the hilly path from 15k towards 18k.

We get the first Coke at 15k.  The previous three of so water points did not have Coke, which is strange for this run that has a reputation of being ‘cokeful’.  But this celebration of the first Coke is short lived, since a runner passing by my right side soon knocks that tumbler out of my hand and the black gold becomes a drink for the ancestors.  He apologies as he goes along.  I forget that episode in a hurry.  


I get the second Coke at the 18k, and as fate would have it, this also goes down to the ancestors after only one sip, when the tumbler slips.
“My ancestors, please leave me alone!  Let me be!,” I beg the ground, as I keep going.

I am glad that the 21k mark is coming up.  I can even figure out where it is, because the 21km runners are already joining in as they head towards the finish.  And soon enough I can see that ‘Start’ line – and for a 42km run, this is for sure the start line, as you hit the 21k mark.  That point also marks the start of the uphill run for about 10k.  If you are a ready for this hill, then you are ready for the 42.  If you are not ready, or you joke around with this hill, then your 42 run is ruined.

My run was not ruined.  I took the hill slowly in my stride, being aware at every milestone, sorry kilometer-stone, that there was still more hill to come.  From 21k runners get to marvel at the mammoth mountain that persists in front of them for about 8km.  Only the turn towards the right as we head back forces us to now turn away from the Kilimanjaro mountain.  It is awesome.  It is high!

From the 21k Kili met the expectations in terms of water, Coke, glucose and fruits every three or so kilometers.  At 32km, just on the turn towards the last 10k, I was given a large water melon.  They seem to have just cut a chunk of about a quarter of the fruit and handed it over.  It was heavy.  It was handy.  It was yummy!  I kept munching on it as I went along, all the way to the 40k.  By then the markers had turned from number of kilometers done, to number of kilometers remaining.  That means that the marker was now reading ‘2km to go’.

This ‘2km to go’ is where runs are also ruined.  By this time, you are completely tired and ‘finished’.  You assume that 2km is a stone throw away, but it is not.  2km by definition is a run of over ten minutes.  I already had this in mind and hence kept going, knowing that the run was still ten minutes away.  I just had to keep going until I see that finish line.  Nothing, repeat, nothing, was going to mess my well-crafted run plan.

I would be at the stadium some ten minutes later, at 10:27am, having conquered the second Kili.  But I was kind-a-surprised when the phone with Endomondo gave me that ‘the app has stopped working’ message, with the only option being to reset and restart.  Imagine if that was the only thing tracking my run this year?  

I was however prepared for this particular eventuality with a plan B, as I stopped the Runkeeper on the other phone.  This showed a time of 03.43.00 for 42.16km.  The official results put me in position 106 in a time of 03.42.31.  I had shaved off almost 15-minutes from my last year’s Kili time.  

The men’s run was won by a Kenyan in a time of 02.16.50, with the top 7 positions being an all Kenyan affair.  The women category was also won by a Kenyan in 02.47.05, with Kenyans also taking the top three positions.  The 21k event was won in 01.03.59 and 01.09.54 for the men and women events respectively - taken by a Kenyan and a Tanzanian.

 
Twisted
I left the stadium and the fanfare behind me.  I was tired, but not as tired.  My legs hurt, but not as hurting as last year.  That would mean that my run strategy had worked, which was, ‘know what to expect and manage it well’.  I did take a shower then the morning breakfast just after eleven.  

We decided to check out of MUCOBS and experience another joint for this one last night.  Zebra was recommended and Zebra we went using two tuk tuks, over here called ‘bajaji’.  Zebra is a six-story deal with very clean rooms… but at a price of USD45.00 + $1.35 for paying by credit card.  I wished that I had stayed at MUCOBS, but a final night to rest them tired legs with a 32-inch TV that works was worth the cost.

We had to take some lunch as we waited for the check-in at Zebra.  By three, after our lunch, we were still waiting to check-in.  We eventually checked in and agreed to meet up at six and look for a place to take some dinner.  Unfortunately, our clean rooms did not have a clean wifi.  You had to stand out in the stairway to get some wifi signal.  

I took a shower at four and started looking for some sleep in the two-hour waiting period before the evening meetup.  I was just starting to get some sleep when a persistent knock interrupted by drowsiness.
“What,” I shouted from the bed.
No answer.
“What is it?”
No answer.

I got up and went to the door.  I opened up and saw the hotel worker, clad in her blue uniform.
Nimekuretea sabuni na maji.”
(*I have brought the soap and water)

For crying out loud!  Could this not wait!!
Ahsante,” I picked the two small soap pieces and the two half-litre bottles from her.  It was now just about 5.50pm.  The alarm would be going off in another 10-minutes.  There was no need going back to bed.  I sat around and flipped through the TV channels looking for nothing in particular.

We walked the five minutes to the roadside establishment, where we had early taken our lunch.  Our group of three guys and three girls were just starting to settle in with a cup of masala tea when it started raining.  We moved from the verandah area to the inside of the building.  Some drunk local would soon get into an altercation with members of our table, even as the reggae music continued loudly in the background.  

I learnt a valuable lesson that you cannot win an argument with someone who is under-the-influence.  However, it was time to abandon ship and walk back to our hotel.  It became a loss to the proprietors who allowed a loud-talking drunk to ruin their chances of benefiting from ‘cha mlevi huliwa na mgema’ as we left with full pockets.

The rain had already subsided by the time we walked back to the hotel around ten.  I tried to get some sleep by flipping through the TV channels, and at some I got the sleep.  I was first woken up by the shouting of revelers somewhere in the building.  It must have been at the downstairs pub. 
“Must they shout that loudly!,” I yawned as I groped for more sleep after that interruption.

I would be woken up a second time by the sound of the rain sometime in the night.  This rain persisted upto the time the alarm went off at 5.45am, when I took a quick shower and ran downstairs from the first-floor room ready to leave.  I expected some packed breakfast as had been promised the previous night, but was surprised when I was told that ‘wenzako wako humo ndani wakinywa chai’.

I joined the five at the main dining just behind the reception.  They were concluding their breakfast.  I took a cup of black tea with a toast of break and was soon ready to depart. 

The Impala shuttle bus was already parked outside the hotel doors.  It was still raining.  I would take a ‘jampu siti’ since some luggage had to be crammed inside the bus due to the fear of it being rained on if put on the carrier.  That situation would however last for just the first twenty minutes of the journey, as the passengers were soon ‘causing’ as to why they are traveling uncomfortably, while the luggage was comfortably seated. 

The driver would then drive into some roadside petrol stations, stop in the rain, and then start uploading luggage onto the carrier.  By then enough abuses had been exchanged between the passengers themselves, over nothing at all, just varied opinions as to how the situation should be handled.  


Unfortunately, even after the dust had settled, I still found myself as the only one who still remained on a jump seat.  At Arusha I was transferred to another shuttle where I had a seat for two all to myself for the journey back to Nairobi... as Kili turned out to be just another run in the life of a runner.

WWB, the coach, Moshi, Mar. 2, 2020