In Kenya, many families quietly struggle with patterns they cannot explain. Poverty repeats itself. Businesses collapse at the same stage. Opportunities disappear just when success seems near. For years, Peter from Kisii believed his family was simply unlucky. But as time went on, he began to notice something deeper โ no one in his family had ever broken through financially.
Peter worked as a boda boda rider for years. He woke up before sunrise, rode until late at night, and saved every coin he could. Yet no matter how hard he worked, money never stayed. His motorcycle would break down repeatedly. He would fall sick unexpectedly. When he tried small businesses on the side, they failed mysteriously. It felt like an invisible wall was blocking his progress.
He began comparing his life with other riders. Some started at the same time as him but had already bought extra motorcycles and built houses. Meanwhile, Peter remained stuck in survival mode. That is when elders in his village told him that sometimes repeated poverty in a family is not normal hardship โ it can be a generational curse or spiritual blockage passed down unknowingly.





