Makueni man grows breasts after sex with neighbour’s wife

Makueni man grows breasts after sex with neighbour’s wife

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A man who had been warned against sleeping with a neighbour’s wife has confessed to developing sagging breasts after ignoring the warning.

James Mutua, 39, had been told by the woman’s husband that he would be taught a haunting lesson if he crossed the red line.

He has since been watching breasts resembling those of the woman he slept with grow on his chest for the last six months. The hubby who issued the warning lived in the same village as Mutua.

Unlike normal breasts that have black nipples, Mutua’s are reddish and sagging like those of a lactating woman.

“I have been living like this from 2015, and it all started after I slept with my neighbour’s wife back in the village where I was working,” explains Mutua, a former farm manager of a prominent person in Makueni County, Eastern Kenya.

“I felt a sensation around the chest and before long the breasts started developing and became big, forcing me to wear a bra and baggy jackets,” he said.

Mutua, one-time chef at a hotel in Westlands told The Nairobian that his services were terminated along with five others in early 2015 and shortly, he was selling fruits and vegetables within Westlands to sustain his family.

But that didn’t do go for long as a “prominent figure back home contacted me to work as farm manager. I had no option but to leave my family in the city,” says Mutua who says the chance gave him a financial lifeline that saw him open a shop that did not disappoint.

That was when the serpent that tempted Eve came to the garden — the farm where he was the manager.

The woman in question, a neighbour’s wife, began becoming friendly whenever she found him doing rounds on the farm and his shop.

“One night in mid-2015, I returned home around 10pm but while approaching I saw someone standing near the door and upon moving closer I realised it was her (neighbour’s wife),” recalls Mutua, adding, “When I asked her what she was doing at night, she teased, asking if I’m afraid of women. We argued for a while before I allowed her in and she said she just wanted company.”

‘Chemical warfare’ never fails. Mutua had alcohol in the house and “when I started drinking, she requested to join me and I accepted. We drunk until past midnight when I told her to leave but she was hesitant saying that it was late.”

Mutua still recalls with blinding clarity the happenings that followed.

“We were seated far apart while drinking but she moved closer and started touching me. Before long she told me that the husband was far away in Nairobi and she wanted to have sex with me”.

Mutua did not fail his visitor on his matrimonial bed that night. And other chances that followed in his three bedroom house. But honey can turn into a bee.

“She became aggressive and sometimes she could come and pick me in my mother’s house for sex,” says Mutua whose side mattress events were shortly discovered by his wife.

“In late 2015, I sent my wife Sh15,000 and directed her to deposit Sh10,000 in the bank and use the rest. Instead, she decided to travel to the village with kids to check on me,” he recalls.

That was when she was told about Mutua’s hanky-panky. She got mad but calmed down after he apologised profusely.

Mutua claims that word having gone round about his promiscuity, he quit his job and returned to Nairobi but “days after arriving the woman’s husband called me and said he heard what happened but laughed off and swore to teach me a lesson for sleeping with his wife”.

Mutua’s sister who requested to be only identified as Liz told The Nairobian “it is true that someone bewitched him and he has confessed. We just want to see him back to his life again by all means”.

Source: Standard
 
Hakuna uchawi hizo ni side effect za ARV
Binafsi mgumu sana wa kuamini mambo yasiyo na evidence, I question even the existence of gods! Lakini dunia hii imejaa knowledge nyingi sana kila kona, na what we know asa individuals ni punje ndogo sana kati ya bahari ya mchanga. Kuna vitu vingi ambavyo hata wanasayansi wanapata wakati mgumu kuelezea, hasa kwenye mambo haya ya giza..ambayo mengine yako evident. Binafsi nimekutana na mambo mengi mno ya kustaajabisa ambayo si rahisi kuyaelezea, witchcraft ni sanaa, sanaa isiyo rahisi sana kuelezea kutokana na usiri wa wasanii walioko katika tasnia hiyo (pata picha hii, msichana mdogo alikutwa sehem katika mazingira ya kutatanisha, mazingira ya sanaa. Tulipomhoji alijieleza vizuri sana na mahali alipotokea, umbali wa mikoa kadhaa kutoka tulipokuwa. bahati nzuri katika wengi tuliokuwepo kuna watu walizijua sehem alizotaja na waliwajua majirani zake ni ndugu zao, zilipigwa simu kuulizia kama wanamfaham huyo mtoto, kweli walikuwa wanamfaham, kuulizia kwao wakasema hajaonekana toka toka kuche, lakini usiku alilala hapo. Kaka ni umbeli wa kuvuka mikoa mitatu!!!). Huwa natamani sana kufanya research kwenye haya mambo, sijapata mtu tu.
 
Hamna uchawi hapa, medicaly its known as gnaecomastia, a common condition in men using arvs especialy the one known as stavudine, it also causes another condition called lipodystrophy. more info Some Tanzania men on anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs have experienced abnormal breast enlargement similar to that of women. There are even cases where women taking the life prolonging drug against HIV complaining of queer side effects including becoming disabled.
Joseph Mkanda, 43, one of the victims, said he developed strange symptoms plus growing breasts after taking the drugs. Initially, he suspected the cause to be lack of a balanced diet. But he soon realised that the main problem was the type of drugs he was taking.
"I feel very much ashamed to go out of my house, because I have developed breasts like a woman. ...I fear that other people would laugh at me," he said from his Mtwara-base.
"I went to one of the medical doctors in my village, who told me that such signs were normal for people suffering from AIDS who have been taking the drugs for a long time. At the moment, I don't know what to do or where to go," said Mkanda.
Salima Omar, 36, from Mtwara said she developed strange symptoms after taking the drugs. Salima, a mother of seven, said one of her daughters died shortly after birth in 2006 when she had undergone the HIV test.
Changes in body
One of her sons is also HIV positive and has been taking ARV drugs since October 2007. She explained they had both been taking the drugs, but due to unknown reasons, she started noticing changes in her body.
But she believes the changes were caused by the fact that she has been unable to follow the instructions of taking the ARVs. She said the drugs were very strong and required the users to get a balanced diet. But Salima was unable to follow the instructions and at times stopped taking the medicine.
"These drugs are very strong; if you take them without enough food you become very weak. But there are days when I'm forced to take them without eating anything, especially when I get seriously sick. In other words, I take the medication irregularly," she explains. The family lives off the earnings of her husband who repairs bicycles.
After spending on alcohol, which Salima admits she likes very much, there is little left to support a big family like theirs, especially for buying food. Actually, she has been forced to sell all the family goats in order to keep the family alive.
Like many families in Mtwara District, Salima's has been experiencing food shortage since 2007, a situation complicated by the recent long drought in the district, forcing many people to survive on only one meal a day.
She feels very weak on days she does not take the medication. "I have even started developing some complications ...I believe it is due to my inconsistency in taking the drugs. My left side is developing rashes, and I suffer much pain," she says.
Despite her HIV-positive status, Salima had until recently insisted on having more children. Three months ago she gave birth to twins. One died, and the other is very weak. While pregnant, Salima's doctors gave her treatment to prevent transmission of the virus to her babies.
Hassan has agreed they will not have more children, although Salima is not convinced. She particularly dislikes his refusal to use a condom when having sex.
There is no alternative to taking ARVs by HIV positive persons, even though it is challenging to adhere to the treatment because of lack of resources to get proper diet.
Combination
According to health community reports certain drugs should not be used together because of the way they interact. For example, Idovudine and Stavudine should not be used together, and Zalcitabine should not be combined with Didanosine, Stavudine, or Lamivudine.
Dr Lilian Mtei, who has been working with people taking the life-prolonging drugs at Muhimbili National Hospital advised patients who develop strange symptoms to see a doctor immediately so that the medication can be changed.
She said there are many side effects caused by the reaction of different types of ARVs on an individual.
For his part, the Management Development for Health (MDH) and Africa Academy of Public Health (AAPH) Chief Executive Officer, Dr Chalamilla Guerino, said such strange symptoms in patients are caused by Stavudine and AZT drugs when taken by a person for a long time.
"Such patients need to see a doctor whenever they notice any strange symptoms developing," he explained.
According to the doctor, Stavudine ARVs were phased out this year because of the symptoms, but AZT is still being given to people although it has the same side effects.
For her part, the Deputy Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr Lucy Nkya said all patients who have developed such strange symptoms should be referred to regional hospitals where they can get more assistance.
She clarified that AZT was also phased out and so could only be in the market illegally.
She explained that AZT was only given to pregnant mothers, but later the government decided to phase it out because of the side effects.
The deputy minister said that medical employees based in the rural areas receive training continuously especially those dealing with HIV/Aids cases so as to be able to face the challenges of helping the patients.
Meanwhile United States of America confirmed that it has phased out the Stavudine ARV drug because of its side effects. Despite its users developing a number of disorders, including some men using it growing breasts, Stavudine ARV is one of the drugs still being used in the country.
Ilya Levin First Secretary Director, Public Affairs Section in the US Embassy in Tanzania, told the Guardian in an exclusive interview that the side effects include lipodystrophy hyperlactatemia and polyneuropathy.
 
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