Mike Sonko and his wife Primrose Mbuvi Primrose is celebrating the former Nairobi Governor for being a great dad
Image: courtesy

Primrose Mbuvi, wife to former Nairobi County Governor Mike Mbuvi Sonko has shared a lovely message celebrating her husband for being an amazing dad.

Taking to social media page, Primrose shared a video of her husband deep in slumber as he enjoyed a helicopter ride accompanied with Ruth Kiple's song "Happy Father's Day."

Captioning the post she went on to highlight the beautiful things that a father brings to the table as she compared the weight of being a dad as opposed to being a mom.

 

Primrose emphasized that dads do go through their own share of struggles as she hailed her man for leading their family beautifully.

"A father may not carry pregnancy for nine months, but he is always pregnant with family needs, dreams and visions of a better future.

A father may not know how labor pains feels like, but his pains are not physical, his pains are emotional, and he suffers mental injuries from time to time," the first part of her lengthy post read.

She went on to add,

 

"A father may not have breasts to breastfeed babies, yet everyone sucks from his unseen breasts.

A father may not experience monthly periods, but he bleeds from inside when he has no means to provide for his family, when he gets blames for not being like his fellow men, and when he is rarely appreciated for His daily struggles and push just to keep the family together,"

Finishing up she called on people to learn to appreciate their fathers more and always hold them in prayers as they undergo their fair share of trials that sometimes they never even talk about.

"Let’s all appreciate our Father’s and pray for them. May God strengthen all Father’s!.....

HAPPY FATHER’S DAY Baba yetu tunakupenda @mike.sonko,"

She also celebrated her late dad by posting two pictures of him on her Instagram stories. She captioned the photos, "to  our daddies in Heaven, we miss you," accompanied with a crying emoji and the prayer emoji as Gramps Morgan's 'People Like You,' played in the background.

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