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The End of Our High School Series… What We Learned | TRC Podcast

TRC LIMITED PODCAST Season 1 Episode 8

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After 8 powerful episodes, the TRC Podcast High School Series officially comes to an end.

In this special finale episode, hosts Ruth Tengecha and Nyambu Mwangi reflect on the journey, the stories shared throughout the series, and the lessons they’ve taken from the conversations.

From struggles and healing to growth and unforgettable memories, this episode highlights both the difficult and beautiful moments that came with the high school experience.

The hosts also celebrate an incredible milestone — reaching 1,000 subscribers in just one month — and thank everyone who has supported the journey so far.

As one chapter closes, another begins. At the end of the episode, they officially announce the next TRC Podcast series: Church Hurt & Church Gain.

Thank you for being part of the High School Series.


SPEAKER_02

Another day, another episode. My name is Jambu Ramwangi and I am Ruth Tengacha. It's fun, it's real, it's honest. It's the TRC podcast. The last episode of our high school series. How does it feel to finish this series?

SPEAKER_03

I'm so happy and I'm proud of us. I'm literally so proud of us. Imagine we put in so much effort from the fact that it was just a concept. Remember every time that it would be like either you're doing the dishes or being the dishes, you're washing clothes, and we're just on video call, we're like, we do this, we do this, we'll pray over it. And there's been so much prayers as that has been going on about this work. Even before we did this shoot here in this place where we shoot from, like a reverend came, akamwagiliya mafuta, it's just been uh It's been ordained by God. Ordained by God. And I was telling Caro this morning, today God told me when I was just doing my things, you just have to accept that I'm in this work and I'm not proving myself anymore to you. Yeah, just like it's anymore, Ruth. Just know that I'm in this work. So just accept it. Thank you. So tell you some gamungu anakwanga, like if I was God. Yeah, I would just I would be done. I would be done for uuanataka uu kitu. Uyu mungina nataka. Mungina nataka, uuu anataki. Do you think God needs a face you? Aki maybe anabo Gabriel.

SPEAKER_02

Hi, just shut off everybody. I need to go for a massage. Uyu, uyana anataka, uyana ataka, uya na sema, I don't exist. Uyana nitusi, uyuana oba, uya na nataka. Uyana na lia, uyuana lia, uwa wana pigana woa, awa wana faja site nini. Yeah, he needs to take a broof and but you know what? He's good. Nandia me to fikisha, and I'm so happy. What do you think we will learn about shooting that we didn't expect?

SPEAKER_03

Um, there's a lot of cut, cut, cut, cut, cut.

SPEAKER_02

Cut what? Leave me alone. Me, I didn't expect that Hatha will just be showing up at our door at 6, 7 a.m., 8 a.m. No, you hunt at toilet. Sana, sana, sana. He's doing a great job. Yeah. Yeah. But shooting is fun. And it's fun. And Niliona mutuaki someone like do something that that doesn't feel like work. Like, of course, of course, post your content. See, we go to my page on TikTok. Sorry. So, like, do something that doesn't feel like work. And it, of course, with a chokea then over should become a janna, someone was just sleeping by 8 p.m. and quash. Yeah. But it doesn't feel too heavy and it doesn't feel too much because I'm doing it with my friend. So it's just like it's just like another hangout with my friend, just yapping.

SPEAKER_03

And me, I really appreciate this friendship. Because me, I think all the friends that I have, or just everything that I have in general in my life, like ima to ka tukwa mungu. Even this friendship, like, cause you know, if I'm I I know that I'm a very business oriented person and I'm uh I I rush, no, I'm just like I'm an action, take a risk, take a risk. I'm just like tufany. Yeah. But since I most of the time it's like I I I na quiting yaraka na choka. So like kama ungia kuwa hapa. There some things like ngikwan ni mechoka, because sometimes na kwanga like, okay, tufanye, stuck i wanbe ruth no. Wake up and do, wake up and do, which is which is very important in this uh work. Yeah, it's a balance.

SPEAKER_02

Tulishikana kama Kama switch na switch na charger.

SPEAKER_03

Switch na charge. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Yes, soulmates. So, guys, on the last episode, uh high school series, of course, we posted Palevo Kwanye Instagram. Kama ja to follow Instagram. What are you doing? You know, we posted on Instagram and asked you guys for some of your questions, opinions, and good experiences about high school because we don't want to be just a bunch of negative nancies. PSCC to be some good experiences that we had in high school in the middle. In the middle of the bad, you know. And to look at your experiences, your questions, your everything. Yeah, and you guys sent in a lot of them. And because there's going to be a short episode, we're going to tackle just a couple of them, Cinder. Yeah. To Jibu, because Tulka to attack to bring you guys in as well, at least to give PSI DNS in the Cina sa tu na bombard to nawa bombard na my stories. Penny him to pay my stories, Cindy. Yeah. And we did get a couple of questions. So Ruthena, the first question.

SPEAKER_03

Okay. The first question. This is a question that's not even the first question. It's been a question on all the comments everywhere. On the TikTok is everywhere. On the WhatsApp, yeah, on the on the DM. Yeah. Everybody's asking me. Celine Lini kwa podcast. Celine, Celine, Celine, Celine. Celine, Celine, Celine. Celine is my sister, and like we would have had her on the shoot just like Celine is a doctor and she's in the UK. So she can't come right now until November or December when she comes for holidays. But by the time I didn't come to Kifanya shooting e-podcastonga, Bali Sanamba just have to make a special episode for her. So we're just gonna give Hunter a photo so that you guys can see Celine. Celine over here. Celine over here. Yeah. But that's my sister, and I love her so much. Nibile too. Sorry guys, are you available? She's not in Africa in the apps. She's in the M-Aps unless we are madowns. Yeah. So you wait for her to leave the M-Ups to come to the Madowns. Then we do the nini. We do the episode.

SPEAKER_02

But little side, you're a sisterholic.

SPEAKER_03

No, you I love my sisterholic. I have four sisters. I have Celine, Naomi, Bob, and Shiro. I'm a sisterholic. You just I love them so much.

SPEAKER_02

And they bring a little a very good balance in your life. Like really ukana relationship, one or all of them. And it's just it's so cute to watch, you know. Because we I only have a brother missing up my sisters. I have I have four sisters and two brothers who's blessed like Ruth. We bareki women. God has his favorites. Let me say a dark joke. Kuna ka chitilukati nagiana kovide call. Then I told you how Kama upendi dakuma shidayako. Then you told me how um I I told you how God answers your prayers, Araka nini nini. Then I then this guy told me a special subscription for the orphans. You can't access this one. This one is just for the orphans.

SPEAKER_03

Una joya jananan jambi. There's something that she said that he, uh, you guys you talk to, you talk to two. There's something she said, at least you guys you talked to, you are Siju what? Oh, uh-uh. She said she do something to do with fathers. You talk to your grandmothers. Because I had said I said that my shosho had called me because I told my shosho, like, I had a homa. So my shosho was calling me to find out, like, so she was just like, it was actually Kiragu or or I think it was Kiragu. So she was, he was like, You guys talk to your grandmother. And then I was like, You guys talk to your parents, you know, killed it. You know, yeah. I loved her humour so much.

SPEAKER_02

Make a fun joke out of it. And I feel like when you meet someone new, when I like, should I laugh? Should I should I laugh? And a konga like, she's so sick. Yeah, just uh, you can laugh. It's okay. Okay, you can laugh. The parents are dead and we we laugh.

SPEAKER_03

They just chose they didn't want to be in this universe anymore.

SPEAKER_02

Anyway, Selena Takuja in November for Christmas, so we are going to make an episode for her. Nah, yeah, mumwombe. We are blessed to have a doctor in our in our friend group. Yes, sir. We love it, right? Yeah. Question two, niyako, madam. Question two niango. Yeah. So uh I saw uh was it a comment I'm your question back? Yeah. Mtuaki semma, can you talk about the allegations of performers dating their teachers? So, unapata, a girl performs really, really well in mathematics, and whatever. Yeah. And then out of nowhere, all of a sudden she's dating Mr. So and so when you teach your subject. Yeah. Just based on the fact that she performs in that subject. And this is something I've only heard in girls' schools. I don't think schools in my liza lakini. I've never had a boy's school of hey, naniana pitanga English, so an a date Mrs. So-and-so, you know, that type of thing.

SPEAKER_03

I saw teachers in our comments on the video we'd posted about like um teachers looking chinier, the desks and everything. And there's like a thin line because for sure there are some students, for sure, who seduce their teachers. I even saw in the comments one teacher saying that we used to seduce teachers before when we were students, all that. There are some students who seduce the teachers, and there are some teachers who m molest the children. Like there's both sides exist. So the problem is finding the thin line because we mtoimye anakatia mode, nakuna mwy akati mwali mu. So, how are we able to come to the middle ground of knowing this and this and this? That's why it's important to do due diligence to find out is this student really hitting on the teacher or they are just performing well in the subject. Because I feel like where there is no that thin line, like yeah, I feel like one thing that also some teachers normally do is because they've not been able to establish the thin line, everybody has done it. Everybody gets punished.

SPEAKER_02

And nini comment iliko a bit longer. And it sounded like she was really hard. She was it traumatized her from experiences even with men and whatever and whatever. Yeah. And it I can just imagine the pain because I to you know um manga come a false accusation. That thing bans you. It burns you alive literally. Yeah. Una feeling you chungu because especially when the fact that there are people who do that. You know, every market has a madman type of thing. There are people who do that. And my story, I was telling you how it really hurt. Kama uyu dame. I can imagine it hurt that yeah kati mwalimu. The rumor is nakatiam walimu. And for me, it was illegal. Okay, we may suspend you because you are a lesbian. Then when I am completing for phone in, I find out actually so-and-so and so-and-so were dating the whole time in school. But they never got caught, they never got suspended, they dated even after high school and continued with their relationship. But me who was never a lesbian, I got the insults, I got the suspension, I got the mother crying in the in the in the office, I got all of that, you know. And it really hurts because you as a teacher fan yeah your due diligence to know for a fact what is going on, you know, instead of just putting together everyone in the same basket. Because you don't want to do the due diligence of interrogating and interviewing and kufa two investigations ako, u doya for a fact who is in this and who is not in this. That's a very unfair position.

SPEAKER_03

There's a discovery that I made about adults a few uh quite a while back. I realized that even adults ni watuwa kuana stress out. Una getu sometimes, like mtu kwana stress, and I decide to ku ku punish wewewe because you're the first person they have met, you're the first person that anapanished regardless of everything. So in a kwanga, like sometimes it's good, like ufanya internal self-workers are human being. And we're not even here to blame people. We are blaming nobody. We've spent money to buy equipment, we've gotten cameras to just come and blame people. No, this is a mental health place where we are discussing, like, even if you know that you have your stresses, you museum tatoam to because, like, in high school, as much as like to go on some of the positive aspects, so much goes down there that in a destroying him too almost for life. Because of a certain word that someone said could be a teacher, could be a student, and you're finished. So, regardless of the stress that you're having, work on yourself. Be you you are an adult, you are a child, work on yourself and you're tollem to mungine shida.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, because your boundary could you are like this is my personal life and this is my cause and jambi, there's a part that felt like uyo ni mwalimu. Amiam katuna stressake, the family zake and whatever. But the first student anamet, Utah me punishwe the whole day. Like unambu washe cho bila viatu, like that can't be just about me waking up late.

SPEAKER_03

I think the name wrong shoes. So nkwaara bangomas. I can't remember. So ka patana me nikonovara bangomas. So it was just like she made me wash like three stairs. And then I did to ask her, really? Like, is it really? Is it that tip? Is it that tip? Is that tip? Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Or you are just looking for something to get your stress out. But then I realized, uh, a bit of topic here, I realized kwa the teachers who used to teach us, atana niya lisema. I think at Victor, one of them. There is a teacher mwenye, he doesn't punish as much, he doesn't insult as much. Like in everyone in that class Hata kosa kufanya kazi, hatakosa kufanya assignments, kufata instruction, zake type of thing. And we had such a teacher who ali kwa po like maybe for ten years, but he used to tell us like I don't I don't remember ever punishing anyone. Like ilenye, and a wash stairs, and a wash a cho nini nini kuku to see and whatever. Yeah. And he he it was very rare for I don't think at a four years up to me on a ki punishman say he wouldn't punish people. Like in a class, yeah. Can we just say his name and thank him? Yeah. Mr.

SPEAKER_03

Gila, God bless you wherever you are, like you are doing an amazing job. Yeah, for real. God bless you.

SPEAKER_02

We we had really good experiences with him, I can say for sure.

SPEAKER_03

And uh my daddy, bro, so you know what? He used to call me like on random times, like, are you fine? Are you not okay?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, even me after suspension, he used to like my dad used to call him a lot. Like, Karuan and Elijah, because in combioniker after suspension, I would call me. So, like, he used to communicate with my dad. Your dad wants to know if you're okay, how are you? Even when I was assaulted, he's the one I told, he's the only teacher I told.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

You told him Yeah. Okay. He's the only teacher I told. And I told him, I think we were close to finishing exams, and I remember you told him, like, please don't report it because I just want to leave school and just go, you know. And he really stood by me like he was there the whole way through. But weo ni mwali mwungepata. Nivere day ungepata tim to a jafi assignment yakiswahili. I think it's a little bit.

SPEAKER_03

And I still passed casewhili in KCSA English too. English night. Uh, me pata, English came math n lipata D biologi nika patanga you see minus. But I think came nigwangan B plus.

SPEAKER_02

Kemu liku repeat. Because I remember seeing your results. I think we're meant to be friends for forever, bro. I remember there's a day, I'm seeing a catch on a side track, but there's a day this kusueli teacher li kuja class. We had uh, I think a triple Kisueli lesson or something crazy. And the lesson before me to read share cut books. And I remember beat down so much for failing. And he came into class because he used to run everywhere. He ran into class. He's like, hey, what am I money? Then I better half of the classes in tears. And I remember he let the first whole lesson go. Like Alikuwa na kuja apatunaliya na kambia, and okay also everything is going to be okay. The whole 40-minute lesson, ilisha evo. Then he spent the second lesson encouraging us. Aktuambi apana, kama mathi mekpelekai vi do your what you're good at, nini ni. Then the third lesson really fullza.

SPEAKER_03

Uhwa nakambaje na karo the way you normally remember the fine details of high school. Mina kwanga like I remember na zero. Because like my brain ilikwa full.

SPEAKER_02

So tini ku ku nini inheritance mutakubukambaya high school. Nili kwa tali what when did that happen?

SPEAKER_03

Imagine. I remember. But I remember nili kwana napakum chaza na nkwa nakulanga danya class. Because n alikuanga so nice. He was kinda my friend. I told you.

SPEAKER_02

I remember kujakwa desk mate, because my desk mate was Muslim, so ako na nyile mob nabi kona nyuele mob. Ali kwa kuja tombia, hey, nyiny mumia to spumu jaze nyuleze nwe, mumebe ya for saudiot. Yeah. So our teachers ni unapatanga, the students really don't want to cross cross their boundaries, juna jua and ya ni kim cause hey shima, it's my fault, you know, in type of thing. Like in a way, but kuna nye una tousi mwanafuzi, unani beat down, unani punish every five minutes.

SPEAKER_03

It's like a in like a home. Una pata ule mzazimwenye, like unaski zanga mzazimye. Umgea a home unapata like umtu akingia dada minge mingya kila umtuana swama naishia. Even though inakwanga, like work on yourself, bro. Work on yourself. What is the other question? Umtwari sema, I relate to Ruth about losing parents and not having a safe space both at home or at school. Uh, first of all, sorry for the loss of your parents. God is your parent now, he's gonna take care of you, don't worry. And the thing about not having a safe space at home or at school, I think you are such a bad place to be in. Because that has been my place for quite a long time. And you're like, I do wanna peace new bani, especially any how peace like kill a mali to uko. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

But that is a very I think new manager to have these conversations because about the suspension thing and whatever. It was a thing that was happening, which is sad. Like in it, it happened, it happened.

SPEAKER_03

A lot of people in your many DM or National Kinyambiya, like, oh, I don't have a parent, I'm scared of saying that my dad is dead, my mom is dead. I was there too. Atamini Lidanganya, my parents were alive for years. I refused to accept who I am. When I went to Strath, I was lying that these are my new parents because it was so embarrassing, and I felt so bad, and I felt like I wasn't worthy to be on this earth because like my parents are dead, or this person's part, or like I'm being taken care of. No, like umtu na kuchunga seems as you are okay. They're doing a great job, but like feeling yeah, up a seek way to peace and everything, not because anybody is bad, but because too like too good about yourself. But one thing that I love about God, especially like before I even share this story, I'm not dwelling on myself, but I'm encouraging someone. Before I even shared this story on TikTok, I was telling you, can be a bug. I was to feel like I have a physical bug on my back when I was not saying the truth about who I was. Immediately that I share that story on TikTok and I said everything part one to seven. I felt yay! Now I can be a person. Yeah. Because I used to feel like a thing. I used to feel like a thing. Like nine create content online, everybody. No jokewa nanny younger. People they would meet me, they're like, oh Ruth, you're so beautiful. Especially this guy is called Mr. Festus. Like, alikwa my really good teacher. I was a bit disrespectful, I'm gonna lie. Yeah, yeah. So, like, Adia aliku wanashanga to king ya class strath. I could like you guys should be like takecha. She's so focused on the money. But like, after I just shared my honest truth, I became so free. And I would like to encourage anyone, wherever they are, just share your honest truth. Like, welio, whoever will want to judge you, let them judge you. For those who will be with you in your pain, they are your real friends. Because you guys, may appreciate you guys because I'm trying to make me feel bad about my situation ever. And I don't not even have a situation. Because I remember I told you last year, because me God wanna shanga so much. Mungana niwa, to napiganga sorry na mungusana, he's my best friend. And he told me last year when I was going to Shago because I've not been to Shago for quite a long time. And he told me, Ruth, when you go back to Nairobi in 2026, I never, ever, ever. So it was a big warning. He said, I never ever ever wanna hear you tell anybody ever again that you are an orphan. Let me never hear those words come out of your mouth again. He said, You need to tell people that you are the daughter of the most high king. He said, Don't you dare tell anybody you are an orphan. And um, Kasama, sorry, sir. Yeah, I even put it on my bio on Instagram and TikTok that I'm the daughter of the king because he said, Stop telling people you are an orphan. And even when I went to Shago, he told me I want you to go tell my mom and dad bye. Not because you are leaving them, but I want you to be at peace with that part and tell mom and dad by because where we are going, we are not going with them.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_03

So we cannot go with them in the sense of like not at you to I am abandoning my parents, but where we are going, I'm not carrying that burden. Your identity of I'm an orphan, I'm an orphan. He said, You're not an orphan, you're my child. So stop telling people that. And isn't he taking care of me? Yeah, the father is taking care of me. Exactly. And I am being gonna say it's like the the past two weeks ever since we started this one. Carol, the past two, do you know the number of people we've met?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, the past two weeks. We've met a crazy amount of love for people like big people because like sister way. You know, type of thing. And in I think Atani that's that's more evidence. Yeah, I'm here. Like I'm your father. Nicoapa, Nicoapa, Nicoapa. Yeah. Let's move to the let's move to. The last prompt, and this is uh actually Nisisi Tulisama. We'll do this. Yeah, positives of our high school. We don't be semi-we don't want to be a bunch of negative nations. This is in SEME, our channel, kwa ni nini, they only speak about the negatives. Nini nini. Yeah, we did have positive.

SPEAKER_03

We didn't buy microphones to come and talk bad things about our school because yes, when I was in to other people's schools, a story in Kata Positive number one from my high school. That is a big positive. Even if I washed toilets 50 million times, atuku wai chapua. The school that I was in, thank you for that. That to kuku whai chapua. That was so great. Because nilikwa nilipigangwa raimani ni kuwa na chapapwa mkwanzangu swa zantaningi red. Like kwan kofi na walimum koneki nabaki kwa wusoyangu. But that's one positive that I.

SPEAKER_02

Like the normal kuchapwa. Like kunona vile in normal schools, like kamakwa videos a kiragu. Mwimwana kuja na exam papers then ananza kuwa chapua nya jafkisha pass maxi juni, ama ujafanya jutiu na chapua. That wasn't a thing in our school. So ya tu kotu na chapua. And when like Nilienda, I don't know why I didn't expect us kuchapwa. I don't remember being informal being like, guy, you to ku kuatuchapu, you know. Like it just never happened. It wasn't a thing at himnambiwa. For once in this school, you're not beating zi. You just live and realize, oh, atuchapangwe, like you would be punished to tambu, wash a chow, amo, wash a dome, amu fanya nini. But takuna www.ikwan anatembiana kiboko. That wasn't a thing. Yeah. Yeah. Positive number one for me. I loved, loved, loved. Miss Juka baita kwa controversial to the people from our school. Controversial. But I loved, loved, loved singing practice. Oh. I loved singing practice, bro. Of course, kuna kuna satadays kazan ilkwa nina lala and whatever the usual. But I loved singing practice. So yo iso like three hours to go to n assembly ground with all our chairs and we practice for mass in the morning. Like is Kwimbezo Manyibo. The one thing, one good thing I got from high school is the Catholic songs. Do you know how many times I consider being a Catholic every day? 58 times. She'll be there. Because of that school. Like, hey, Gina Maria. It's like Gina Tukufu. Like those songs, bro. Just the the nini. Alafu najo the more m kifika form for sessan nyindium nako in charge of the the rest of the school. Nindiom na panga and whatever. Mnaran mas I I enjoyed that so so much. Clock it. I loved that.

SPEAKER_03

Positive number three. Mukifika form four, how could I find a duty? I was eagerly waiting to just be in form.

SPEAKER_02

The only duty for foam four's was their class. I was just eagerly waiting to be a phone four because I was done. Like foamfalls are not cleaning pavements and to do toilets and don't make sure you're gonna that's it. I love that about our school. That was great. We love I loved that. Positive number four is compared to other schools, to que real, guys, our food was not bad. No real.

SPEAKER_03

That's true. The food was our food was not bad. Even the kizeri ilikwana fire. Like my friends at the kideryo ilkuana weavers.

SPEAKER_02

Aja, like like a story zingine, because what mlikuam nakula, you know, and I feel like the food got better even with time. Like to care for more. And the food we had in form one is not the food we were having in form two, in form three. Like the food got better with time. Alafu with the with the like special days, to same closing days, we used to eat good. Like the chicken, ila wakati, like before we close school or there's a school party or something. The chicken was really good, the pilau was really good, the chapoza, like we used to eat good. I lafu akukwa na atichakulaki dogo. Like unge shiba, like ila nye adunafat type of thing. So our food was not bad. I remember we used to have eggs on Sunday, we used to have chapo every Saturday.

SPEAKER_03

Look at you now.

SPEAKER_02

Look at you now. We're gonna trade. A whole tray. So the food was not bad in our school. I won't complain. I remember atukifanya benchmarking, kunashu lezing kuja and ziko like eyes a boy school. Hey, boys mlikuam nakapitiakwa department. Wange kuja wane food yetu wako like what? Like lunch ni like rice cabbage with meat and and our rude. And it wasn't kidogo meat with thai. But I remember we used to have a lot of meat. It was good. So mi apokwa food si we complain because ni kwanmen high school, it was evidence that I was eating good.

SPEAKER_03

Positive number five. Our school had structure. Unochamina kwanga a very structured girl. I don't know like to do bitung yeng. Structure. We used to have uh locers in the dining. We atiniku naskati wotuana kimbiya kuwa for breakfast ni chai sis. Just kimbio to your locker and get your cup and there's bread for everybody and get your bread. And then there's a tea and get your tea tea. When there's food, everybody is getting food on time. Yeah. Why are we fighting? Why are we running? For the food. Yeah. Yeah. It is really nice. Yeah, I'm even like, yeah, these people are doing this at this time. Even though when we're going, we're like for those masses. Yeah, like e-class in and I know. I've always been a person when you're not pen and structure. So I did like even in terms of like service, yeah. When I when I when I give clients services, or even when I go to places where service, I really like structure and quality. I'm a person who will go for something because it has quality. I just don't do definitely. For that.

SPEAKER_02

And remember for one king, the lockers in the dining room. Like everyone had a locker. I don't I don't see it. It was so cool. Everyone had their own locker in the dining room. Well, na joyako, and remember mine was locker number four 498. I remember very well. So we ended on a platea kuapo. We used to have a plate, a side plate, a knife, a spoon. And they and there were glasses. And there were glass. So you uba ilikwa kubunjika. But other than that, it was really nice. So kila nina skiang stories TikTok like oh si joko high school una chuka platea kwa kwa loca, una faia nina plate class. Una fai ni na plate class. In the dining hall. You just go open, una chukwa niniakwa lafu when you finish, you clean, you put it back there. Unaenda mbono kwa navitu kwa kwa class. You know, I loved that about our school. Positive number six or seven. Six or whatever. It's your turn. Oh, it's my turn. I I remember a positive thing that I loved about our school. I took a tu nava tie. I loved that. I don't think I would have loved wearing a tie in a high school uniform. It was just an open collar hapa evi and I really, really liked it. Like tuloka traka so neat. Our uniform was not terrible. Yeah, it wasn't bad.

SPEAKER_03

Positive number, I think this is seven number eight. Positive. Positive na kto wakashule because nakwanga Jesus ambassador. Yeah. It's the fact that they introduced us to God. That I will always treasure from my high school. Wherever our high school principal is, or our school just in general, thank you for making me aware of the presence of God. Like those singing practices, those kwenda mass, those kwana canisa. God bless all of you for that. Because that was something that was so great that I will always treasure. I feel like maybe Mungu a mention it to Kunita from when I was a young child. I'm gonna get Catholic before I went to Anglican. Then I I've studied in Catholic schools all my life. Primary, I was in a Catholic school. I did two pr I did three primary schools and they were all Catholic. I went to the high school, it was Catholic. Strath is Catholic. I mean so me to Catholic, Catholic, Catholic. Those are things that um I got from our school, which was good.

SPEAKER_02

And the positive number, whatever, student gaping. I think I know I think I can mention a positive experience with a teacher. And it's not the Kisueli teacher. Mrs. Osero. Mrs. Osero, I think Bosibor and Among Liliaga to this day. Mrs. Osero was an amazing teacher. I did computer and we had two computer teachers. Yeah. And a guy and a and a lady. And Mrs. Osero was such a mom. Mrs. Osero was such a mom. She was one of those teachers when yeah, she won't go out of her way to punish. You like punish anyway. This is my fault. I deserve this. I deserve this. She was very strict, but very, very loving. You know. And I remember one thing that made me love her is okay, two incidences. Before tufanye KCSC. Yeah. Practical paper computer. The Sunday before, I think we were doing it on a Tuesday. I don't know. Yeah. The Sunday before, aluka machine to be that whole week. I'll bring you guys a special like for lunch, ni ni ni sit no na ah, weakosturiza jaba. Tell me why this lady, ali ali it uh the computer captain, akawambia go tell all the computer students of computer lab. Stukaenda. She had cooked us chapo. Oh, she had cooked us chapo. Alugamituleta chapo, drinks like a lot of snacks. Like play chakoli na ja type of thing. We had a lot of snacks, and I remember kito stack him to see wa computer ige uku. So jimko class muna summan C C to make hula ben. Like she cook alukwa to be I'll cook you chapo with my own hands, and she cooked us chapo, and we were 36 computer students in our yeah, and she cooked us chapo, she brought us soda, she brought us sweets, she brought us snacks, like biscuits, like she brought us a lot of things. Na alukwa tobia, na cham lukwa mnona kama na danganya. Here's your here's your little form for lunch. Tu kififanya ilesku tulikotrafia computer practical exam. In our computer lab, kulukwana like her office was part of the room like in like ikona another door type of thing. So you could it was a glass door so you could see her inside. And Viletu Tulianza kusetiwa up like you see Tia ni tu napua papas nini. I started having a full-blown panic attack. I was freaking out. I was like, I don't know if I can do this, nini. So she took me into her office. Says only examiners are wanginawani, they don't care like that. She took me in into her office and she was like, Carol was going. I was like, I don't know if I can do this. Tears down my face. Makabasi, everything I couldn't breathe. I was freaking out. And I remember she held my hands and she was like, Can you breathe? Like literally, I'm breathing exercises. I didn't even know what they were at the time. She was like, Carol, breathe in, breathe in, hold on. Breathe out, breathe out, breathe out, breathe. Breathe out. Alinifanye zo breathing exercises. And she calmed me down. She was like, You can do this. I'm here for you. Oko Peke, Ako, you can do exams. She calmed me down. Ali ni tuliza, kan itulisa, and it's a little bit.

SPEAKER_03

KCC can la.

SPEAKER_02

KCSC. Hey girl. KCSC, last paper. And Neliku Asubui. She ali kanamimi the whole time through. Aki she calmed me down. Like Akaya miapanguza machose, you're okay, you can do it. Nini nini. Ushafa nya theory, ushafaya project, practical easi kushinda. Akani tuliza, kani rudisha kwa kiti, and throw the whole paper she was checking in on me. Like the whole exam. Like ile nye. See, obviously n vigilators wanatembea nini nini. Like alukwana kuja and yangali ako like, you're okay? Yeah, you're okay. You're okay nini. Then time you could load, like used to load your work in a CD and your examiner zone and she was like beside me the whole time. So, like, you're okay, you're doing good. Okay, sawa nini nini. I remember when I finished that paper, I just ran to my parents. I was like, I need to leave this place. I ran, but she held me down so much, and I don't even think she remembers it, honestly. But I've remembered it for the longest time. I remember I told my parents after I was like, she's short. No, no, no, I mean she killed and I really appreciate her for that. So, Mrs. Osara, if you're watching, thank you so much for that. I've never forgotten what you get in the computer.

SPEAKER_03

I got an A minus computer. Me, another positive, I think, which is our last positive. Not many people have this um experience, but the teachers were great to me. They were great, they were great. Yeah, I've never had a problem with a teacher at Chukiyana or anything. Me, I love the teachers, even if I was to meet them right now, I would say hi to them. They were amazing to me. And the teachers who taught me, they were kind to me. God bless all of you, wherever you are. Me, they were great to me. And it's good to because somebody can have different experiences with different people. Yeah, they were amazing to me, and I appreciate that from them. Yeah, and um, we have really enjoyed shooting this high school series. I know. And now to comment so makeways, oh my god, shoot two episodes per week. You subscribe, then we get the money for two episodes. Subscribe, please, that we have the money because the production cost is very expensive. It's busy.

SPEAKER_02

So subscribe and share.

SPEAKER_03

Subscribe and share, and then we can have two episodes per week because you also want to do two episodes per week.

SPEAKER_02

We really do. Shooting is fun. It's the finest! It's finest I know. Yeah, so subscribe in your transa quality two episodes per week. Subscribe. Yeah.

SPEAKER_03

By the time this episode, itakuina to a kotusha pita over a thousand subs. Could be two thousand, could be thirty thousand. Who knows? Jesus knows. Yeah, but we have already given a gift to one of our viewers for the great work you guys have been doing. We really appreciate you. Asantikua kutushikilia. Yeah. God our blessing. Sure. Sala, sala, sala.

SPEAKER_02

And thank you for keeping up with the high school series, more series in Akuja. I think keeping up with the Kardashian, keeping up with the Tengesha household.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Anyway, more more series are coming. And um I think the next series wamb. Yes. We're going to do a series about church heart and church gains.

SPEAKER_03

Let me tell you one thing that God told me because me now penanga kuambia me God and I zoom. We wanted to do church hat only. Yeah. And um just for people who've been hat in the church to get their perspective and everything. But God told me, not everybody has been the hat in the church. So, can you also do church art stroke, church gain? Yeah. I said, sorry, sir.

SPEAKER_02

Never focus focusing on only the negatives to not have happening because everything you got a negative and a positive. Yeah. So church hat and church gains coming up like a week after you're seeing this, right? And yeah, that's a new series. And if if you have a series suggestion for us, drop in the drop it in the comments. And drop it. Hey, this is a last monkey same. Yeah. Anyway, drop it in the comments and we will get into it. Get the guests that you guys want and everything. So subscribe near to parte the guests. You know, yeah. Subscribe and like and share everything. Thank you so much for watching the high school series. We'll see you in the next series. Bye. Bye bye. God bless you.