How I Spent My Christmas Holidays

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Remember those days in primary school when they made us write about our holidays? A whole one page foolscap of it. You wouldn’t believe how I would embellish mine; half-lies. Tales. Lores. Then they’d send you off with 37/40 and you’d be elated, imagining that you were about ready to become a doctor and perform a heart operation.

Here is my account. I’m ready to put my hand on a bible that the events I am about to tell are a truthful account of what happened to me on the day of 24th December 2014, circa 10.20am. Nothing but the truth. So help me God. This is the first piece I’m writing this year so it’s going to be a long read, you might want to take a bathroom break now.

I’m on this airline to coasto…just the fam’ and I. We just settled in our seats. Tamms has obviously taken the window seat to take pictures of cumulus clouds, I suppose. The Missus and Kim are in the middle seat, which inevitably means I am left with the aisle seat.

As we settle in, directly across the aisle is a commotion. No, I lie, more like a confrontation. There is an middle-aged yellow-yellow lady with two well-mannered kids (you can tell well-mannered kids…why you ask? They are calm) asking this Indian guy to leave her seat because they are in seat C10, C11 and C12, as it states explicitly here on her ticket. The Indian guy says – and here you have to insert an Indian accent because that’s how he spoke – No problem, you sit on my seat, you sit anyvea. The woman says ‘But I can’t sit anywhere when I have a seat I have been allocated! Kindly vacate my seat, I’m sorry’. The Indian guy says, Lady please sit on my seats, they are very good seats, they are the same. No problem. (Why do Indians like saying No problem even when it’s obvious there is a problem?). And she says with a loud sigh you could hear all the way to the Sameer Business Park, I don’t want to sit on your seats when I have seats I booked!

So the Indian guy mumbles something and tells his sons in his mother tongue to leave the surly lady her seats, because it’s not like it’s curry she will carry home, is it sons? So they scramble out of the seats and the lady and her well-mannered boys settle into their well-earned seats and I’m thinking, finally, world peace.

Well, not yet, Ban Ki Moon.

Meanwhile all passengers are now seated. The crew is doing final checks etc. What does the Indian guy do? He stands defiantly in the aisle with his loyal sons, aged around 8 and 10. Kindly take your seat sir, the cabin crew tells him and he says he needs his luggage moved to where his seat his. Which is your luggage, sir? He counts about seven pieces of luggage over the seat he has just vacated. Sorry, sir, you may have to sit and leave your luggage here. No, he says, I can’t leave my luggage here while I sit aaaaalll the way over there! Sir, your luggage is fine, kindly take your seats. No, I want to sit with my luggage. Sir, please take your seat. No, I want to sit with my luggage, no problem. Hehe. So the cabin crew walks up the aisle about 1,000 seats away and comes back and says, Sir, there is no room for all your luggage where your seats are, so you will have to leave them where they are. No, I can’t leave my luggage here.

Now we have a problem, even though he keeps assuring us there isn’t any. They are the only ones standing at this point. The plane is humming, ready to leave. Mr Pradeep [can we call him that?] and his family of seven isn’t about to budge. He’s wearing official pants and an official shirt tucked in. He has pudgy but tough hands with somewhat dark nails. Middle-class. Maybe he has a shop or workshop or he fixes watches. Or makes baby-cots. Or he’s in printing. He probably does all these. But you can tell he’s a man who accustomed to folding his sleeves. A man who has worked hard all his life to become what he has. A man who has been saving hard to take his whole family down to the coast for a holiday. A man who will be damned if he doesn’t sit with his luggage. At this point I wonder what my pal Boniface Mwangi would have done in this circumstance; maybe stood on his seat, hugged him and whispered in his ear, Don’t sit until you have your luggage with you, apply pressure, stay strong, never give up, Pradeep, fight them damn it! Fight them son of Mumbai!

The flight is delayed now. Pradeep is digging his heels in the soil, or thick carpet as it were. Some self-righteous Nairobians who are just dying to get to coast to do nothing but drink copious amounts of alcohol and fart in the swimming pools are now turning in their seats to glare at Pradeep who remains beautifully unmoved. There are mumbles. Outside is a gorgeous day, the sky is blue and the weather is spectacular. The perfect day for a revolution.

The flight purser, I think, struts over to where one of the cabin crew is trying to drive sense into Pradeep. By the way, I have to say that the flight attendants on that flight were real beauties. Their uniforms were well pressed and actually had colour, they looked immaculate with these thin belts around their waists. And they actually had waists to speak of. I have noticed, and I think I wrote it in one of my columns before, a worrying trend of cabin crews losing their waistlines. That they are no longer pretty or with long legs as we remember them. Something terrible is happening to cabin crews’ waistlines, they are growing big and I don’t know how safe that is for us passengers. I’m just saying. We are losing our elephants and now we are losing waistlines of our cabin crews and we are doing nothing but laughing at memes.

But these particular girls were quite trim and I wanted to plead with them to maintain their shapes and to avoid the Swiss chocolates when they flying international. We beg you. You can keep all the weaves you want, but please retain your waists because there is little else to look at during flights plus nothing beats being served by a good looking air stewardess, just so you know. It’s the only reason we bother to do online-check in.

Sir, we are ready to take off and you are delaying this flight, please take your seats immediately, the stern flight purser tells Pradeep. Pradeep doesn’t care for small waists and cute thin belts. He isn’t moving without his bags. The murmurs around the plane are getting louder. A smart Alec, some chap seated three seats behind me says loudly, and he says it in Swahili which I’m too lazy to write here verbatim because I’m no Ken Walibora, that guy has a point, he is only afraid that someone might get off at Mtito Andei with his luggage. There are ripples of laughter in the plane. Hohohoho.

But Pradeep isn’t moved by gags. Neither are his stoic sons.

So the flight purser throws in the towel and says, Look, if you refuse to sit down I’m going to get the captain to handle this case and with that she walks away in a huff and I’m like uuuuuuuu, the captain! Uuuuuuuu, she is going to report you to the captain, you are in so much trouble Pradeep because when they call the captain, that’s it, you are toast my Mumbai friend. She made it look like she was going to report him to the headmaster and the said captain would make him uproot a huge tree trunk before he eats his dinner in Mombasa. Uuuuuuuu, the captain! We are so scared. We are quaking in our sandals.

To be honest, I didn’t mind the drama. No matter how unreasonable Pradeep was, I was routing for him to stay put and not move without his damned luggage. I mean, if a man wants to sit with his luggage let him! Do you know what he’s carrying in the luggage in the first place? No really, do you? Maybe in one of those bags is an urn containing his grandfather’s ashes and one of his grandfather’s wishes was that he is taken to coast because before he passed on he was bed ridden and all he dreamt of was getting well and having some sand under his feet. So yeah, Pradeep was within his rights to want his luggage by his feet, because men just don’t insist they want their luggage by their feet everyday, do they? Fuck airline regulations, they didn’t know his grandfather, he was a noble and honest man, raised him and his four brothers and sisters through hardship, now his brother is a doctor in Nairobi. You know doctor Patel, don’t you? Everybody knows Doctor Patel. Well, that’s Pradeep’s kid bro.

So I was ready to sit on the runway for another two hours until Pradeep got to sit with his treasured luggage. Besides what was I rushing to the coast to do? I was only going to spend all my time in the pool teaching Tamms how to float (unsuccessfully) and her asking me, What do I do to float, papa? And me trying not to say, apart from try not to eat half of the dessert buffet? But I can’t because she might get pregnant at 17 all because I said that to her at 6! Raising girls is like walking around with an egg on a spoon, man.

By the way, folks with kids, does your kid always ask you something and you always give them a reasonable fatherly answer while you actually have a smart-ass answer in your head? I struggle with that. I really do. I wish I could speak my mind: Papa, why does Kim like crying? Me: Because he’s still a baby and babies can’t talk so their only way to communicate is to cry and get our attention. Yawn. (In my head: Because he takes after mom’s side of the family.)

Anyway, where was I? Oh, yeah, right. Si now the purser has walked away to report Pradeep to the captain. We all sit and wait. There is silence in the plane because we are all dying to see what will happen to poor Pradeep here and his grandfather’s ashes. Will they be heartless enough to throw him and his family out? He has sons and a daughter and his wife and a very elderly looking woman who I suspect is his grandmother and another much much older looking one who I suspect is his great great grandmother. You know how Indians are; they keep familia together. Safety in numbers.

The plane is deathly silent. Not even a cough. Even the babies have stopped crying. We wait. Any moment now I imagine the captain kicking out the door of his cockpit and roaring, WHO IS THAT MAKING TROUBLE ON MY BLOODY PLANE?! ER, WHO?? We will all cower, slide further down our seats. Pin drop silence. I WILL ASK ONE LAST TIME, WHO IS THAT MAKING TROUBLE ON MY BLOODY PLANE?!

And then a small baby voice, a small timid and innocent voice, Tamms’s voice, will say, “This one,” as she points at Pradeep with her small tiny finger. Such a snitch, Tamms! That’s what I’m raising. She can’t join the mafia, that girl. I suspect she has taken that from my side of the family, I’m afraid. My little boy, though, will be a better mafia. He has lots of Kikuyu blood in him and so you will pluck all the nails on his fingers before he rats on Pradeep. Atta boy!

After Tamms has sold Pradeep down the river, the captain will then slowly strut down the aisle, eyes into slits now, peering intently at Pradeep. But Pradeep is from India, he has watched tons of Indian movies with bad hairy men worse than this captain. The captain doesn’t even have a beard. Men without beards can only scare dolls. Even if they wear fancy captain hats. Pradeep isn’t moved, in fact he sneers a little. Plus his family has fought the bloody Pakistanis for generations; he isn’t scared of a mere captain without a beard. If this were a movie, some pretty Indian girls with tanned skin and red dots on their forehead would come into the plane singing their hearts out. Like canaries. But this is life. No pretty Indians girls in planes. No red dots. Just Pradeep sneering and the beardless captain bearing on him and his two boys.

Everybody in the plane is cowering as the big bad captain walks down the aisle. There are a good number of first time fliers in the plane (you know the ones; the ones who take pictures of the wings and anything else) who don’t know their damned rights. They imagine the captain is a supreme being. A despot. A martinet. First time fliers don’t know any better; they want to open the windows for fresh air. Hehe. Anyway, as the captain walks down the aisle, everybody avoids eye contact with him because he might suddenly stop at your seat and shout, YOU! GET OFF, I CAN’T FLY THIS BLOODY PLANE WITH SOMEONE WITH A BAD WEAVE LIKE THAT ON IT.

Talking of captains.

Why is it that when all captains speak into their fancy intercom thingis [it is an Intercom right?] they sound like they went to London Business School at some point in their lives and when you meet some of them in person they sound like they attended Karatina Computer College? What is it about the cockpit that turns good men and women into phonies? Is this a conundrum worth addressing or should I move on? No seriously, it baffles me. Those posh voices: “This is your captain Wachira Wanjiru; I’m assisted by my first officer Leilang Ole Kaparo (you’ve never really heard of a Maasai captain, have you?). I hope you are enjoying your flight so far, we are cruising at 28,000 feet, somewhere over Bujumbura, we expect to touchdown at OR Tambo at 10mins after 11pm, the weather in Johannesburg is a bit chilly with showers expected. Kindly get confortable and feel free to get assistance from our lovely crew, relax and enjoy the remainder of your flight.” Diiing. All posh and shit, talking like Sir Alex Fergusson. Then you meet them in a bar and captain Wanjiru from Manchester is saying, “here is the dhing….”

Anyway, the captain never comes out. We wait and wait but he (or she) never comes out. Instead some chap with a radio in his hand and a luminous safety jacket comes in and walks up to Pradeep and says, Sir, you have two options here, you either sit down or you disembark from the plane because this plane is late. There is that moment where nothing moves because the events to follow will depend on Pradeep here and I hope he says, I choose to sit with my luggage, I – like Bonnie – pray he stays the course instead the damned guy, after raising my hope so high, simply says in that Indian accent and one finger in the air, All right, I sit no problem and he ushers his sons to their seats at the back. I feel like crying. I suspect he only sat because he didn’t understand what “disembark,” meant and it sounded like something that would bring shame and dishonour to his family and he couldn’t have that.

But still, I was deeply disappointed. I was waiting for a melee. I was waiting for Pradeep to stand straight before him and his starched captain uniform and say, “I’m the son of XX, and these are my sons, Sanjiv and Sanjay, and we will not sit if our luggage isn’t with us.” Then the captain will have to hold him and Sanjiv by their ears and drag their curry-asses down the aisle while his wife screamed at the captain to let him go this minute or she will strangle him with her sari, and his elderly mother and grandmother and great great grandmother screamed at the filthy captain ‘let go, let go’ and Pradeep screaming, saying, We fought the Pakistanis at the border, we shall fight the captains here in Nairobi and people cheering Pradeep and some cheering the captain and the Missus creasing her brows disapprovingly and my nigga Kim obliviously sucking on a bottle and Tamms, my snitch baby, calmly staring out through the window, at that beautiful azure revolutionary skies wondering if a lady really has to skip the dessert to float in a goddamn swimming pool.

Well, happy New Year, Gang.

[Image Credit: Free stock photos]

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6
136 Comments
  1. Yes. Crying babies are always from the mum’s gene-pool. My 4 year old daughter thinks her mum is the super power in the house because she gives her a beating and I just tell her not to repeat mistakes.

    I think it is time I dropped the egg on my spoon.

    “this is the dhing…..” LMAO. Hoping I am the first to comment.

  2. Hehe. I just cant finish reading this. The first five paragraphs are already tearing me up. Thanks Biko for making my week

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  3. am at work and all i can do is chuckle. I wanted to laugh so hard, so now i have tears and look like I swallowed a whole potato!!

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  4. Write a book man, I would buy it. Entertaining read, your way with words is amazing. Don’t be too hard on the Indians, this country would be very dull without the Indian spice and curry!

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  5. Ha ha ha ha ha ha:-D :-D…YOU! GET OFF, I CAN’T FLY THIS BLOODY PLANE WITH SOMEONE WITH A BAD WEAVE LIKE THAT ON IT.

    woi!!! Yehofa 😀

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  6. Biko ati Karatina Computer College? Grrrrhh!
    That is my village college and you should know how prestigious it is in the village and how a valuable member of the that society you are if you trained there. Lol!
    You have clearly made my morning though. Happy new year!

  7. Hahahahahaha what a start of a journey..Pradeep really disappoints me too..
    this line though…’The captain doesn’t even have a beard. Men without beards can only scare dolls.’ Happy new year Biko.

  8. “Then the captain will have to hold him and Sanjiv by their ears and drag their curry-asses down the aisle while his wife screamed at the captain to let him go this minute or she will strangle him with her sari” This one made the guys in the office think am mad, laughing my head off (the curse of the open plan office!). Great piece pal!

  9. Biko! Mwenye alikuroga alikufa! I have laughed throughout! Thank you so much! I was having a rather crappy day….NOT ANY MORE!

  10. Please never stop writing, You make my day everyday I read any of your articles. Good way to start the year>>>>he is only afraid that someone might get off at Mtito Andei with his luggage.

  11. Eish…after all that drama Pradeep decided to let go so easily. maybe he was just scared of the guy in the luminous jacket and radio…..

    “The plane is deathly silent. Not even a cough. Even the babies have stopped crying. We wait. Any moment now I imagine the captain kicking out the door of his cockpit and roaring, WHO IS THAT MAKING TROUBLE ON MY BLOODY PLANE?! ER, WHO?? We will all cower, slide further down our seats. Pin drop silence. I WILL ASK ONE LAST TIME, WHO IS THAT MAKING TROUBLE ON MY BLOODY PLANE?!”

    This shows how many commando movies you have watched in the past.
    happy new year too Biko

  12. Biko that was hilarious .I am from Karatina went to a school called Mathaithi primary and I have been told my spoken English is amazing so drop the sarcasm. Maybe there is something about people from Karatina.

  13. interesting! naye Biko, this wasnt ur holiday! the plane hadnt even Nairobi by the time the story ended!!!!!

  14. Something terrible is happening to cabin crews’ waistlines, they are growing big and I don’t know how safe that is for us passengers. I’m just saying. We are losing our elephants and now we are losing waistlines of our cabin crews and we are doing nothing but laughing at memes.

    Biko you are Hilarious.
    I know Doctor Patel……

  15. Seriously Biko haven’t you heard of speech marks I was forever struggling with knowing who is saying what.
    Also felt wasted by Pradeep. I mean after all that?

  16. Biko, you watched too many movies growing up, lol… By the way, I have a client called Pradeep, will tell him to read this

  17. tears!! tears!!! am pretending to be working on an excel sheet while reading this—and i can’t bloody laugh out loud because it’s supposed to be a serious business—-good piece Biko—awaiting more on how your holiday from this side was with bated breath!

  18. Biko, you are madness through a pen……or keyboard. The day I am fired for almost always laughing at the office, ni wewe!

  19. “We beg you. You can keep all the weaves you want, but please retain your waists because there is little else to look at during flights plus nothing beats being served by a good looking air stewardess… ”

    LMAO!!! Biko, you write effortlessly. No drama on flight back?

  20. Now Jackson you end your story in anti-climax. The narrative was about how you spent your xmas but all we have been treated to is a an episode inside the plane. Or is this season one episode one we should rub our fingers and wait for season two.

  21. Biko, Biko, Biko… Am reading this while in a salon, of course doing a weave… And laughing to tears. If this guy ( who seems inexperienced) pricks my scalp with dhis very long needle, it’s on you!!! Lol!
    And am wondering, when r u writing about the Xmas part?

  22. Hahahahahahahahahaha…..Biko!
    Here is the dhing…I wish the only college I needed to attend to become a pilot was Karatina Computer College.

    Just how many hours did it take for Prandeep to finally sit, felt like it was atlest 6hours minimum reading this…

  23. NOT SAFE FOR WORK!!! Unless snorting and tearing from fighting back laughter is acceptable at your employment. I loved this!

  24. ” drag their curry-asses down the aisle while his wife screamed at the captain to let him go this minute or she will strangle him with her sari” I am dead! Book!Book!Book!Book!
    Story haijaisha… Hata Ndege haijafika Costo!

  25. I suspect he only sat because he didn’t understand what “disembark,” meant and it sounded like something that would bring shame and dishonour to his family and he couldn’t have that.<————– This right here killed me

  26. “that guy has a point, he is only afraid that someone might get off at Mtito Andei with his luggage. There are ripples of laughter in the plane. Hohohoho.”…hilarious! I miss Kenyan jokes like this, I can only imagine how the guy said it in Swahili..Happy New Year guy! Keep the stories coming!

  27. I love your writing absolutely amazing. Reminds me of my daily job. Brilliant in the fact that u create suspense is ur writing.

  28. We speak like we attended London School of Economics because we know you cannot see us. Speaking over the intercom while we are holed up in the cockpit allows us to assume any character we like. But there is a history behind it too. It started with the first black African pilots and why most of them have two English names.

    1. “We speak like we attended London School of Economics because we know you cannot see us.” Haha. Good one, Captain.

      1. Uuuuuu! We have a captain in the house. Biko utachapwa…. Uuuuu!!

        Trust Biko to use “Uuuuuu’s” in a piece. Ha ha!
        This is a great start.
        I personally like the lengthy ones.

  29. Bahahahahaha ‘I feel like crying. I suspect he only sat because he didn’t understand what “disembark,” meant and it sounded like something that would bring shame and dishonour to his family and he couldn’t have that.’

  30. “….Diiing. All posh and shit, talking like Sir Alex Fergusson. Then you meet them in a bar and captain Wanjiru from Manchester is saying, “here is the dhing….””

    HILARIOUS! And so very true!
    The year now just began….finesse this was.

  31. Great piece Biko… Couldn’t stop reading to the end even after everyone else left the office for home…. Happy New Year

  32. This article could use a bit of proof reading. Most of your articles, really. In saying that, this drew a few chuckles, so it wasn’t such a terrible read.

  33. As soon as you invoked Ban Ki Moon, I knew it would be epic.

    Then I ran into this…
    “We are losing our elephants and now we are losing waistlines of our cabin crews and we are doing nothing but laughing at memes.”

    And this was just after the #Tweet4Elephants events.

  34. Loved it!!!! You know l said to myself l would read only four paragraphs and finish the rest after waking up, oh how I finished reading and I feel it was oh soooo short! Didn’t even have to take potty break 😀

  35. Biko you have started the year greatly , I have laughed my heart out! I am trying to imagine one Pradeep remaining beautifully unmoved, lovely day and year ahead!

  36. “YOU! GET OFF, I CAN’T FLY THIS BLOODY PLANE WITH SOMEONE WITH A BAD WEAVE LIKE THAT ON IT.” I read that part paused, had some beverage- called my Mom to tell her am having a great day and continued reading… Bravo Biko!

  37. Then you meet them in a bar and captain Wanjiru from Manchester is saying, “here is the dhing….” hahahahaha!
    But Pradeep disappointed us all nkt!
    Happy New Year Biko!

  38. Nostalgia. I remember my first holiday composition, done in 1982 or thereabouts. It was a masterpiece titled ‘How I spended my holiday’

  39. ‘… All right, I sit no problem and he ushers his sons to their seats at the back. I feel like crying. I suspect he only sat because he didn’t understand what “disembark,” meant and it sounded like something that would bring shame and dishonour to his family and he couldn’t have that.’….I have died, resurrected and died again! hahahahahahhahaha…You can never go wrong with Indian jokes!!!

  40. Interesting read, humorous all the way, that Indian guy deserves an award for stubbornness, by the way Biko, were you on an airline or an aircraft? hehe

  41. ok.. so u also had to make us feel as disappointed as you were huh.. you started the story with so much promise and no climax…sigh…i wish prandeep left the plane.then id have loved the ending of this story too…

    P.S i think anyone who can fly a bloody plane deserves to act all posh n shit…heh heh heh

  42. “He has pudgy but tough hands with somewhat dark nails. Middle-class. Maybe he has a shop or workshop or he fixes watches. Or makes baby-cots. Or he’s in printing. He probably does all these. But you can tell he’s a man who accustomed to folding his sleeves”….. Dead!!!!

    What a way to start the year!! am in stitches in the office – thank goodness it is lunch time fewer people in the office…. Keeping them coming – looking forward to an even better year

  43. What a way to start the year.. I’m glad you still don’t have your sanity back! I’m in stitches…Biko you’re sick, always been.

    …”At this point I wonder what my pal Boniface Mwangi would have done in this circumstance; maybe stood on his seat, hugged him and whispered in his ear, Don’t sit until you have your luggage with you, apply pressure, stay strong, never give up, Pradeep, fight them damn it! Fight them son of Mumbai!”

  44. Oh Biko! Master of digress! Still. idie. That smart Alec killed it!

    Be very scared when Tamms discovers this blog and moreso that you’ve been snitchin’ on her hehehe

  45. Pradeep is a bright guy. You see a guy in a luminous jacket with a radio in hand in your plane you know he means business.

  46. Happy New Year… I hope that one of your resolutions is to compile these stories into a book of short stories… please please 🙂

  47. highly dissapointed- by pradeep!!!! i expected that the guy would arraign his 4 generational family to do some gijarati moves.

  48. ……. I wish I could speak my mind: Papa, why does Kim like crying? Me: Because he’s still a baby and babies can’t talk so their only way to communicate is to cry and get our attention. Yawn. (In my head: Because he takes after mom’s side of the family.)… LOOL

  49. Biko you must have been one of those high school students who totally relished occasions where a student blatantly refused punishment and then awaited the teacher’s reaction..a good piece to start the year with,awesome!

  50. Great read as always. Please do address that intersection between the London Business School and the Karatina Computer College…..this conundrum needs a platform.

  51. read it immediately i got the notification on email , three reads later and I am still trying to imagine what was in the bag . Maybe tools of work for watch repair ?

  52. Have i laughed or what? Biko, you analyzed Pradeep and his family in what? 10 minutes? Hilarious, as usual and well written story!

  53. Yo, I am sure I am not the only one waiting for Part 2, 3 and 4 of this piece. This was not you Xmas holiday, you did’t even leave the airport.
    Dude, you better have parts 2 – 4. It would make for good Feb reading, especially for those of us pushing thru the winter.

  54. ….We are losing our elephants and now we are losing waistlines of our cabin crews and we are doing nothing but laughing at memes…..that’s my killer line

  55. “Don’t sit until you have your luggage with you, apply pressure, stay strong, never give up, Pradeep, fight them damn it! Fight them son of Mumbai!”

    As I pick myself from the floor, I have to put it out there, I love humor and this Biko-kind-of-humor is my flask of chai.

    http://www.mytinytwocents.blogspot.com/

  56. Biko,my workmates are literally chasing me away..ati ‘why do they sound like they attended Karatina Community College:D’
    ,…
    you are really too much,ati …my nigga Kim and my snitch baby Tamms:D

  57. These two lines just killed me
    “…that guy has a point, he is only afraid that someone might get off at Mtito Andei with his luggage. There are ripples of laughter in the plane. Hohohoho… ahahahahahahah

    I feel like crying. I suspect he only sat because he didn’t understand what “disembark,” meant and it sounded like something that would bring shame and dishonour to his family and he couldn’t have that…”

    Bikozulu i just love your style of writing man, awesome

  58. Just read this;new fan,, so hilarious..

    Men without beards can only scare dolls

    i wonder if you are this funny while holding conversations or such humor can only be brought out in writing.

  59. Praandep is a crazy lilltle man, who has brought shame to the indian community. How in hell could he cause all this ruckus and sit down, He should be put on a no fly list, he better be ashamed of himself…….

    Hows 2071 so far gang?