How to Be a Better Human - How to have great sex (w/ Siphumeze Khundayi and Tiffany Mugo) (re-release)
Episode Date: April 13, 2026Sex is a normal part of human life, but it can also get complicated–whether you’re having it or not! The way we approach, think, and engage with our sexuality varies widely our culture, community,... identity, and more. But one thing we can all strive for is healthy and safe sex. Siphumeze Khundayi and Tiffany Mugo are two sex educators and the co-founders of HOLAAfrica (HOLAA!) a Pan-Africanist digital platform that focuses on creating spaces that deal with safe sex and pleasure. Today they share insights on the kinds of mental and emotional tools we can turn to in order to have great sex, why it’s ok to take small steps on your sexual journey, and why it’s important to take ownership of your pleasure.(This episode originally aired in 2022)For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscriptsLearn more about our flagship conference happening this April at attend.ted.com/podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hey everyone, Chris Duffy here.
We wanted to share a special episode from the archive today.
I hope you enjoy.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy, and you're listening to How to Be a Better Human.
Today, we're going to be talking about sex.
And it sometimes feels like the more that we know, the more we discover is still out there.
While conversations about sex and sexuality are more out in the open these days,
for many people, there is still a lot of embarrassment and shame around the time.
topic. And as a result, many people avoid talking about it at all.
Myself included, I will readily admit that I get very awkward and very nervous when I try and talk about sense.
Luckily, today's guests, Sufumesei Kundai and Tiffany Mugo, are the founders of the hub of loving action in Africa, otherwise known as Hala Africa.
And they are known for promoting conversations about sex and sexuality across the continent.
What started as a passion project while they were still in university has now exploded into articles, workshops, a podcast, a TED Talk, and so much more.
But at its core, Hala Africa is a place where African women and queer people have a safe space to talk about sex in a way that's positive and not just centered on trauma or shame or sadness, and also not centered on the often repressive ideas about love and pleasure that have historically been promoted by the Western world.
So in today's episode, I'm going to talk with Tiffany and Sifumezay about what they've learned in the process of gathering so many other people's stories, how to let go of shame so that we can communicate more freely, and how to nurture a healthier and safer attitude towards sex, regardless of what you're into or not into.
To get started, here is a clip from their TED talk.
Even you as an adult have some internalized ideas about sex that you never challenge, some good, some bad, and some very, very strange.
So when you allow someone to see you butt naked,
do you ever think about how the ideas that you internally have
will affect whether you will like them tickling your elbow or kissing your thigh
or shouting up the name of a chosen deity?
One must do internal monitoring and evaluation
if we are going to live our best sexy lives.
And we're going to tell you how to have a great sex life, right?
But the first thing you need to do is let go of the bad ideas you have about sex.
Think about the things that we need to change and the things we need to embrace in all of their shiny newness.
We are going to embrace all sorts of shiny newness right after this quick break. Don't go anywhere.
And we are back. Today on the show, we're talking about sex with Tiffany Mugo and Sifumezekundari.
Hello, everyone. I am Tiffany Kogore Mugo. I am a writer, curator, and thinker about time.
Hello, everyone. My name is Sipumezekunay, and I am.
a theater maker, visual artist, and I co-curate Hola Africa.
Well, now that we know who you are, how did you two first meet?
So plot twist, we are actually a couple.
A lot of people don't know that.
I will tell my side of the story about how we met.
We met at the World Cup, like, bad breakup things.
I was still in the country.
I'm actually Kenyan.
And, like, my ex was just being a mess.
We're not even going to discuss that.
And so I decided to stay for the World Cup instead of going home.
the 2010 World Cup when it was in South Africa.
And I think that we met the day of the first match.
So that's when I think that we met, we met.
But apparently you have a different story.
Yes.
So the actual story is, so we went to varsity together.
And we did, we had this festival, a theater festival.
And each residence has to participate in this festival.
And we shared a stage.
So her res and my res shared the same stage.
And they were doing
Dozaikishang is,
what is it called for colored girls.
And she was one, so she didn't have any lines in the entire show.
I didn't have lines.
She came through just like coming in as the man who steals someone's stuff.
So I obviously had to watch these people rehearse over and over and over and over.
And that's actually where we met.
And this was in our first day of university.
But she doesn't remember me.
And we then proceeded to meet every single year after that.
And she doesn't remember me in all.
all of the events that she's gone to.
She remembers the people around me, but she doesn't remember me.
Okay, so first lie, I did have lines in that play.
Okay.
Second lie.
Okay, I don't know whether the other stuff is a lie.
It's not a lie.
The play thing is a lie.
I had lines.
Wow, okay.
Our Genesis story is still up in the air, but it has been 13 years now, I think.
Yes, of us actual dating.
Yeah, so 12 years of us actually dating, and that's how we met.
We forgot our anniversary this year, which just goes to show how long we've been together.
It's been a long time, guys.
That's a sign of a long successful relationship, for sure, when you forget the anniversary.
Okay, so you founded Hala Africa.
What was the initial response to that?
It was very positive, actually.
It was positive, but everyone was very shy.
Because I guess it wasn't a space that they were used to.
And, I mean, it started with the physical workshops that we used to do where women struggled
to speak a lot of the time.
But over time, I think people then got comfortable
and they spoke quite a bit, actually.
And then I think once the ball started getting rolling
and people got used to telling their own stories,
we just couldn't stop them.
And also we didn't censor what type of writing.
All we said was it has to be positive.
You cannot put down another human being
in your expression of self.
That's all.
So even if you are not that great at writing,
we would edit your work, we'd sit down and would edit you and make sure that you are coming across
as the way that you want to come across.
But, I mean, outside of people struggling to speak in the beginning, I think that everyone was excited about it.
Everyone, we had, all of the responses that we got were very, very positive straight women were like,
oh, my gosh, this platform, I needed queer women like, oh, my gosh, this platform, I needed.
But one thing that was very interesting was like the shyness wasn't even just about
contributing, but it was even around engaging with the platform.
Like, even something as small as a like on a post was quite difficult.
So one of the things that whenever I'd go to conferences and stuff, people would come
and there, be like, oh, we follow holler.
And I'm like, that's great.
And they're like, but we can't like your posts sometimes because, you know, a like is
almost like acquiescence.
And then it's the visibility of you having liked this post.
And I think in a lot of people's personal spaces, because, you know, you
got your grandma on Facebook.
Because our website, there are certain African countries where you can't access our website.
And Asian countries.
Yeah.
And Asian countries.
So there's also that to navigate.
So not accessing all of the continent as much as we'd like to.
Yeah.
I'd like to get a little bit deeper into that, into the idea of context and geographical context.
Because, you know, one thing I noticed in your podcast, you ask that the question can be anonymous.
We don't have to know who it is.
But you need to know where they're friends.
because, as you say in the podcast,
geographical context is really important.
That's so crucial for giving this advice.
One of the things that I've had to do
is, high key check my privilege, right?
Because we live in South Africa,
so we can do the whole thing where we can be on a podcast
like yours, which has a huge footprint,
and we can live together and we can be fine.
And, you know, like, tomorrow if we go for brunch,
like I could sit on her lap, and it'll be fine.
But, like, it's one of those things of,
well, you see, it also depends on what parts of the country we're in.
So like for me, one of the biggest things has been having to like check myself every time we do work in different countries, especially like in the nature of like, you know, who we invite to the space.
Like one of the things we don't do is we don't publicize when we're going to another country to hold a workshop.
We'll reach out to an organization and be like, hey, can we can you like bring your members?
Where is the safest place to do this?
Like we don't go with the hubris that we can just land.
up a post and be like, holler Africa coming to a city near you.
Like, we do not do that, right?
So we work a lot with sort of organizations on the ground, people doing incredible work
in different countries.
For me, I will not lie, it is a constant struggle of having to remember.
And like even with you in Nigeria hosting that space.
Tiff is speaking about an experience that we had in Nigeria where people struggle to
speak about the positivity of their sex, struggle to speak about how, what
they find attractive about each other, you know, and what they like, how they like to be touched,
how they like to be spoken to by their partners because of this other violent narrative that they
have to carry in their everyday life. Yes, it's great for the rest of the world to identify,
but this is about reminding our own people on this continent and in the context that we have
in the difficulty of being queer on this continent, that it is okay for you to survive. It's
for you to feel good. It's okay for you to enjoy your person as much as you go out into the streets and the world says this is not okay. But behind closed doors, this is important for you to know. And it's important for you to create a healthy environment for you and your partner or partners, or however it is that you choose to create your sexuality or perform your sexuality.
So thinking about, obviously, I come from an extremely high privileged place here. And yet, I still personally feel so.
much fear and discomfort when it comes to talking about sex and bodies. And, you know, I really,
I loved your book, Quirky Quick Guide to Having Great Sex. And one of the things I think is so
powerful about it is you really address that of like, it can feel weird to talk about. It can
feel uncomfortable and it's worth pushing through that. And you acknowledge that it can feel weird.
So where do you think that that fear and discomfort comes from? I think the constant socialization and
shaming. Even though people make like jokes when you're young, oh, you know, you're a little
heartbreaker and you're a little this and you're a little that, you know, when kids will
like hug or be overly intimate, there's always that constant policing, right? That sex is something
that is for a very specific time, a very specific purpose and that gets drilled into us,
constantly, constantly. And I think we just continuously grow up with these mixed messages of,
you know, we should all partner up and we should all like, you know, be little heartbreakers.
And is that your boyfriend? Is that your girlfriend? But then constantly being told that sex is not something that we talk about. And we also don't have the language. Because think about the first time, like a parent says the word penis or vagina in front of their child. Like to this day, my mother, knowing my job, knowing the books that I have written, the work that I've done, cannot stand it when I say vagina. Like, so,
when you grow up in that context,
you can't talk about something
you don't have the tools to talk about, right?
There's also, I think, religion
and the way that we shape our value systems
around religion and shaming people for sex before marriage, you know,
is a sin.
And actually, masturbating is a sin.
I think for the longest time,
I carried a lot of shame around masturbating
because this thing.
it gets drilled in you.
You are not allowed to touch yourself.
And even, or you're not in a healthy space in your relationship if you're masturbating.
Oh, yeah.
That's a good one.
Then now you're also attaching the sexuality that you are ashamed of to another person.
And now you guys have to match.
And, yeah, there's a lot of policing around sex.
Definitely.
So much policing.
And it comes from every single direction.
We're going to take a quick break, but we'll be right back.
So do not go anywhere.
And we are back.
Okay, so we've already been talking a bit about some of the ways that society and strict religious interpretations have put all sorts of restrictive ideas about sex into our heads.
For many people, they can feel like there's rarely ever a time where we can actually openly speak about sex.
And Tiffany and Sifumez, they say that that was not always the case.
And in fact, we can look to the past to teach us how to move forward.
Here's another clip from their TED talk.
Now, it all seems pretty morbid
that culture and society have failed us in our quest for Quaiters,
but this is not the case.
There are things that the past can teach us to help us upgrade the present.
So now, if I had a glass of Merlot, which I really wish I did,
I would pour the ancestors a drink
because there are ways in which African societies
hadled this sex thing before the sea that shall not be named
colonization came through.
We had within African societies,
We had spaces both social and spiritual
that helped institutionalize healthy sexual practices.
We had sexuality schools that taught social and erotic cues.
We had spaces where teenagers could engage, understand
and, like, properly know how to handle sexual urges
and places where adults could handle the stresses and strifes of adulting.
Ways that didn't include you hiding your credit card bill
or deleting that toll-free number from your phone.
These spaces of old were so important for women.
There were African sexual practices that centered women and in particular their pleasure.
Yes.
These spaces still exist and they existed in the past where it was like a case of understanding that pleasure was a core part of your relationship as man and wife because heteronomativity is forever.
But like just really, really understanding that and teaching that and being okay.
But even within those spaces, it was for.
that particular thing.
It wasn't just like at the watering hole being like, hey, you know what?
He needs to go down on me more.
Like there was specific spaces where we spoke about that.
Yeah.
And I mean, I think even just outside of Africa as well, the world was not as intimidated by
sex.
I mean, you look at Greek mythology, for example.
Oh, the Greeks were wild.
The Greeks were wild, you know.
people were free about sex before and all over the world.
It wasn't just here in Africa.
Thinking about the big picture of what you two work on here and why conversations
around sex are so important, I think that there's the one hand where on the personal
level, when we don't talk about it, we kind of don't get what we want.
We don't get things that feel good.
We have a lot of shame.
It's confusing to try and talk to a partner and have them read our minds or we don't know
how to have those conversations.
But then there's also these really big societal problems with that too, right?
Like being stigmatized and feeling shame leads to prejudice.
It leads to people not reporting crimes because they feel like that is shameful.
It leads to not having conversations around sexual health.
It leads to diseases spreading.
All of these issues arise at their core from us feeling like this is not a subject that we can talk about.
So that's a huge problem that I think is really important to get past.
I wonder with the positive side of this, what does it mean when you think about people being sexually healthy?
What does that mean beyond just the physical safety and precautions of that?
I think one of the things that I've really been getting into lately is not just like the way you're saying the physical part of, you know, sexual health, but the emotional part, right?
Sort of like the sort of more spiritual part of emotional health and thinking about not emotional health, sexual health and thinking about it more realistically.
how are you feeling about your sex, right?
And I think that's like such an important part that a lot of people forget
where when we're talking about sex, we're like, oh, okay, so I have condoms.
And, you know, we possibly live in a world where we have, like, access to, like, safe abortions
and things like that and all of those logistical things, but what does it mean to be emotionally healthy, right?
And be sitting there and have sex and be like, okay, was that like a good experience for me?
not just physically, but emotionally.
Because you can have orgasms
and you are just like busy fighting your own demons, right?
And the reason you're having these orgasms
is because you're running away from something.
And one of the things we've realized a lot in our work
is how sex seeps into so much of your emotional life, right?
So even like when people seek help for like sexual problems,
you'll find that a lot of it, there's like a psychological element,
there's like, you know, need,
to look into like past traumas and things,
needing to look into like what you're going through right now.
And so the emotional part for me is a big part of like
what being sexually healthy looks like outside of the physical,
just making it more holistic.
So what that means for me is also being free enough to decide what you enjoy.
You know, I think the world right now likes to tell us how we should
perform our sex, how we should be sexual beings. We shouldn't be sexual beings or you should be
this kind of sexual being. Like sex positivity has also created this huge pressure for people to be
having a whole lot of sex and not necessarily like body counts are a thing now. So what that does
is it starts, it starts creating a narrative that shames somebody who may not necessarily want to
have as much sex or somebody who does not want to have sex at all, you know. So I
think for me, sexual health is everyone being free to decide what kind of sex they want or
whether they even want to have sex without outside judgment, without anybody coming in to
force their own opinions onto your sex. So as you probably know from my podcast, I'm always like,
I'm just going to tell you my life as it pertains to this. But like I know for me, one of the
weirdest things that happened to me was after quirky quick guide came out, I was so sexually
tapped out. Like, I just did not want to engage with sex, let alone have sex. And now I'm sitting on
panels. I'm sitting in spaces and people who've like engaged with the book or who've just seen the
cover like, so how did you write this book? Like, was it all physical research? And I am just,
I am sitting there. I'm dying inside in all of these spaces. And I'm like, what is going on?
And now everyone is expecting all of these like wild eyes wide, shut level stories.
And I'm like, actually, I'm not having sex right now.
And you can see the physical disappointment.
Like people's face is just dropping and being like, what do you mean?
Like, this is a whole book about how to have great quirky sex.
You must have at least three sex swings.
And I'm like, no.
And so it's just really weird to not be able to sometimes,
even when you're like sex positive, the pressure that comes from it.
So I think that idea of just being able to,
breathe. So that has been like a huge journey for me to be able to sit in spaces and be like,
I'm actually not having sex right now and I feel nothing about like any of the judgment that
you're feeling because you've also come here expecting something. That's really one of the things
that I loved about your book is that I certainly wouldn't have said that I felt like I was
sex negative before. But my idea of a person who is sex positive is like someone who is way
more out there who's having sex with all sorts of people, whereas I have been in, you know,
an agamist relationship for 15 years, and I am about as boring as you could possibly get.
And so I was like, that just doesn't feel like a term for me.
But I think you do such a great job of explaining that it doesn't mean that you're out there
and you're having all sorts of adventurous, unusual sexual encounters.
It can just be that you're doing what is right for you sexually and that you feel healthy
about that, which I think is not always the case in terms of how it's publicly presented.
No.
me and my friend were joking that when you're sex positive,
you have to, number one, be kind of sexy, right?
Like we were joking.
And then we were like, also all of us in my like sex positive work squad,
we all pole dance.
It was just like, what are we all doing?
How did we all end up pole dancing, guys?
Like, we love it.
But like, guys, we can't all pull dance.
So if there's pressure on both sides, right,
there's pressure to be kind of like chaste and perfect.
And I'm putting this in big quotes, like sin-free.
and then there's pressure on the other side to be like wild and pull dancing.
What would you say to people who are trying to figure out where they fit?
And maybe aren't even really sure where they fit yet.
What is the way to start these conversations or start to figure yourself out?
I would say it starts with you.
So rather than looking at what the outside thinks or what the outside wants or doing research or doing any of that other outside work,
maybe just close your doors and start with yourself,
have a little bit of a touch here and there,
and see what it is that you enjoy without anybody else's opinion.
Because at the end of the day, your sex is yours.
And I think where the world fails is trying to have an opinion
on somebody else's sexual experience.
No one can tell you what your sexual experience is but you.
And you cannot discover it by reading, by doing all of these things.
You can do those things.
They are helpful.
but you have to start by connecting with yourself.
What do you enjoy in your body?
If you are comfortable in your body or not, how do I get comfortable in my body?
What are the things that I'm uncomfortable with?
Okay, then how do I get comfortable with the things that I'm uncomfortable with?
Now, how do I make these things pleasurable for myself?
You know, starting with that, but it is a self-discovery process.
It is not a joint.
It is not a group process.
It's not any of those things.
Oh, yes.
And taking your pleasure.
and your sort of sexual experience out of your partner's hands,
your partner, single, plural, whatever it is,
genuinely taking your pleasure out of other people's hands,
be it one-night stands, be it your long-term partner,
be it that person who didn't hit on you at the coffee shop,
so now you're feeling undesirable.
No, man, just as much as you can internalize things,
which is difficult.
Like, it's not the easiest thing because we are pack animals as humans.
but as much as you can internalize the process of your sex, your pleasure, your bodily experience, that I feel is one of the most important things.
It's also okay to not be in a good space sexually. I think we also put so much pressure on ourselves. We need to fix the problem.
But sometimes it's just sit in the problem and allow it. It's time. You know, so you don't have to, if you feel like you're in a sexual rat, don't try and fix it too quickly.
like understand that there is something that needs to be processed and allow yourself that time
to process.
You don't have to be okay with sex.
You don't have to have sex all the time.
You can go yes without it and find whatever it is in yourself, then you can start coming
back to it.
So yes, we're giving advice on how to fix the problem, but you also don't have to force
yourself to fix the problem quickly.
So once we figured out kind of our own deal, and we're trying to communicate.
it outwardly. What are some examples of healthy versus unhealthy ways to talk about sex?
One thing I always tell people, don't try and like talk about and fix the sex during the
sex. Guys, no one wants feedback when you're butt naked. Like, woo, loud, have mercy. No one needs
feedback when you're butt naked unless it's like, ooh, that was good. So we're non-monogamous.
I had an experience with somebody and like it was our first night. And also, first nights are not always
going to be fireworks. Sometimes most of the time they're actually not. Yeah, most of the time they're
because you're still figuring out each other. And this person decided to give me feedback the next day,
which was good. It was not during the sex, but it was harsh. Hey, woo. Guys, when we give feedback,
kindness. Don't blame the other person. Yes. What people tend to do is they blame the other
person for like a bad sexual experience and not understanding that sex like is a conversation.
So if the conversation was whack, like there is a chance that there was a need for more of a back and forth.
Maybe there was a way that you weren't connecting or whatever.
So what happened with this person is they just like came at me sideways.
Like it sent me reeling.
There's something inside me that like shut down.
And I come from a job where I have the tools to build myself up instantly.
So the fact that to this like day, months later, I'm still like having glitchy moments.
kindness, my people, figure it out how to say things kindly.
We really are at our most vulnerable, right?
We're literally exposed, but we're also figuratively exposed.
It's hard to have a conversation where you know that you might hurt another person.
And it's really hard to have a conversation where you know that you might get hurt.
Even the idea of like starting a conversation with kind of one of the most basic questions,
which you've recommended in your book and in your talk, right, of like, is this good?
good. Do you like this? That is really scary for a lot of people, myself included, because
if there's the chance that they say no, and then you're like, oh, but I thought it was good.
Oh, no. I thought this was a material stuff. Yeah. It turns out it was a C material. Oh,
no. Our grading skills are so far off. So how do you, I mean, you two are professionals in
communicating. What do you recommend for someone who is very much not a professional at communicating?
I would recommend writing down your thoughts first. Yeah. Because I think one of the
biggest things with communication is when we don't plan it, we kind of stumble into it and we just
start saying things off the top of our head. And that's when things go sideways so quickly,
like so, so, so quickly. And this is the hardest thing for us humans to do, but it is very important
to put your ego aside. It is very important. Somebody not enjoying something does not mean that
you are doing something wrong. It just means that you need to.
to readjust now and try something different. So, and that requires you to put your ego aside. And
this is about co-creating an experience together. So even as you are writing down your thoughts,
understanding that, okay, cool, ego aside, what am I trying to build with this human being here?
What sort of experience do I want to have with this human being? Because it's also going to be so
different with each person that you have sex with. And even if you think you're confident and you know
exactly what you're doing with the next person you're not going to know because it's a new body
and you're understanding very new things. And so you have to learn what they like, what you like
and what somebody else that you've had sex with before, like isn't going to be the same thing.
Most of the time, it's not going to be the same thing. So you have to relearn. You have to start
from scratch every single time. So it's important to put that ego aside when you're dealing with
sex and talking to a partner about it. It's important that we talk a little bit about. It's important that
we talk a little bit about how we can establish and make sure that we are constantly checking in
on consent, because that is a big part of really good sex.
Part of our work, we've seen that even in long-term relationships and stuff, the idea of
consent seems to still be murky because people just do not have the basic tools to talk
about their bodily autonomy, right? And it's not even just like, you know, women or gender
non-conforming folks.
I once had a conversation with a man
and he was just like,
sometimes I don't want sex,
but I don't know how to say no.
Because the whole idea
about men constantly wanting sex,
you know, spreading their seed
and all that stuff,
it just boils down to the inability
to be able to talk about
our sex and our bodies and stuff.
So we can't, even the word no now
just becomes confusing or whatever.
Yeah, and for my own personal experience,
I have often found that the heart
hardest conversations to have are not about the presence of desire, but the absence of desire.
As a heterosexual man, there's not really like a cultural space for that. And as a result,
it's like, wait, what does that mean? Is there something wrong with me? Is there something wrong with you?
That that is a, for me personally, has been like one of the more loaded things to try and communicate
and to just be like in touch with and myself is those moments where, hey, this is just not something
that I want. It's sometimes a weird pressure, I think. And it's so difficult. And I think this is going to be
so weird. I'm out here like defending the fellas. It's not what I usually do. But like just the
inability for like men to be like actually I don't want to have sex. And then the pressure because then
their partner is like, oh, am I undesirable? And like the way I said before like this sort of
group collective ego, the collective sexual ego, because now you don't want to have sex. And
you may not want to have sex for a myriad of reasons. You may not want to have sex for one reason.
right? And it's chances are it's a very internal thing, but then it becomes this whole thing of
like your partner's like, am I now undesirable? And all of a sudden you've got like this big
problem on your hands. And no one wants problems. We just want peace. We don't want problems, right?
So now you're just like, okay, maybe I should just have the sex. And then all of a sudden,
the sex becomes a chore. And now you start thinking maybe I'm just not enjoying the sex with this person.
and it just spirals, whereas it could have just been a, you know what, I don't feel like the sex right now.
Cool, baby.
Like, why don't you feel about like the sex?
And it's like, oh, no, it's been a long working week or, you know, someone left a really nasty comment on like my podcast, like, you know, on Spotify or Stitch or whatever.
And I don't need that.
And I'm sad now, so I don't want to have the sex.
So, yeah, it's tricky.
What does or what should the future of sex and conversations about sex look like?
Woo!
Like, wow, crystal ball things.
Okay, what should?
I think freedom.
Freedom, right?
Freedom to speak about it however you want to.
Freedom to let other people speak about it and engage with it.
Like, freedom for everyone and safety as well.
Yeah.
Like, just, I think with freedom comes safety.
And with safety comes freedom.
And the show's called How to Be a Better Human.
What is one way that you are trying to be a better human right now?
I'm trying to be a better human by being a good human to myself
because I know that when I allow myself to be free
and I allow myself to be exactly how I want to be
and I give myself the love and the patience,
I'm able to give it to other people as well.
I think I'm trying to be a better human by slowing down
because I move very, very quickly.
and sometimes that comes with a lot of impatience,
especially for interacting with other humans.
So I'm trying to slow down, which just makes me breathe,
which also gives me a lot more grace for other people,
because I feel like in this world we all just need grace
and we all just need to be patient with each other and to be kind.
And when you're moving at a rapid pace,
it's very difficult for kindness to catch up with you
because you're just like, what are you doing?
Come on, get it together now.
So I am trying to slow down so kindness can catch up with me.
That's so beautifully said.
Last one.
What is something that has helped you to be a better human?
So that might be a book, a movie, a piece of music, an idea.
It could be anything.
A person?
So the first thing would be the year of yes by Shonda Rhymes.
The cover was serving self-help.
And I was like, no.
And then my phone died.
I know.
My phone died for a weekend.
So I read the whole thing.
And that book, like, high key, just changed my life, right?
And the second thing is this human right here.
Like, no, legitimately, like, has taught me so many things about myself,
has shown me, like, my best parts, my worst parts.
Like, it's, yeah, this human right here.
For me, sure, there's so many things.
I think my art, my work as an artist has taught me a lot.
and it has taken me to so many different types of contexts, you know,
and I've learned so much through the work and through the work itself and the people that I've met there.
And then I would say that Hala is the biggest, biggest game changer in my life, actually,
because everything that we've had to publish, we read and, you know, it teaches you so much how other people
speaking their stories teaches you so much about yourself and you get to know so much about your
gaps and you get to know about the strengths that you didn't realize. You get to discover your own
sexuality. I discovered my sexuality because of this organization and the work that we do and the
conversations that we have with queer people, you know. I learn so much from every single person
that we meet. And I think that's why we give so generously to holler because it.
it gives to us so generously.
We grow with every single thing.
So biggest,
biggest life changer for me.
Really?
You're not going to say me?
Well, you are such a core part of Holla.
You are like the anchor.
It's too late now.
It's too late now.
Now we're fighting on the podcast again.
You know, you got to go out on some drama.
That's a cliffhanger from what will happen next.
What happened next?
Thank you so much for being on the podcast.
It has been truly a pleasure to talk to you both.
And you're such an inspiration and also just
a joy. You're so much fun. It's great. Thank you so much for being here. No, thank you so much for having us. Yay.
That is our show for today. Thank you so much for listening. I am your host, Chris Duffy, and this has been How to Be a Better Human. A huge thank you to our guests, Tiffany Kegure Mugo, and Sufumezai. They run Halaafrica, which is h-o-l-a-africa.org. You can also read Tiffany's books, touch, sex, sexuality, and sensuality, and the
quirky quick guide to having great sets.
From TED, our show is brought to you by Sammy Case, Anna Fieland, Erica Youn, and Julia Dickerson.
If there is one thing that they highly encourage, it is fighting on the podcast.
They love the drama.
From Transminter Media, we're brought to you by Greta Cohn and Farad de Grange,
who have also both been tricked into reading self-help books when their phones died.
And from PRX, we've got Jocelyn Gonzalez and Sandra Lopez-Monsalve,
who could write The Quirky Quick Guide to Making Great Podcasts.
Thank you so much to you for listening to our show.
I hope that you have great sex.
Oh, God.
Oh, wow.
That was so awkward.
I am sorry that I said that.
Please keep listening anyway.
We will be back with more next week.
