A whole community walked for its mind.
On Saturday 30 May 2026, more than 800 people walked 15 kilometres against substance use. Together, they took mental health hope to the grassroots.
Some mornings simply feel different, and this was one of them. It was a cool, grey Saturday — 30 May 2026. Yet the ground at Ngaru Location in Kerugoya was already busy long before the start. Soon the lead banner went up. By then, more than eight hundred people stood ready. Their plan was simple, but bold: to walk together, in public, for mental health.
The 2026 Healing is Possible (HiP) Community Walk ran for fifteen kilometres. First, the route left the staging ground. Then it followed the tree-lined country road. Finally, it cut through the centre of Kerugoya town. At times the walk was loud. In other moments, however, it turned quiet and tender. People sang as they went. Many also carried placards. Best of all, the local leaders led from the front. Area chiefs joined in, and so did the Assistant County Commissioner and county officers — right from the first step.
That detail matters, because it was not just for show. When leaders walk beside school children, people notice. Together they stood against alcohol and drug abuse. As a result, they sent a message no poster ever could. In short, this talk is welcome here. And it is safe to have.
The whole community came out.
So who showed up? School heads came with their students. Church and NACADA-trained religious leaders came from across Kirinyaga. Boda riders, shopkeepers, mothers and elders joined too. In total, five schools emptied their classrooms onto the road. As a result, the line of walkers grew very long. In fact, you could not see both ends at once.
We did not want experts simply talking about the community. Instead, we wanted the community itself. People walked on their own feet, in their own streets. In doing so, they showed a clear truth: mental wellness is everyone’s business.
Mental health is not a side conversation. It is the ground a community stands on — and we are done whispering about it.
Reaching the unreached.
Most mental health messaging in Kenya never leaves the city. Often, it stays in seminars and English brochures. It also hides in clinics that rural families cannot reach. The HiP Walk breaks that habit. Instead, it takes the message to people the system tends to miss. Better still, it meets them where they already are.
So we walked. After all, movement is good for the mind. Also, there is no shame on a road full of your own neighbours. The theme on every shirt said it well: Sweat for your sanity. Exercise, sunlight, company and honest talk are not extras. In truth, they are the front line of good mental health.
The messages we carried
Mental health is a development issue.
You cannot build a strong county on a sick population. After all, every lost mind means lost work and lost income. As a result, the whole household slips closer to poverty.
Put those numbers together, and a clear pattern shows up. Today, more young people are sinking into alcohol and drugs. Sadly, this happens in the years meant for study and work. So hours that should build a future are lost to drinking. Worse still, money that should teach a child is spent at the bar instead.
But the cost is not only about money. In fact, drug and alcohol use can lead to depression and anxiety. Drinking peaks between the ages of 18 and 29 — the prime working years. And when a breadwinner is unwell, the whole family feels it. That is why we say it plainly: mental health drives community growth.
We are not waiting for permission to be well. Healing is possible — and it begins the moment a community decides to talk.
From one walk to a whole system of care.
The walk is just the part you can see. Behind it sits a much bigger plan. At Convo Africa, we want mental health talk to feel normal. So we push for it at work, in schools, in homes and, yes, in churches. On top of that, we are building real tools to back the talk with care.
Convo E-Therapy
This is an online service. It links you with trusted, low-cost therapists. Better yet, you can book a session in minutes — from anywhere.
DoctorsBench.care
This is a records and practice tool for African clinicians. It offers simple screening, clear workflows and supervision. As a result, providers can reach more patients — and care for them well.
157 community leaders trained
On 2 May 2026, just weeks before the walk, we trained 157 community leaders. Now they can spot distress, respond with care, and point people to help. After all, these are the chiefs, pastors and elders that people turn to first. So by training them, we fight stigma right at its source.
What government can do next.
Goodwill can only carry a movement so far. To close a gap this wide, the government must move with us too. So here is what we are asking for:
- Fund the policy we already have. Give the Kenya Mental Health Policy (2015–2030) and the Mental Health (Amendment) Act real, ring-fenced county budgets.
- Take care to the village. Train Community Health Promoters so they can screen, support and refer.
- Make it affordable. Add mental health and addiction care to the SHA/SHIF cover.
- Protect young people. Back NACADA and the counties as they limit easy access to alcohol and drugs.
- Grow the team. Train and keep more psychiatrists, psychologists and counsellors. Then post them where rural families can reach them.
So, to every chief, teacher, pastor, officer, parent and student who walked with us — thank you. You proved the point with your own feet. Yes, the road ahead is long. Still, we now know what a healthy community looks like. In fact, it looks just like Kerugoya did on 30 May.
Healing is possible. Walk with us.
Maybe you need support. Or maybe you want to refer a friend. You might even be a provider who is ready to help more people. Either way, a door is open for you.
Talk to us · contact@convo.africa · 0724 936 949 · convo.africa/news


