Kenyan Man Showers Praises On Tanzanian Ladies after Visit: "Very Kind and Respectful"
Tanzanian women are beautiful, extremely polite, caring, interesting, patient and attentive. A Kenyan man had glowing words for Tanzanian women. What are qualities of Tanzanian women? This is according to a smitten man who recently travelled to the East African country. The man praised the women, saying they were down-to-earth and resourceful, unlike their Kenyan counterparts. Narrating the culture shock he experienced, he noted that the women are also exceptionally trusting of strangers, respectful, and hospitable. "I've never seen people so trusting like these guys. On the 1st day, we went for drinks. And there was a balance of KSh 4,000. For some reason, my visa card wasn't processing payments. And the bar matron said, it's cool, you can pay tomorrow. I did pay and leave a tip," he wrote on Reddit. The man shared an instance where he struck up a conversation with a woman who, out of her volution, acted as his tour guide during the trip. "I randomly began a conversation with a lady. She bought me lunch, took me around town, and showed me all the nice beach spots. Took me fishing. Never asked for anything, never took anything, she was just vibes," he said. He said he felt unwilling to leave after the woman acted homely by cooking and serving him food at his hotel. He capped the immersing trip by urging fellow Kenyans to make the country a must-visit destination. "Kindly visit Tanzania." What did Kalenjin lady say about their men? While he was swooning over the Tanzanian beauties, a Kalenjin woman, @memoi254, was sounding the alarm against men from her tribe. In a tweet, @memoi254 vowed that she had never dated a man from her tribe. She said they are immature, essential, and unromantic. "I'm a Kalenjin, but you will never see me dating men from that community—very useless, careless, basic and non-romantic men. A Kalenjin man is someone who can live abroad for 20 years, and he still has local behaviours. I would instead get married to a Muhindi and pay dowry," she wrote.
by William Osoro
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