
If I could turn back time, I would have listened to the warning signs.
I thought I had married into a loving family. I was wrong.
When I married Kevin, we agreed on one thing: before bringing children into the world, we would first build a stable future.
We worked like a team.
Kevin had a good job, and I ran a boutique that did so well that we managed to buy a car, a small shamba, and even start building our dream home.
But everything changed the year Kevin fell sick.
He passed away after a long hospital stay, leaving behind not just a broken heart, but also loans he had taken to push our business forward.
I was still young, widowed, childless, and drowning in grief.
I thought my in-laws would stand by me.
Instead, they turned into strangers overnight.
Three days after the funeral, they sat me down and told me coldly:
“All that Kevin left the car, the house, the land belongs to our son.
You came into this family with nothing.
If you want to stay here, stay quietly. If not, leave.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
Everything we had built had been through both our efforts.
Yet they locked me out of the house we built together, drove away in the car we bought together, and even claimed the shamba as their own.
On top of my grief, I was now being hounded by creditors because the loans Kevin had taken were in both our names.
I was paying debts for properties that had been snatched away from me.
For months I cried myself to sleep.
I lost weight, I lost friends, and I almost closed my boutique.
I kept asking myself: “Is this the life I worked so hard for? Is this how love ends?”
One evening, when I had nearly given up, a childhood friend visited.
She saw my misery and said:
“You may not believe this, but sometimes the pain we suffer isn’t just misfortune, it’s fueled by envy and cruelty.
If you want justice, speak to Dr. Bokko. He won’t undo the past, but he can make sure those who wronged you don’t prosper from your sweat.”
I hesitated. I’m not the kind of woman who seeks revenge.
But the thought of them living lavishly in the house I had helped build, while I struggled to pay the debts, burned in my chest.
I finally called Dr. Bokko.
He listened patiently to every detail from the loans to the betrayal.
Then he said something I will never forget:
“You are not seeking to harm the innocent.
You are calling back what was taken unjustly.
What is stolen can never bring peace.”
Following his instructions, I took part in a revenge and justice spell, a ritual meant to return the pain of betrayal to the doorstep of those who caused it, without me ever lifting a hand in anger.
I cannot explain how it happened, but within months the ripples began.
The first blow came when the car they had fought me for was involved in a terrible accident.
No one was killed, but the vehicle was completely written off.
Soon after, they started saying the new house they had forced me out of was “haunted.”
They complained of hearing footsteps at night, strange whispers, and feeling cold chills even in the heat of the day.
Eventually, they moved out.
As for the shamba they had boasted about, it became impossible to cultivate.
Every planting season, something mysterious ruined the crops, either floods, pests, or strange soil diseases.
They have since abandoned it.
Meanwhile, my boutique slowly recovered.
I cleared all the loans, started afresh, and today I live a peaceful life on my own terms.
I don’t share this story out of spite.
I share it as proof that sometimes the people who hurt you most don’t get to walk away laughing.
Justice may not come from the courts, but it can come in its own way.
If you have been betrayed, stripped of what you built with your own sweat, or left to suffer while others enjoy your labor, don’t drown in silent pain.
There is hope, and there is a way to reclaim your dignity.
Phone: +254 769404965
Dr. Bokko gave me back not the possessions I lost, but something more important, the peace of knowing that injustice does not go unanswered.