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The Kanzu Casuality

There I stood—Ntinda’s unofficial mannequin—draped in a kanzu starched so stiff it could’ve doubled as a coffin. Auntie Carol, armed with a carnation and a grin wider than the Nile, stabbed the flower onto my lapel like she was spearing luwombo meat. ā€œMzee wa Rutaro!ā€ she declared, as if I’d volunteered to be the human punchline of my sister’s matrimonial circus.

The church? A sauna with hymns. My sweat pooled in places even the boda-boda guy wouldn’t dare discuss. The groomsmen? Strangers who kept calling me ā€œUncleā€ā€”at 25!—while elbowing me for wedding cake predictions. Cake. The mythical dessert that, in true Ugandan fashion, arrived three hours late, after 17 speeches and Auntie Jolly’s tearful ballad about ā€œwhen I was a bride in ’86ā€¦ā€

But the carnation. Oh, that carnation. It wilted faster than my dignity. By the photo shoot, it sagged like a politician’s promise, petals dropping like flies at a Rolex stand. The photographer—bless his overzealous soul—yelled, ā€œSmile, jajja!ā€ as if my face wasn’t screaming, ā€œI’d rather be stuck in a Kajjansi traffic jam!ā€

Then, the dance floor. My kanzu betrayed me, tripping me mid-kadodi. I face-planted before the cake, earning cheers louder than the couple’s kiss. The finale? A slice of fondant so sweet it numbed the shame.

I fled at dusk, carnation-less, trailing glitter and Auntie Carol’s cackle. Kampala weddings: where you’re never just a guest—you’re a casualty of love’s artillery…

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Written by DMT (4)

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