08 Apr 2024
This article features Ann Njoki, a Security Assistant with a passion for spoken poetry. Ann's journey into poetry began with a push from her grammar teacher, and she has since developed a profound love for this unique form of expression. Read on to discover how Ann finds inspiration, prepares for performances, and balances her creative pursuits with her role at Kenya Airways.
I got into spoken poetry through my grammar teacher. I fought it at first, oh, strongly did. What made me want to start? The urge to edit my first, dummy piece, which was forced out of me by the same grammar teacher. Re-doing it into something better felt home.
My inspiration for my poetry varies. Observing, experiencing, relating, reading, listening and imagining are among my inspirations to write.
First, I study my poem/spoken word which allows me to know when the intonation changes, the pace, and the mood to speak the words. Editing also happens here. Second, I imagine the performance, trying to bring it into reality. That allows it to flow, during the actual performance. It's like downloading without buffering. Third, I practice in front of my mirror, or in front of a friend who is also a poet. Finally, performing.
Its title is S-HEROE. It is special to me because it is the most visual piece I have done, from real life experience.
Below is a Thanksgiving spoken piece.
Grateful- for the Thanksgiving Day
1, 2,3 ,4 ,5, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, maybe even millions. That's you and I counting our reasons to give thanks, and you and I both know we ran out of count. First off, you and I and him and her and them woke up, therefore we are grateful. We can breathe, and therefore tell the difference between a lily stinking and a rose scenting, we can walk, and therefore slay and sway alongside the wind, we drove to work in full stomachs and therefore instead of our stomachs rumbling, we scrambled for duties, we can smell and therefore experience the petrichor as the brown grounds grow all green and thank the rains for refilling the springs, we can see and therefore watch our birds take off and touch the same grounds.
We are grateful because the other day a mere flu grounded our birds on the same grounds, but here we are now, reclaiming the pride. We are grateful for we remain the pride of Africa, East, West, North, South and Central, even though sometimes messy. We are grateful for our color red, which sends a message of life, vigor and love. We are grateful for the noise pollution of our birds taking off or landing, because that spells several words including business, money and success. We are grateful for the excellent development opportunities, and lively working conditions. We are grateful for all of the seasons starting with spring where we grow new skills as trees grow new leaves, we are grateful for the extremely hot summer that teaches us to appreciate the extremely cold winter, we are grateful for fall so we can fly to Boston and walk on the pink, purple and yellow leaves fallen, we are grateful for winter so we can fly to London and write our names on the snow, instead of the Mombasa beach sand.
We are grateful, and therefore we give thanks. Give thanks for the great and the small, give thanks for your legs, they are two but can move a vehicle with four or more, give thanks for family and friends because just like colors, they make life beautiful, give thanks for the hot after work shower, I mean, is there a better feeling? Give thanks for that coffee that you sip when sleepy and pray that it never meets your white shirt, give thanks when all the traffic lights turn green for the breakthrough and, ifff they turn red, give thanks for the new updated challenge. Give thanks for the extreme sun that taught us to appreciate the rains. Give thanks for things we have and give thanks for things we don't have, for they form the basis of our purpose. We Giiive thanks.
Creative professionals often have rituals or sources of inspiration. Do you have any daily routines or habits that fuel your creativity?
I have two habits that fuel my creativity. One, listening to silence. Total silence. Oh, this is a holy grail. Two, reading books/stories/novels/comics. I’m currently reading ‘The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas’ by John Boyne.
Yes, I am familiar with Poetry Slam Africa. A virtual member, haha, but I belong to the society.
Locally, I love Mufasa’s work, and Teardrops inspires me. Internationally, I look up to Mukoma wa Thiong’o, Jackie Hill Perry and Clayton Jennings.
Just put it on paper however blurred it seems at first. Clarity sometimes establishes as you write.
www.youtube.com/@njokipoetry1447
08 Apr 2024
This article features Ann Njoki, a Security Assistant with a passion for spoken poetry. Ann's journey into poetry began with a push from her grammar teacher, and she has since developed a profound love for this unique form of expression. Read on to discover how Ann finds inspiration, prepares for performances, and balances her creative pursuits with her role at Kenya Airways.
01 Sep 2023
Let's talk about music. Firstly, do you have a stage name and what's the meaning behind it? Pesh GoG is my stage name. My name is Peninah and short for Peninah is Pesh. I am a born-again Christian; my identity is in Christ. I am a daughter and a girl of God thus the Abbreviation, GOG- Girl of God which makes up part of my stage name “Pesh GOG”. My Music is available on YouTube and Boom play as Pesh GoG.
02 Nov 2023
The big bird brings with it a mixed bag of chaos. Just before dawn, when the darkness of the night is about to start rising, Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA)’s Terminal 1A can be so quiet it feels like an apocalypse happened. There are birds in the air approaching the airport in various intervals; KQ 479 from Kigali, KQ 311 from DXB, KQ 117 from AMS, KQ 535 from LOS, KQ 115 from CDG, KQ 509 from ROB.