What I’ve Learned at 28, As Kenya Strives to Get Irrigation Right
There comes a point where one begins to notice the difference between development that is spoken about and development that can actually be felt. The distinction is subtle at first, but over time it becomes impossible to ignore. Some projects exist mainly in reports, speeches, and headlines. They sound ambitious, look impressive on paper, and disappear quietly into the background once public attention moves elsewhere. Others take a different path. They settle into people’s lives slowly and practically. A farmer harvests more consistently. A household stops depending entirely on erratic rainfall. A community begins to plan ahead instead of merely reacting to hardship. That kind of change rarely announces itself loudly. Perhaps that is one of the most important things this country continues to learn about development. Real progress is not measured by how grand a project sounds at launch, but by whether ordinary people feel its presence years later. That lesson becomes especially clear wh...