Netflix:Self-Isolation&Chill

It’s the perfect time to binge watch on shows since we are self-isolating. Netflix has never looked better!  This article has gathered up a list of shows to help you go through these isolating times. Tanzaniene times has your back

Ozark

THE OZARKS

A series about a financial adviser who drags his family from Chicago to the Missouri Ozarks, where he must launder $500 million in five years to appease a drug boss. This show was released in 2017 and the current third season was released earlier this year. It has great reviews from viewers around the world making it a must watch series in 2020.

THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE

If you love horror, this show is the one for you. A fractured family confronts haunting memories of their old home and the terrifying events that drove them from it. The show has a lot of suspense and it’s truly chilling.

The Crown

THE CROWN

This series follows the political rivalries and romance of the Queen Elizabeth II’s reign and the events that shaped the second half of the 20th century. The show has 3 seasons and it is definitely a good way to learn about historical facts without reading. It’s entertaining and quite educational at the same time.

Elite

ELITE

When three working class teens enroll in an exclusive private school in Spain, the clash between them and the wealthy students leads to murder. The show has three seasons and throughout the seasons there’s quite anticipation whether the secrets will be out of the bag or not.

By Vanessa Mwingira

Aloe Vera:For Hair Treatment

In this quarantine period, most of us are really missing the saloon. Our hair needs some tlc! Well here’s a solution, ALOE VERA.

Aloe Vera is a plant that has great benefits in the human body. It contains proteolytic enzymes which repairs dead skin cells on the scalp. It acts as a great conditioner leaving your hair all smooth and shiny. Most importantly, it promotes hair growth, prevents itching on the scalp and reduces dandruff.

This article will focus on one way to use it, Aloe Vera as essential hair oil. All you need is to follow these easy steps below and you can take care of your hair in the comfort of your home.

  1. Take an Aloe Vera leaf (make sure it’s washed), slice out the sharp edges then cut it in half to reveal the gel.
  2. Cut it into thin slices then put the slices in a glass bowl/cup where you will add a desired amount of olive oil.
  3. Switch on your stove and place a pan with water. ( 1-2 cups of water)
  4. Grab the glass bowl/cup and put it on the pan on the stove. This will allow the mixture to heat up indirectly. As the water in the pan boils, the heat allows the release of nutrients from the Aloe Vera to the olive oil.
  5. When the mixture in the bowl turns brown, switch off your stove.
  6. Take down the glass bowl/cup and add up a desired amount of castor oil to the mixture. Castor oil thickens the hair.
  7. Transfer the entire mixture into a dropper to enable easy application on your hair.

This treatment can be used on all types of hair and changes can be seen as early as a month. Taking care of your hair is quite essential so show your hair some love by doing this treatment, it will definitely love you back.

Feeling at home when away from home.

They’ve met each other’s parents, and know more about each other’s relatives and family histories than they do their own. Before Angela changed jobs, they were employed at the same place and carpooled to and from work every day. They witness each other’s excitement at new dating prospects. They support each other through one heartbreak after another. Angela has watched Rhoda find the love of her life, get married and start a family. Rhoda has looked after Angela’s toddler after a nasty break up with her child’s father prompted legal action. They are more family to each other than their own families back at home. 

Rhoda and Angela are in the same business major. As a matter of fact, they meet in class just as often as they do in other settings. They’ve shared a rental apartment for so long that most people think they’re sisters. They’ve met each other’s parents, and know more about each other’s relatives and family histories than they do their own. Before Angela changed jobs, they were employed at the same place and carpooled to and from work every day. They witness each other’s excitement at new dating prospects. They support each other through one heartbreak after another. Angela has watched Rhoda find the love of her life, get married and start a family. Rhoda has looked after Angela’s toddler after a nasty break up with her child’s father prompted legal action. They are more family to each other than their own families back at home. 

Angela and Rhoda are a small part of a larger international student community neatly tucked away in the middle of America’s bible belt. It is not uncommon for familiar strangers such as them to form tight-knit communities in the colleges and universities they find themselves in. They are both Kenyan, and although from different tribes, their shared nationality is enough to foster closeness and even a considerable sense of dependence. 

Angela has had a child out of wedlock with a young African American student named Tony. Angela’s parents have been pressuring the pair to formalize what they believe to be an informal union particularly after Angela announced the pregnancy her third year in college. Tony is hesitant, stating that they are young, still in school and have the rest of their lives to figure out whether or not they want something so…permanent. He is also aware of the clash of values he experiences often with Angela. From the spanking of their young toddler, to the Kenyan cuisine he is not fond of, Angela’s Swahili conversations with Rhoda and other Kenyans also leave him feeling excluded.  Angela is distraught, fearing the disgrace her parents will endure in a very conservative village in Kenya where they live. They have spent their life savings to give her the expensive private education few can afford. They had been cautioned that a girl child is easily enticed by all manner of ungodly western attitudes and would likely end up pregnant and unable to give back to the family that supports her. Her nightmare seems to materializing right in front of her very eyes.

There is a hierarchy in these circles, and being in the “in group” is a privilege not afforded to everyone. Immediate family and other relatives rank the highest, followed by close friends from home, and fellow tribe members as in same and similar nationalities. Other nationalities but of the same race, rank higher than other nationalities of different races/color. Other races rank the lowest, meaning they are the least likely to be permanently adopted into the “in group” or “inner circle”. 

A crutch can become its own form of disability. Familiarity can breed comfort and self-righteous complacency. Groupthink rarely allows for new ways of thinking and doing things to take place. Sometimes people subconsciously seek out new experiences in the form of people from opposite walks of life as is evident with Angela and Tony. However, in order to integrate this new information there needs to be a willingness to release or adjust expectations and do things differently. If not, the pressure of leading two separate lives becomes unsustainable.

By Naomi Kessy

How Hurts Heal

Yes, this begins with a pun. A pun about a burn. I’ve just been burned. Literally and figuratively. I’m sitting in my living room half naked, because my burn needs to air out. That’s on the outside. On the inside, I’ve got a fistful of feelings that I also need to air out. Feelings about getting burned. 

To avoid the afternoon heat, I had made a habit of going out for my poor excuse of a run later during the evenings. There was something sublime about the cool breeze and absence of people traffic because well, everyone else was stuck in traffic at that time. I would wave, and occasionally stop to chat with a few familiar faces along the way. Not wanting to be pestered or cat-called by the unpleasant type of familiar face, I would put on a magnificent pair of headphones big enough to at least make me look preoccupied and unapproachable. Power walking as if I was someone twice my age, added a finishing touch to the whole look. 

I like to pride myself on my razor sharp intuition. So when this tall strapping being, who happened to actually be running materialized beside me, I was stunned. Not having heard him approach and get so dangerously close, threw my brain into a reboot sequence. That should have been the first red flag. No, not him, but the fact that I was caught unawares. My intuition would later try again, albeit unsuccessfully, to point out that the aura of this new entity was suspiciously impossible to read. An Aura is the distinctive atmosphere or quality that seems to surround and be generated by a person, thing, or place. His aura was dead quiet, like the dense nothingness of a void. Come to think of it, it felt more like a magnet or a vacuum, drawing things towards it. In the wild, prey animals instinctively become attentive when the noises around them cease. Because this usually indicates a stalking predator. 

I pride myself on more than my intuition. I am also just very prideful. And what they say about big egos [they are me] is that the bigger they are, the harder they fall. 

What would follow that encounter, would take years to unravel. I can’t help but think of the similarities between burning my thigh and leaving that situationship behind. Just like my blindsided intuition, I did not plan on emptying a flaming hot cup of tea onto my own thigh. The burn I sustained, among many other things in life, simply could not be anticipated. And sometimes, we are the unintentional cause of our own pain. I love tea, almost as much as I love people. And like people, tea will only do what it can or what I allow it to do to me. If the tea was cold, nothing would have come out of it. If I had decided to walk away and not engage anyone that evening, nothing would have come of it. But the tea was at maximum temperature, straight out of the kettle. Experiences are intensified by the perspectives and actions of the people involved. In our case, our expectations and actions collided and took a turn for the worst. 

I keep staring at the blistered and bruised skin on my thigh, trying to make out any semblance of what it looked like just a few hours ago. It is tender to the touch and discolored, standing out from the smooth brown skin surrounding it. I can barely recall my personality before all of the heart wrenching romantic experiences I have worked through. I do know that I am a little less trusting, hypersensitive to any signs of conflict or misalignment. What is also hard about leaving difficult situations behind, is accepting that the hurts or experiences are now part of our lives even though they are history. They are at least part of our living memory, for better or worse. We remain the same, but simultaneously changed. Permanently. 

Speaking of airing things out, I did the adult thing and summoned the courage to see a medical professional on what to do with the new wound. Because there are things that other people are better qualified to assess and help us treat. Therapy has been the most expensive and most life changing investment I have ever made. A few weeks into a soul sucking depression will have anyone, thinking thoughts they never would under different circumstances. My first instinct when the scalding hot liquid hit my skin, was to get it off by vigorously rubbing the clothes I was wearing. Of course this only served to damage it further. I am now the proud owner of zigzag scar lines and can almost see into my own flesh. The human thing to do when we are in indescribable emotional pain is to want to make it stop.

Sometimes permanently. Drinking and smoking had worked for me for a little while. Then they made me hate myself more as I watched my health decline, fully aware that I was doing it to myself. Therapy helped me find alternative ways to cope with my intense emotions. 

Our intuitions are supposedly powered by the same mechanisms that run our immune systems. During the pandemic, it was often people who had pre-existing health conditions that suffered the brunt of catching the infection. Along with therapy, educating myself on past traumas has shown me why it was easy for me to be blindsided. I had perfected ignoring the call coming from inside my own body and soul. Along with knowing how to keep us healthy, these systems also know what to do to heal. Thankfully, all I need to do is keep the burnt area clean and dry. This means no tight clothing, soft natural fabrics that allow my skin to breath and the occasional dab of antibiotic ointment when the blisters dry out and form scabs. The worst part of any negative relationship or experience is usually when it is happening. The healing does not or rather should not induce any more pain than the original event unless it unearths something deeper that had always been there. I am aware of how emotional triggers and deficits from my upbringing and socialization contribute to a weak sense of self and poor boundaries. I also know how to recognize people and situations that feed on these vulnerabilities and compel me to compromise my personal integrity. When painful things happen to people who are already emotionally fragile, they tend to feel overwhelmed. Emotional healing involves building resilience and self-trust, so that we’re not caught in repeating cycles of toxicity, like someone who easily catches illness due to a compromised immune system. It means making sure that I am pouring enough into myself that I do not approach relationships with other people from a deficit. Everything from a proper diet, to getting enough sleep and meditating positively influences both physical and emotional health. 

Even if the tea incident had been someone else’s fault, I am the one who suffered the injury. This is not to say that none of my previous romantic partners did anything wrong. But if the wound is on me and I’m the one in pain, it only makes sense to focus on healing myself. And it is a practice. A practice in processing my emotions and providing myself with closure. Releasing any hurts, disappointments, and grievances over unmet expectations. Instead of blaming, avoiding, projecting, and suppressing negative feelings; being with them and emotionally attending to myself. With time, I will heal both physically and emotionally. It is not time itself but rather the space and conditions needed for me to put myself back together that will do the healing. If I embrace a growth mindset, I get to make better choices in the future. As long as I don’t get in the way of it. My body, just like my soul, knows how to heal itself. And I get to move on to other better experiences because I have done my best to learn from and understand previous ones

By Naomi Kessy.