Was it all a LIE?
Since my childhood, I have loved being on the know. I am just into what is going on and in specific, the political side of current affairs. I used to get to know the names of ministers in my country’s cabinet when I was young and name them one by one to my dad.
What motivated me
the more was the excitement it brought to my family. They enjoyed seeing me
love news. Every time it hit 7 pm or 9 pm, I would hardly miss the news on
Television. That has grown in me and up to now, I just cannot live without
knowing what is going on in the news locally and internationally as well.
When I grew up
there were no smartphones, hence I had to rely on the traditional media. For me,
it was mostly Television and newspapers. My dad was a lover of newspapers and I
would peruse through them in the evening when he got home.
This love for
current affairs and more so, Kenyan politics heightened when I got into campus.
Well, surprisingly I studied mass communication. Since my first year in college
pursuing a Certificate in Mass Communication, I started drafting commentaries
on current affairs and sending them to the Kenyan newspapers.
This I learned
from the Journalism club which I joined at the Multimedia University of Kenya,
then was Multimedia University College of Kenya. The excitement of seeing my
byline after my commentaries were published made me fall in love with writing.
Something else
that motivated me was that people started to see that I am an avid writer, I
remember competing or seeing how many times each of our commentaries were
published with Rushdie Oudie, now a Daily Nation, Kisumu county writer. I was
so amazed at the many times Daily Nation and The Standard published my
commentaries.
Now, I had to
start cutting out my commentaries and came up with a scrapbook. You know that
age when you are almost done with school and need to find a job. My
commentaries were my portfolio. They had my name on them, I owned them. I
schooled until my degree level with a Bachelor’s degree in Applied
Communication and graduated in 2015.
Then I joined
Daystar University for my master’s degree in communication and my writing zeal
In communication. This time around, I had already come up with my blog –
terryruthwanjiku.blogspot.com. I unfortunately never landed a formal job but
interned in a Kenyan parastatal for a year under the Communication department.
This opportunity
builds up my writing profession. I also remotely interned with Ananke Magazine
based in Dubai for six months in my first year of my Master’s program. There my
article got featured and I added it to my portfolio - https://anankemag.com/2016/06/23/wife-inheritance-in-africa/.
I then bumped into
the Ajira Digital program and got one writing gig. After that one article, I
got absorbed by the person I worked with and he started sending articles for me
and paid me weekly. This was such a great venture for me because through writing
I could make a living. I just cannot look back.
I do what I love
and get paid. Then this year I applied for writing and translation training on
the Ajira Digital platform. I got trained for two days and now in my third week
of the mentorship program. I have my own Upwork account which I have started
bidding for work personally and still get other writing gigs on the side.
Thanks to technology, I now go by the motto of the Ajira Digital platform
tagline – “Online Work Is Work”.
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ReplyDeleteGood job
ReplyDeleteThank you Emily
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