Spoken Word: “The Work You Didn’t Choose”
Spoken Word: “The Work You Didn’t Choose” In Kenya they did not always say— Work. They said— “Show me your papers.” A small book. A pass. A record of your movement, your breath, your worth— written by someone who did not know your name before they needed your labor. Walk without it— and you are illegal on your own land. Stay without work— and you are punished for being still in the place that raised you. They took the land— and called it progress. They took your movement— and called it order. They took your time— and called it opportunity. And somewhere, a man stands between two worlds— his home behind him, a settler’s field ahead— and neither one is his anymore. In Ghana it came softer— No whip in every moment, no chain on every wrist— just a slow rearranging of reality. A road built here. A railway there. A port calling your name without ever speaking it. And suddenly— the old ways feel… far. Not gone— just pushed to the edges of survival. You can stay— but staying grows harder. You ...