by Sheldon Starnel
Before I begin allow me to introduce a generation
A generation that wakes up before opportunity wakes up
A generation that refreshes pages the way millennials refreshed prayers
A generation that does not knock on doors, because doors are now digital
A generation that does not carry CVs in envelopes but hopes in smartphones
Every morning somebody somewhere opens an app
A three letter word carrying a three trillion problems
The app is the office
The app is the manager
The app is the receptionist
And sometimes the judge
Ajabu ni kwamba app is happy
Tunafungua app kutafuta happiness
Lakini app inatupea pressure badala ya pleasure
Tunatafuta connection Lakini tunabaki bila protection
Tunatafuta income Lakini income inatuonyeshe outcome hatukuona iki come
We are connected to customers
Connected to ratings
Connected to maps
Connected to algoriths, deadlines
Yet disconnected from rights
And here come the stars
Not the sky that guided sailors or inspired poets
It’s the stars that decides whether you eat
Five stars and you become a hero
Three stars and suddenly you become a problem
One complainant and your confidence collapses
Like a building built on a borrowed bridge
Kilometers of commitment
Years of experience, months of sacrifices
All gathered to a rating system
Today’s stars are not in the sky but in our phones
Our success depending on someone tapping on a star
Kila time tuna hustle mpaka hustle inaitisha break
Tunakimbiza maisha Lakini maishi inatukimbiza
Rider anakimbiza delivery
Delivery inakimbiza deadline
Deadline inakimbiza rating
Rating inakimbiza income
Income inakimbiza bills
Bills inakimbiza peace
Peace we are left to search for
Like a password to a life we were promised
Lakini swali inabaki moja
What is work without rights?
What is labor without dignity?
What is flexibility without stability?
What is opportunity if it disappears the moment you need it most?
What is freedom if saying NO means saying YES to hunger?
What is independence if your survival depends
On an invisible algorithm
An algorithm that is your boss
An invisible boss who decides who to eat and starve today
And identity…who am I?
Am I a freelancer, contractor, self employed
Or am I simply a survivor whose struggle
Has been rebranded?
Labels change
Technology changes
But struggle has refused retirement.
Imekuwa njaa ile ile iliyojivaa kama teknolojia
Ni preasure ile ile iliyojivaa kama uvumbuzi
Ni uncertainty ile ile ilojifunza teknolojia
And somehow we are expected to celebrate
The ladder without noticing how the top
Keeps moving higher.
yet we rise because resilience is our second language
we learned resilience before success
met rejection before opportunity
learned how to rebuild before rest.
Every application ignored
Every task cancelled
Every door closed
We collected them and turned them into stepping stones
Because resilience is what happens when dreams refuses eviction
Resilience is what happens when tomorrow keeps disappointing
Tunataki kazi na haki
Tunataka income na insurance
Tunataka connection na protection
Tunataka platform na sio flat form
Tunataka flexibility Lakini sio possibility
Ya kufukuzwa na instability
This piece I bring to an end Lakini this will not be my end
Because the gig economy is not built by apps
But built by people
Not by algorithm but by ambition
Not by platform but by perseverance
Not by technology but by humanity.
Until every worker is seen
Until every voice is heard
Until every right is respected
We shall continue.
Because we are more than workers
We are the heartbeat behind the hustle
The people behind the platform
The hope behind the log in
And every time log in
Is a true definition of bado sijakata tamaa?
