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“Ke ngoana.”

It was many many years ago. He was so young. She was so young. He did not deserve to die that early and she did not deserve to lose him so quickly – so suddenly. But she was a kid. She had to be fine. Surely, she could not have felt the blow.

She was the first to find him. She was also the last he spoke to, the last he was with, the last he saw. She was the one who had to run for help even though it was too late. She ran. She did not even like running. It did not say much though, she was a kid.

She would see the image of the one she adored wrapped in a pink sheet and the memory of his brown face fading in and out of the pink for the rest of her life but that’s okay because she was just a kid.

She watched, detached and unsure what the right shape of grief was supposed to look like as everyone around her wailed and wept and that was okay, she was just a kid, she probably understood nothing of it. It was definitely not because she was not sure she deserved to grieve or afraid of how it would be received. Kids have no right causing unnecessary drama when everything is already hectic, do they?

Everything happened so quickly that she would fail to even make sense of it even in her grown days but that was okay. She was a kid.

She was shuttled through the days that followed the way children are shuttled through things that adults deem too large for them – gently redirected, kept on the periphery, handed food and told to go play, or not, she does not really remember. She does remember though, that there was no basket holding her in and rocking her back to steadiness. Nobody asked whether her head was on fire, or her chest moved between feeling like a gaping hole and that it caved in when she was sleeping. Why would they? She was a kid. She was probably fine. She would soon forget, the way kids do, merciful and quick. Nobody knew that she was not forgetting. That she was storing. That somewhere behind her small eyes she was carefully folding everything – the pink sheet, the running, the too-lateness of it all – tucking it in a place she would constantly stumble upon as she searched for memories of him.

The memory of it is not quite clear but the burial was probably on a hot sunny Saturday. She bathed early, got dressed decently. It did not matter to anyone if she showed up for the service or not, she was a kid. So she did not, she kept herself busy, a busybody really, moving from one unoccupied person to the next, looking for company, looking for anything. He was her company. He was her anything and everything. She was just a kid. Kids do not necessarily need to say goodbye, do they? The whole weight of the tent with the green mat and all those people and a coffin that apparently held him did sink but not really because she was a kid. What could she have possibly known? What could she have understood? She stood at the edge of it all, small and unaccounted for, watching the adults move through their grief like they had been given a script she had not received.

During the service, her main goal was to find a companion to take her to the spaza for snacks because she was just a kid, clueless, not because she needed to get somewhere far from it, even only for a little while. Not because the coffin was too real and the green mat was too final and she had not yet been given the words for any of what was sitting in her chest. She was a kid. She was fine. The script had decided.

And then life continued, the way life does, indifferently. People packed up their grief and carried it home. The tent came down. The green mat disappeared. And her? She just kept going, because that is what you do when you are a kid and everyone has already decided you are okay. You become okay. Too okay, in fact. She went to school. She played. She laughed at the right moments and was quiet at the right moments and nobody looked at her too carefully, possibly because they were too afraid to. She was a kid; kids are elastic and kids are good at moving the only way they know how – onward and forward – and so she did too because she had not yet learned that she was allowed to stop. Here and there, she would slip in a story about the boy she loved, in conversations that were too trivial to dwell on.

She is just a kid. This is what everyone decides, always. Children are resilient. Children bounce back somehow. Children do not even understand much of what is happening. That is not anyone’s fault per se.

The adults around her were also beyond shattered and they did the best they could to move through the fog of that loss. They did the only thing they knew how and they did it well – keep the child fed, keep the child distracted, keep the child away from the heaviness of it all. Shield the child. They loved her, they probably thought of her, but they simply were never taught that love, in that moment, also needed to look like spoken consideration.

*adds epiphany by Taylor Swift

She is not a kid anymore.

She is not sure when it happened – the crossover. She knows only that at some point, the thing she had folded and walked away from began to take up more space than she had left for it. It had been patient, but its waiting was the kind unfelt grief can wait; no urgency, no noise, and no intention of leaving.

She thinks about him now in a way she did not allow herself to then. She thinks about the fact that he was her best friend even before she understood the concept of friendship. Her person. The love of her life, and now, the loss of her life. A real loss, a counted loss, a loss that deserves a name and a place and someone to sit with you in it.

She thinks about the running. running as fast as she could but never as fast as she wished. Running with the hope that would soon be crushed as though she had no right to it being otherwise. Running away from the possibility of the guilt that would eat her alive if he were not to make it. Running with the knowledge that everything could go wrong but hoping it does not. Everything did go wrong.

She thinks about the pink sheet they both used to sleep on. How he used to tease their sitter for mispronouncing it as he helped her make the bed. She tries to find if there was any sign in those moments, a communication she missed because there is no way he could have left without telling her, without her. He used to tell her everything and he most definitely wanted to go everywhere with her.

She thinks about how they made sure they stood her far away from him and how for the first time, the separation truly felt final, because it was. Of the words she swallowed as they placed him in the bakkie of a police van and drove off when all she wanted to do was scream and beg for them to not take him away from her.

She is not a kid anymore. And she is learning, at last, to give the one she was permission to feel.

It is true. She was just a child. E ne e le ngoana. She did not know. She did not fully comprehend, but she does wish someone, anyone, would have walked with her until it all made sense to her.

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The Light Mug

Written on 19.01.2025, part of my submission for a writing competition I lost. Inspired by this moment from 02.09.2024 and the bits and pieces of friendship, my home country and the love I’ve received and given even in moments where it felt like there was no energy to even feel love. For the people who continuously choose me without much of a reason to, for giving me a light mug to drink from even when the beverage tastes too bitter or feels too hot…thank you.

The air outside The Light Mug Café in Maseru carried the scent of freshly baked pastries and the faintest whisper of wood smoke from nearby braziers. The night was alive, and so were we. The city’s quiet sophistication mingled with the unspoken chaos of its streets, a juxtaposition as electric as the hum of anticipation that buzzed in our veins.

We were a motley crew of friends, bonded by the shared struggles of university and the hunger to escape them, if only for a while. Thabo, with his booming laughter that could fill an empty hall, was our ringleader. His charm was a magnet, drawing us out of our shells. Then there was Lebo, whose sharp wit often left us in stitches, and Palesa, the quiet observer, her eyes always searching for beauty in the mundane. I, Mpho, the narrator of this evening, brought my own quirks- a penchant for overanalysing everything and a deep-seated love for moments like this.

As we stepped inside, the warm light of the café spilled over us like a blanket. The room was a symphony of colour: terracotta walls adorned with Basotho hats, shelves lined with books and fairy lights that twinkled like fallen stars. The gentle hum of a jazz saxophone melded seamlessly with the chatter of patrons, their laughter and clinking glasses weaving a tapestry of sound.

We claimed a corner table, its surface polished to a mirror shine, reflecting our excited faces. Menus were handed out, though Thabo announced almost immediately, “I’m getting the chicken pie. The best in town, no debate.” Lebo rolled her eyes. “You’ve said that every time we come here, and yet you’re always surprised when it’s as good as you remember.”

The night unfolded like a slow, intoxicating dance. The café’s signature Light Mug Mocha – a decadent concoction of rich chocolate, espresso and a hint of cinnamon – became our centerpiece. Its aroma swirled in the air, inviting us to indulge, to savour, to let go of the weight we carried daily. We talked about everything and nothing. Lebo’s voice rose and fell dramatically as she recounted her most recent clash with a professor. Thabo countered with his latest attempt at cooking- a near disaster involving burnt rice and a smoke fest.

And then Palesa spoke. Her quiet demeanour often meant her words were rare but precious. “Do you think we’ll remember nights like this?” she asked, her voice barely louder than a whisper. The question hung in the air, heavy with meaning. Silence fell over us like a gentle snowfall.

I looked around the table, at the faces of my friends- their features softened by the glow of candlelight, their laughter lines etched by years of shared joy and struggle. “How could we ever forget?” I said, the words tumbling out before I could overthink them. “Nights like this are what life is made of.”

Outside, the city pulsed with its own rhythm. The lights of Maseru glittered like jewels scattered across a velvet cloth, and the distant sound of traffic was a reminder that life went on, even as we lost ourselves in this moment. Lebo nudged me, her eyes gleaming with mischief. “You’re being poetic again. Write this down for your next masterpiece.”

We laughed, the sound spilling out into the café and drawing a few curious glances, but we did not care. For a few hours, the weight of exams, the uncertainty of the future and the world’s restless demands melted away. We were just us, a constellation of souls bound by a shared orbit.

As the night wore on, the café grew quieter. Plates emptied, conversations slowed, and the jazz saxophone’s melody softened. Thabo leaned back in his chair, his smile more subdued now. “We should do this more often,” he said, and we all nodded, knowing full well how life’s currents would soon pull us in different directions.

“Let’s take a picture,” Lebo said, pulling out her phone. We crowded together, laughing as Thabo insisted on being in the middle. The flash illuminated our faces, freezing the moment in time. It was not perfect – Palesa blinked and I was mid-laugh – but it was real. It was us.

As the night deepened, the reality of our situation began to weigh on us. We had not planned how we would get back to Roma. Public transport had long since ceased and taxis were no longer an option this late. Thabo joked about camping outside the café, but the flicker of worry in his eyes betrayed him.

“Maybe those guys can help us,” Lebo said, tilting her head toward a nearby table. A group of older men, loud and boisterous, had been watching us intermittently. Lebo’s casual flirtation; a glance here, a coy smile there, had caught their attention. One of them raised his glass in our direction, a sly grin playing on his lips.

My stomach lurched. This was Maseru, where the veneer of charm often masked darker intentions. “I don’t think that’s a good idea,” I said, my voice firmer than intended. Lebo raised an eyebrow. “Why not? They are offering a ride, or lodging.”

I glanced at the men again, their laughter grating against my nerves. They looked old enough to be our fathers, and I was done hunting for a father’s love in between strangers’ sheets. The thought sent a cold shiver down my spine. “No,” I said, shaking my head. “We’ll figure something out.”

Palesa sighed. “Do you have a better plan?” Her tone was not accusatory, just tired. We all were. The night had been magical, but the reality was creeping back in, unrelenting in its demands.

“Let’s ask the staff if they know someone reliable,” Thabo suggested. “We’ll pay extra if we have to.”

Relief washed over me. It was not a perfect solution given our student budgets, but it was better than relying on strangers with too many questions in their eyes. The café manager, a kind woman with a warm smile, made a futile attempt of calling a driver she knew. But as we waited for the driver to decide, something shifted in us. The initial worry began to dissipate, replace by a quiet acceptance of the moment we were still living in.

When we finally stepped back out into the night, the chill air was a stark contrast of the café’s warmth. We stood there for a moment, huddled together against the cold, reluctant to move and ruin the perfect stillness.

We eventually resigned to the back of The Light Mug, where the world seemed to pause. A small patio overlooked the dim-lit streets, and the stars were clearer than they had any right to be in a city, as if the universe itself had decided to put on a show just for us. Despite our initial plans to stay from alcohol, Thabo grabbed a lone bottle of wine from the counter. It was not stealing, right? Someone paid for it and probably forgot it there, we were showing it some grace. Lebo found a playlist on her phone, the soft hum of familiar tunes filling the air.

We cozied up together, sharing a single blanket someone had draped over a chair. The night’s chill wrapped around us, but it only made the warmth of our laughter sharper. We sipped wine from mismatched glasses, the tang of it grounding us in this surreal, unplanned magic. Palesa started singing a childhood song, her voice lilting and soft, and one by one, we joined. Off-key, forgotten lyrics, bursts of laughter in between but it did not matter. The stars did not mind and neither did we.

As the first hint of dawn kissed the horizon, we knew the night was almost over. We would find our way back home in the morning but for now, this was enough. The laughter, the wine, the stars…this was home, even if only for tonight. Would we remember this night? The laughter, the fear, the small triumph of making our own little home away from home? I did not know. But for now, it was enough to have lived it, to have the fullness of it. As I laid there, I tried to soak it all in; the weight of it, the beauty, the fragility, the fleeting magic of a night out with friends, where the world seemed to pause just long enough for us to breathe. That night, we were infinite.

.Mpho

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Hey, friend.

To whoever, for whenever.

I hope you are well.

Restart.

I hope you took a breath today.

I walked into your room at 3pm two days ago and you were still in bed, curled up, eyes bloodshot. You dared to smile at me, I looked at you and your lips quivered. This year has presented quite an unexpected turnout.

Friend, I know life has been moving fast, and not in a good way. You seem to be a little more tired than usual lately, a lot more really. Even trying to perform and play pretend is something you are not acing much truly, good thing I guess. You do not play your early morning rock music which I used to never understand, or dance to your Amapiano beats. You do not go out for ice cream anymore, just for helpless past-midnight walks to any place far from all of it. No place IS far from any of it.

I am sorry, friend. I really am, my heart goes out to you. I am sorry that instead of admiring the beauty of the starry sky or gasping in joy as the night breeze hits your skin, you whisper “Hello, darkness, my old friend“. You told me last Tuesday that you wish the night monsters could find you roaming or something like that, but we are not five anymore and koko does not exist.

Lately, nothing seems to be going right for you and it has taken its toll. You are overwhelmed because you know that time does not stop to let you nurse your wounds and regather yourself. The rest of the world keeps moving as yours falls apart. You are tired. You want it all to end, or to reset. You want to go back to 2016, when everything was not moving as tumultuously, when the world was not as chaotic and when everyone was still alive.

You have cried more than you have laughed recently, and even your laugh does not echo anymore. It is not wholesome and boisterous, it does not force me to tell you not to disturb people at 2 in the morning and it does not bring you to tears or knock the breath out of you. It comes out tense and ends with a sigh. Your eyes do not crinkle when you smile, they just glimmer with the kind of sadness so grave it makes my heart physically ache.

Your nails have been bitten to their skin, and your lips too. You cried about toothache because being gritted is the new normal stance for your teeth. You pop Grandpa very frequently now, yet the headache never goes away. I never have seen you so anxious, so scared, so worried.

It has been truly heartbreaking to see you like this and friend, if I could make it all go away…

I want to let you know though that you are not alone. Just as you have continuously told me that we are in this together, I am reminding you of the same.

In a very recent unfortunate event, someone unlikely but very likely echoed my favorite line to me. REMEMBER TO BREATHE. It was not until she said it that it dawned on me that I do not remember the last time those words left my mouth or ran through my mind. I had forgotten to breathe so much that I had forgotten to even remind myself to try. To you as well, REMEMBER TO BREATHE.

It may not seem like much but for as long as the breath still fills in your lungs, comes back out and continues the pattern, there is possibility. Where possibility lies, lies hope, and vice versa. I know hope crashes. Hope crushes. Hope burns. But hope also rises up again. Hope also rebuilds. Hope restores.

I may not have the solutions or even know exactly what it is you are feeling. I may not know what exactly happened five years ago or five days ago. But I see you. I am you, to some degree. And I think you will be okay one day, some day.

You are loved. If not by anyone else, by me at the very least.

Love,

Your friend.