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Every Story Matters
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There’s a Facebook post making rounds claiming that Njugush and his wife Celestine Ndinda have separated after 16 years together. The claims are heavy. That there was cheating. That it happened more than once. That it involved someone close to home. That things got so bad she moved out with the children to a rental along Thika Road while he stayed behind in Ruiru.
None of this has been confirmed by them.
But that hasn’t stopped the internet.
“We Saw This Coming” — The Campus Angle
Some people quickly went back to their days at Kenya Institute of Mass Communication. The story being pushed is that when they met at KIMC, both were already in relationships. That campus life was wild. That they already knew each other’s habits.
The tone in those comments is almost like: you marry someone knowing their character, don’t act surprised later.
It’s gossip, yes. But it shows how fast people dig up old stories to explain new rumors.
The Blame Game Is Brutal
The comment section is not kind.
Some are attacking Wakavinye directly, calling her careless. Others are mocking Njugush, even going as far as commenting on his body, saying his “ukonde” is part of the problem. A few even dragged tribe into it, warning people about marrying from certain communities “at your own risk.”
It’s ugly. And it says more about us than about them.
There are also those saying this is why they chose to stay single. Others claiming most women enter marriage already dissatisfied and end up comparing their husbands to other men. One comment stood out: you can’t force loyalty on a grown adult. It has to come from within.
Then there are the people who think the whole thing is fake. That maybe there’s something about to be released. A show. A campaign. Something.
Fame Changes the Equation
For years, Njugush and Wakavinye represented that “from scratch” success story. From campus to comedy stages. From hustling days in Kawangware to international trips. People saw growth. Commitment. Partnership.
So when rumors like this surface, it feels personal to fans.
We’ve seen similar patterns before, like when Thee Pluto and Felicity Shiru went their separate ways. At first everything looked fine online. Then suddenly, it wasn’t.
Social media can show Bali photos and smiles, but it never shows the full picture. Fame brings pressure. Attention. Temptation. Comparison. And comparison, as one commenter said, steals joy very quietly.
The Mental Health Conversation
One part of the thread took a serious turn. Someone pointed out how situations like this can hit men hard. The humiliation. The public jokes. The feeling of being “played.” In a country where men rarely talk openly about emotional pain, that part shouldn’t be ignored.
Whether the rumors are true or not, the weight of public speculation alone can be heavy.
So, Is It Really Over?
Right now, it’s all talk.
No statement. No confirmation. Just screenshots, opinions, and strong emotions.
Maybe there’s trouble. Maybe there isn’t. Maybe it’s exaggerated. Maybe it’s private and being handled quietly.
What’s clear is this: Kenyans don’t just follow celebrity marriages—they invest in them. And when cracks appear, even rumored ones, people react like it’s their own story unfolding.
Until the couple speaks, everything remains in the grapevine.
And the grapevine, as usual, is very loud.
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