A beautiful young lady has shared her tactics of luring men into giving her money. Kiambu woman Joyce Wairimu shares her experience with witchcraft. Joyce Wairimu said her desperation for a good lifestyle led her to a hustle that introduced her to a witch doctor. The single mother of one who started clubbing and drinking after high school said she targeted clients from clubs and bars. Kiambu woman spiking drinks in bars Speaking to TUKO.co.ke, Wairimu said she used to spike her targeted clients’s drinks with magic substances. “You had to be smart since you cannot be openly spiking drinks in the bar. There was a substance I was given that I would put in my mouth. I would take the drink first to mix the substance with what they are drinking and then give the drink back to them,” she claimed. Wairimu from Kiambu said she had a good relationship with her witch doctor, who would upgrade her tactics. Subscribe to watch new videos Demonic spirits in form of flour She shared she was given several magic substances including body lotion and demonic spirits in the form of flour. “The perfume and lotion I was given made my clients see me glowing. They would see an attractive woman, drawing them closer to me. The flour that I was given helped me lure married men to my bed and give me exactly what I wanted. I would wake up at 3am and pray while facing a different direction as I cast a spell on the name of the person I wanted. They would call me during the day saying they wanted to see me, and that is how I would get the favour I wanted from them,” she noted. She also claimed that not all married men fell for her trap, as some had religious wives or mothers whose prayers protected them. Caution while donating cash in rural homes In another story, Kenyans said the fear of witchcraft discouraged them from donating cash in rural homes. The Kenyan town and city dwellers said they exercised caution not to fall prey to the antics of supposed village witches who were in their numbers. It emerged that the radical natives in the upcountry areas used cash donations and other goodies to cast spells on the benefactors. To avert such, those willing to give but cautious enough preferred mobile money to direct contact with those believed to undertake black magic.
by John Green