GDLive Newsfeed
We check in with people at each stage of the cash transfer process to see how things are going. Take a look at some of their stories as they appear here in real-time. Learn more about how recipients opt in to share their stories.
Stages:
 
Enrollment
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Transfers
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Completed
Newsfeed > Esther's Profile
Esther's family
Esther
landscapeCountry:
kenya
workOccupation:
Raising livestock
faceAge:
66
workCampaign
Kenya Large Transfer
There will be no further updates from this completed recipient.
2nd Payment
Transfer Amount
53150 KES ($438 USD)
access_time over 1 year ago
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How is your life different than it would have been if you never received the transfer?
Yes, I have a goal of completing the building of the second room in my house which had only one room and a corridor that served us as a sitting room. I started this construction using the first transfer because the house was congested and could not accommodate my family.
In your opinion, what does GiveDirectly do well, and what does it not do well?
GiveDirectly is an organization that came to make us proud and feels like the rest of human beings by empowering us. I am saying so because I have a water tap that supplies my home with fresh water through the transfers I got. Initially, I had to hire a motorbike to aid me in fetching some water which was at a distance. Apart from the time consumption, it was also expensive to hire the motorbike for $1 per trip and the water was also not free. Currently, I am happy because I have my tap water for family use.
What did you spend your most recent transfer(s) on?
When I withdrew the money, I first considered adding a second room to my house. This idea was triggered by how small my house was and it could not accommodate my five young children since the six elder ones have their houses. I also paid $100 in school fees for my two secondary children who were in form four. By the time I received the transfer, they had been sent back home for fees and I immediately paid so that they could not lose a lot of time as they were preparing for their final national examination. Thereafter, I bought some food for my family.
 
Initial Payment
Transfer Amount
55000 KES ($474 USD)
access_time almost 2 years ago
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Describe the moment when you received your money. How did you feel?
I got anxious when my friends and relatives told me they had received their transfers. I quickly went and picked up my phone from the charging shop. No sooner had I opened the phone than a message popped up, confirming that I had received my first transfer. I was thrilled and started ululating, attracting the attention of passersby. I headed back home and shared the good news with my family and who congratulated me.
Describe the biggest difference in your daily life since you started receiving payments from GiveDirectly.
Installing the fresh tap water in my home is the biggest difference that the money has brought in my life. I now enjoy having water and no longer walk for long distances looking for water. I am happy that I could achieve this and I am looking forward to selling to my neighbors at a cheap price and earning a living.    
What did you spend your most recent transfer(s) on?
I spent KES 15000 on setting up a tap in my home. For the longest time in my life, I have been fetching water very far away from my home. Every day I had to walk over 40 km in search of water for my own home use. When I received my transfer, I installed a tap with fresh water, which will reduce the pain and struggle of walking long distances in search of water. I invested KES 7000 in starting a poultry project. I spent KES 5000 on building the structure to house the chicks, whereas I spent KES 2000 on buying one-day-old chicks. This project will offer me a perfect opportunity of being self-employed after spending over ten years with no job. I then spent the remaining amount of money on buying building items, e.g. cement, building poles, and iron sheets, to add an extra room. The room will provide enough space to host visiting relatives and friends.
 
Enrolled
access_time 2 years ago
 
What does receiving this money mean to you?
My ambition is to bring back my business to life. I own a posho mill that I used to grind maize corn in a village, just some months ago it broke down. This machine enabled me to collect some money that assisted me in paying school fees for my kids and concurrently my villagers from walking long distances to search for the service. For that reason, I intend to use sixty thousand Kenya shillings to improve my business by purchasing maize Haller, and fifty thousand to repair the maize mill plant so that it can work as it was before.
What is the happiest part of your day?
The eighth of February was the happiest day of my life. It was at 9 am when my husband received a call from the company he worked for until retirement, when he received he was informed to collect his pension money. It brought me joy that his dreams will finally come true.
What is the biggest hardship you've faced in your life?
Paying school fees has been the challenging part of my life. I have three children who are in secondary education of which one of them is in form four this year. All of them have huge fees balances that started to accumulate after the closing of my business. As we speak they are all chased out of class due to the arrears, this situation makes me sad especially the one in form four is out of class and the exam is around the corner.