Some amazing expeditions begin with a dream and inspiration. My journey began in jest.
Three years into my job, I had managed to build a very successful business from scratch within a major mobile tech company and was knee-deep in starting up my second. It had been a transformational ride from boot-strap social entrepreneur to corporate manager jet-setting Asia and Europe in the name of product and profit.
It’s been a while since we’ve written. JLee very recently finished up her MBA training, I’ve been living the startup life in NYC. We are both headed back on the road this summer with Turkey, Solvenia, Croatia, Ireland, Morocco, China & Netherlands on the itinerary.
The Socient Life continues in our search both philosophically and through product and real business models that are making impactful good in the world. For myself, I’ve been interested in seeing the evolution of social impact becoming generationally an ethos within entrepreneurship.
Lately, discussions with my business partner have revolved around scalability, the magic word that has become an ethos in of itself within the startup world, particularly in Silicon Valley. As we wandered Brooklyn artisanal markets for NYC Design Week, perusing the “slow foods” equivalent of craft goods, she became increasingly nonplussed about lack of scalability for any of the products we saw. From marble-hand-chiseled-glazed cups (personal wabisabi favorite of mine, costing its creator 120 hours of work, selling for $34), to art print transfers of surely a graphic student’s creation into sellable greeting card formats – My partner noted how like any cultural art piece, these were singular one-offs, exposable to only small portions of the human population. Maybe one day some archaeologists will dig up our civilizations and these fad market items will become museum artifacts of our epoch. But definitely not of any impactful value in our current day and age. Read More
It wasn’t immediately apparent during my first two days in Kampala that there’d be a substantial fashion story to cover. In fact, my initial wardrobe assessment after checking out red soil roads crowded with black-smog spewing trucks and plaintains transported on bicycles, was to go grunge. Pulled out my trusty Merrel hiking boots, REI khaki trekking trousers and next-to-be-tossed Forever21 T-shirt. By end of day after my ride home on an infamous boda-boda motorcycle taxi, my hair was a wind-blown tangled mess, shoes grimy from mud, and dust smudged all over my cheeks.
Until I realized, not only was I possibly the dirtiest commuter in Kampala, I was also the worse-dressed. It was a miracle watching office girls in bright colored blouses and sleek grey pencil skirts whizzing by riding side-saddle with ankles demurely crossed on one side of their bodas while I struggled to keep from falling off, amateurly straddled across my ride and holding on for dear life to my amused boda driver.
Soon I noticed that everyone looked like they were dressed for a Wall Street fashion shoot. Men in starched collar euro-fit shirts, charcoal suits and pressed pants, women in tight black sheath dresses and matching demi-jackets adorned by elegantly braided metal and stone jewelry while holding lipstick red patent leather handbags.
And most of all, the shiny shoes. No matter what the weather or how much walking was involved, everyone shows up to work with impeccably clean shoes. The girls of Kampala negotiating muddy and hilly streets in shiny red stilettos with maven finesse made me rue my decision to forgo packing heels into my suitcase.
Throughout the city, only major roads are paved. Most residents live in districts without street signs and boda drivers take directions based on local landmarks. Residential paths winding deep into neighborhoods are lined with small shops offering mani-pedis, hair-braiding salons and suit-fitting among street cafes, mobile money stands and lush forest foliage.
Laundry is a national obsession. Washing machines are rare, out and about rough brick shanties with tin rooftops, one can find wide buckets of water, laundry soap and all manners of signature pieces hung out to dry on the line. A household could be judged by what’s on display, and stained knickers would be an unacceptable blight and shame to the neighborhood.
In most cultures, shiny shoes and a tailored suit still represents the classic definition of what a professional should look like. But coming from California where the dirty-surfer-ripped-tee-flipflops-messy-hair look is considered as acceptable professional attire around many offices, I wanted to investigate further. So I began asking around my Kampala officemates. This is what locals had to say:
“Of course, it would be unthinkable to walk out of the house in a rumpled shirt. You always want to make sure that your clothes are properly ironed and not sloppy. Otherwise, people would look at you funny, like this person is a joke!”
“In school our teachers always emphasize that being clean and dressed properly is important for education. You can’t just earn good grades. If you came to school with your shirt not tucked in or dirty, you could get in trouble for that. It all goes together.”
“My mother always told us when we were young, how important it was that your shirt is neat, the collar is straight. Our pants must be pressed and we had to take good care of our shoes. It shows that you are serious about your work.”
In fact, on street corners around Kampala, you can see little booths stocked with the tools of trade for shoe shine. It’s not unusual to find wet sneakers turned inside in neat rows when strolling down Bogoma Road as shoe-cleaning services lay their customer footwear out to dry. In our office bathrooms, the building management hangs up neatly typed signs reading, “Please do not wash dishes or shoes in the sink, they will clog the pipes. Thank you.”
And thus began my obsession with a Kiwi Shoe Polish radio commercial, one I hear everyday at 6:30am on the car radio on the way to work. It roughly goes like this:
“Kiwi Shoe Polish nourishes and protects your shoes, keeping them looking newer, for longer.
In Uganda, we teach our children how to make the most out of limited resources.
Nothing is ever wasted. By taking good care of their things and making them last, children learn to be responsible.
Because we know that a bright future tomorrow, starts with making the right decisions today.”
Nowhere is this more apparent than at Makerere University, where the nation’s top students study. On Saturdays, the university’s laundry is spread like brightly colored flags across lawns and bushes, washed, dried and ironed by workers of student-started laundering services. Higher education is not only a privilege, it is the hard-earned sacrifice of students and their elders alike.
Whereas the majority population derives its living primarily from subsistence farming, children begin earning their way to pay for school fees through odd jobs and starting up small entrepreneurial businesses. My coworkers had put themselves through high school and university by gathering their friends together to do local deliveries, helping the elderly or busy with yard and housework.
African entrepreneurship has been highly touted by the likes of Time and Forbes. In Uganda, it is becoming a more common experience among the younger generation. Similar startup experiences growing up are further encouraged by professors, classes and programs promoting youth entrepreneurship.
To hear my colleagues talk, you can understand the calculation and planning undertaken in their education and career decisions to compete in a highly crowded job market. Their parents faithfully taught the values of thrift, hard work, and the importance of presentation to give every possible advantage to their children amidst meager means. Their desire to grow, to do more, learn more, be more, is shaped by the challenges of growing up poor. Yet there is no shame, only a shared pride and laughter over challenges overcome through perseverance and ingenuity and a determination to succeed. More than one person mentioned how mom and dad was their hero.
Within chic colors popping out vividly against dark professional hues and tailoring, one senses that hope, aspiration and gumption pervades in Kampala. People are motivated and proud of the adversities overcome, see themselves as part of Africa’s future, and are unafraid to dream big dreams.
Ready for the world, and dressed for success. The difference is but in the shine of a shoe.
To watch a Kenyan version of the Kiwi commercial, see below:
A year ago, JLee announced to MLo, “I’ll pack you up in my suitcase when I work in Africa.” Little did we know that we would reunite this Easter in South Africa. JLee is working in Kenya to bring change through small scale farmers while MLo is wandering countries on the X-Ordinary project.
LeeandLo is dedicated to blogging about the “Socient Life” – Social Entrepreneurship lifestyle. Our mission is to bring you stories and ideas from around the world in the areas of Fashion, Design & Tech with a social impact mindset.
Today, we wanted to celebrate the official launch of LeeandLo by showcasing one of the more creative Socient businesses we discovered during our reunion in Cape Town.
I recently had the opportunity to go on a homestay in Bungoma, a village in the rural part of western Kenya.
I spent the day following around my guide to learn more about the lifestyle of your average farmer. In many households, families depend on kerosene lamps which can be dim and fuel consuming. We were on a project to study the use of solar lamps.
Some of our learnings were that:
For women in the household, light provided a sense of security. Having a sustainable light source while walking around outside, it affords protection and discourages robbers.
For children, it represented a future, as they were able to study for longer hours with a light source in the house.
For men, it represented status, as light in a household meant protection for the family, as well as a luxury to posess.
One thing I had not expected to discover was the particular dynamics that are created due to the availability of light. When the evening hit, the whole family gathered around the one solar lamp. As the only light source, wherever the lamp went, the family went. In a way, the limited source of light physically brought together the family.
The availability and quantity of light can have a major impact on family dynamics. Can the scarcity of light give more quality of life? Because the family is forced to closer physical proximity, the relationships between members can be more intimate due to the added amount of time spent together. Rather than leaving to work, study and relax in separate rooms of the house, everyone must stick together.
Is there life after the spa? As an avid guest of Korean spa facilities, I find myself standing in a little shop located in Cape Town’s bustling Bay Harbour Market, wondering about the secret life of teabags. Think about it, a teabag lives a quiet existence, nestled with its family of teabags in a Lipton paper carton or Chinese tea can. Perhaps it is individually packaged, dressed in little white sachets. It leaves its sleepy brethren, and perhaps joins an intimate conversation between friends or a solo afternoon reverie. Sitting in a tiny porcelain tub, hot water is poured over. Depending on the treatment ordered, our teabag might enjoy an added milk soak or light sugar scrub. Read More
This was recently taken from a particular port somewhere in the world. Where exactly? Scroll to the bottom of the LeeandLo page to find out where JLee and MLo are traveling on any given day. As they say here, Veilige reis!
Ahh… IST, my old friend. Somehow, star alliance, cheap Turk Air flights w roomy, USB plugged economy seats and little freebie in-flight care kits filled w lip balm, sleeping eye masks, socks and other goodies always find me coming back.
Moon looming over New Camaldoli Hermitage in Big Sur, California
“The secret of waiting is the faith that the seed has been planted, that something has begun. Active waiting means to be present fully to the moment, in the conviction that something is happening. A waiting person is a patient person. The word “patience” means the willingness to stay where we are and live the situation out to the full in the belief that something hidden there will manifest itself to us.” – Henri Nouwen
Social Entrepreneurship happens everywhere. Around the world, people are creating businesses, designing products, building infrastructure, investing in needy communities, creating ethos-inspired fashion to drive real impact on real lives. Inside Travel, we traipse the world to bring you stories exploring indigenous innovations, cultural nuances and everything we find interesting and raises the bar of our imagination on how change can happen through the marketplace.