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Things I Won't Tell My Mom (shoot, she's probably reading this)

September 8, 2014



My first boda experience in Kenya occurred on a wet morning, in the pitch-black darkness that is the 5 o'clock hour, on uneven dirt roads winding through the rural farmland of Isibania, Kenya. I was wearing the broken helmet of a former Kiva Fellow who had been in a motorcycle accident in exactly these conditions.




The beauty of being a person afflicted with many fears is that is doesn’t take much to experience an adrenaline rush. In this situation, I might as well have been free climbing Mt. Kenya for the amount of dopamine that was rushing through my brain. My fear of motorcycles started at a young age, after hearing my mom repeatedly use the term “murdercycles” to describe horrible accidents she witnessed as an E.R. nurse. Being a cautious person by nature, and, thus, an easy kid, that’s all I really needed to hear to avoid motorcycle riding all my life…until now.

After hearing that boda was the only mode of transportation in Isibania, I had been sick with anticipation for the next several days. Now here I was, facing my fear in the least safe way possible. And do you know what happened?

I enjoyed every second of it.

Not to say I didn’t look ridiculous, awkwardly grasping the seat with all my might, holding my breath with every turn and bump, twisting my face in the unattractive and contorted way that I express anxiety . Despite my obvious tension, it was an exhilarating experience to drive in the dark of the morning, with no sounds except for the rumble of the boda, and the cuckadoodledoo-ing of the roosters echoing through the land. I fell in love with Kenya this morning, or at least with the peace and calm of Isibania. I was riding through the sleepy countryside as it woke up. I was with Julius, a Kenyan who knows the land like the back of his hand. He introduced me to farmers plowing the land, showed me crops that were being planted, and took me to the most breathtaking views in the area. It was the highlight of my experience in Kenya thus far.




Of course, I have to conclude with a disclaimer: my phobia exaggerates the actual danger of the situation, and the boda driver had everything perfectly under control. Someone else in the same situation might not even give it a second thought. See, Mom? It’s all good! By the time you read this, I will be back in Nairobi, safely taking cabs and matatus again.