
simply amazing, always for you.
There’s a strange irony in how connected our world has become — yet how disconnected we often feel. We text, call, snap, and scroll our way through endless conversations, but sometimes it feels like we’re speaking without really saying anything.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned about myself, it’s that my preferred method of communication isn’t about convenience or speed — it’s about depth. I don’t crave constant chatter; I crave connection. And for me, that connection is best built through words that carry weight — words that mean something, whether they’re spoken softly or written carefully.
This is the story of how I learned that real communication is not about how fast we reply, but how deeply we respond.
The Power of Words That Breathe
When I write, I feel like I can breathe. There’s no pressure to react instantly, no blinking cursor demanding quick responses. Writing gives me a pause — a sacred moment between thought and expression. It’s not just about finding the right words; it’s about finding the true ones.
In spoken conversation, words can slip out too quickly. We say things we don’t mean, or we mean things we don’t say. But when I write, I have time to sit with my emotions — to understand what I’m really feeling before I share it. Writing turns chaos into clarity. It allows me to transform tangled thoughts into something meaningful, something I can hold up to the light and say, “Yes, that’s what I meant all along.”
Maybe that’s why my favorite form of communication is the written word — letters, long texts, journal entries, late-night messages that spill honesty. Words that feel like a bridge between hearts.
Texting Isn’t the Enemy — But It’s Not Enough
Don’t get me wrong — I text. I send memes. I check in. I use emojis that say what words can’t. But sometimes, texting feels like eating fast food when your soul is hungry for a home-cooked meal. It fills the silence but doesn’t always fill the heart.
So much can get lost in translation — tone, emotion, the tiny pauses that tell you someone is hesitating because they care. A text can’t show you someone’s eyes softening or their voice trembling slightly when they speak from the heart.
That’s why I prefer conversations where you can feel the other person — whether it’s through the warmth of their voice on the phone, or the rhythm of their words on paper. Communication, to me, is about presence. You can’t multitask connection.

Face-to-Face: Where Silence Speaks Loudest
When I sit across from someone and really talk — not about the weather, not about schedules, but about life — that’s where communication feels alive. I love watching how people’s eyes light up when they talk about something they love. I love the quiet comfort of a shared silence that doesn’t feel awkward.
In face-to-face moments, the pauses matter as much as the words. The soft laugh, the nervous hand movement, the sigh before an honest confession — those are the details that make conversation human. You can’t text that.
Real communication is often found between the lines. It’s in the unspoken understanding that says, “I’m here, and I get it.”
That’s why I’ll always choose a long coffee conversation over a string of half-hearted messages. I don’t need perfect grammar or poetic phrasing — just authenticity. Just presence.
The Beauty of Slower Communication
In a world obsessed with instant replies, I like being a little old-fashioned. I don’t believe communication should always be fast. Sometimes, the most meaningful exchanges are the ones that take time — time to reflect, time to feel, time to craft something honest.
There’s something deeply personal about writing a letter. The way your pen moves slower than your thoughts forces you to be intentional. You can’t delete or edit easily — you just write from the heart. And when someone receives it, they can hold it, reread it, and feel the effort that went into every word.
Maybe that’s what we’re missing in our generation — the patience to mean what we say.
Because when everything moves too fast, meaning gets lost in motion.
Listening: The Forgotten Half of Communication
We often forget that communication isn’t just about speaking or writing — it’s about listening. And I don’t mean waiting for your turn to talk; I mean truly listening — hearing the emotion beneath the words, noticing the silence that follows them.
Listening is a form of love. It’s saying, “You matter enough for me to put everything else aside.” It’s one of the most underrated skills in our world.
I’ve learned that the people I connect with most are not the loudest or the most talkative — they’re the ones who listen with their whole being. You can feel it when someone’s paying attention — their eyes don’t drift, their mind doesn’t wander. They’re right there with you, not trying to fix your problem, just holding space for you to exist.
That, to me, is communication at its finest — when both people are seen, heard, and understood.
Digital Noise vs. Emotional Signal
We’re surrounded by communication, but not all of it connects. Notifications ping, voices overlap, and social media keeps us constantly “in touch” — but are we really in tune?
We’re more reachable than ever, yet more misunderstood than before. We’ve traded long talks for short replies, letters for likes, emotions for emojis. It’s easier, sure — but easier doesn’t always mean better.
I’m not against technology — in fact, I owe a lot to it. But I think the heart of communication isn’t the medium; it’s the meaning. The medium is just the channel. The message — that’s what matters.
A voice note sent at midnight that says, “I just wanted to hear your voice” — that’s connection.
A handwritten note slipped into your bag that says, “Thinking of you” — that’s intimacy.
A quiet “I understand” after a long pause — that’s love.
We need to bring that back — the emotional signal beneath the digital noise.
When Words Heal
I’ve seen words break people, but I’ve also seen them heal. The right words, said at the right time, can rebuild someone’s confidence or remind them they’re not alone.
When I communicate, I try to choose words that leave warmth, not wounds. I’ve learned that being understood is one of the deepest human needs — and communication is how we fulfill it.
So when I write, speak, or listen, I try to do it with intention. I remind myself that every word carries weight, and silence can carry meaning too.
Communication isn’t about showing off how eloquent you are. It’s about showing someone that you care enough to speak their language — not just linguistically, but emotionally.
Why Writing Feels Like Home
Writing is my way of slowing down the world. When I write, I don’t have to perform. I don’t have to impress. I just have to be.
In writing, I can express what’s too fragile to say aloud. I can revisit it, reshape it, release it. Writing gives me a voice when I’m unsure how to speak.
Sometimes, I write to understand myself. Other times, I write to connect with others. But every time, writing brings me home — to a space where words are honest, and silence is respected.
Maybe that’s why I’ll always prefer words over noise, meaning over speed, and connection over convenience.
Real Communication Requires Vulnerability
We live in an age where it’s easier to hide behind screens and filters. But genuine communication demands vulnerability. It asks us to show up — messy, uncertain, and real.
It’s not about having the perfect response; it’s about having the courage to respond truthfully.
Sometimes that means saying, “I don’t know what to say, but I’m here.”
Sometimes it means apologizing.
Sometimes it means admitting you care more than you should.
Real communication isn’t polished — it’s raw. But that’s what makes it powerful.
Connection Over Convenience
If I had to sum up my preferred method of communication in one sentence, it would be this:
I prefer connection over convenience.
Give me the slow, thoughtful message over the quick “k.”
Give me the long, meandering call where we talk about everything and nothing.
Give me words that come from the heart, not from habit.
I want to communicate in ways that remind me we’re human — imperfect, emotional, wonderfully complex. I want to talk, write, listen, and feel until we both walk away a little more understood.
Because in the end, communication isn’t about being heard; it’s about being felt.
The Language of Being Human
Communication is an art — and like all art, it’s most beautiful when it’s honest.
Whether it’s spoken softly over coffee, written in a late-night text, or scribbled in a notebook, I want my words to mean something. I want my communication to leave people lighter, not heavier. I want it to remind them that connection is still possible in a noisy world.
So yes — my preferred method of communication will always be the kind that feels real.
The kind that doesn’t rush.
The kind that listens as much as it speaks.
The kind that leaves you thinking, “I didn’t just talk to someone — I connected with them.”
That’s how I choose to communicate.
And that’s how I choose to live.
SUGGESTED READS
- The Habits We Inherit: The Quiet Ways Our Parents Shape Who We Become
- The Perfect Day: Finding Peace, Purpose, and Presence in a Restless World
- The Worst Date I Ever Went On (And What It Taught Me About Love, Red Flags, and Self-Respect)
- “The Stupidest Thing I Ever Did on a Dare (And What It Taught Me About Myself)”
- The Lies We Tell to Impress a Crush (And What They Reveal About Us)

Support Our Website!
We appreciate your visit and hope you find our content valuable. If you’d like to support us further, please consider contributing through the TILL NUMBER: 9549825. Your support helps us keep delivering great content!
If you’d like to support Nabado from outside Kenya, we invite you to send your contributions through trusted third-party services such as Remitly, western union, SendWave, or WorldRemit. These platforms are reliable and convenient for international money transfers.
Please use the following details when sending your support:
Phone Number: +254701838999
Recipient Name: Peterson Getuma Okemwa
We sincerely appreciate your generosity and support. Thank you for being part of this journey!
