This week, we’re switching things up with a special collaboration between She Knows Best and Can We Talk 256, the card game designed to spark meaningful conversations and deepen connection.
With over 20 years of friendship between hosts Afsa and Liz, this episode dives into the heart of friendship: what it means to grow together, evolve apart, and still find home in each other. From identity and life goals to career paths and heartbreaks, this is a candid, funny, and vulnerable conversation you don’t want to miss.
About Can We Talk 256:
Can We Talk 256 creates tools that make connection easier, helping people build stronger relationships, one conversation at a time. Their cards are designed to help anyone, regardless of social skills or background, start meaningful dialogue and combat loneliness. Through conversation starters, social clubs, and community experiences, Can We Talk reminds us that connection is not a luxury, it’s a human need.
Check them out on all socials @canwetalk256
It’s not therapy, but it might help.
Uganda and Africa today are full of paradoxes: millions of young people are unemployed or underemployed, while others are cushioned by family names, networks, inheritance, or access to global opportunities. Globally, Millennials face shrinking opportunities even as the largest wealth transfer in history is underway. Privilege is layered, sometimes it’s money, but it’s also gender, skin color, the school you attended, or the freedom to make life choices without survival anxiety. In today’s episode, we explore privilege at the intersection of wealth, gender, race, and networks, asking: what does it mean, who benefits, and how can we use it responsibly?
It's not therapy but it might help.
Everyone says “follow your passion”, but what if your passion doesn’t pay the bills? In this episode, we explore the realities of work and survival in Uganda, where youth unemployment stands at 16.1% and only 3% of young people have formal jobs.From the myth of passion to the privilege of stability, we unpack blue-collar vs white-collar mindsets, office politics, burnout, and the balance between ambition and survival. Whether you’re in corporate, self-employed, or hustling between gigs, this episode gets real about what career success means in 2025.It’s Not Therapy, but It Might Help.
Parenting remains one of the most personal, yet most publicly debated, decisions in our lives. Across much of Africa, it’s not viewed as a choice but a social obligation, a milestone of adulthood, and proof of legacy. But as millennial women begin to question inherited expectations, we’re asking: What if motherhood isn’t the only path to meaning, legacy, or love?
In this episode, we unpack the layered politics of parenthood in Uganda and beyond, from the pressure to have children to the joy of choosing a child-free life. We explore how cultural and religious norms tie womanhood to fertility, how workplaces penalize mothers through pay gaps and unrealistic demands, and how men often escape the same scrutiny.
The conversation digs into the emotional and financial weight of care work, the stigma around fertility treatments and adoption, and the privilege of choice in a world where motherhood is often treated as a duty rather than a decision.
Who are you without the labels? Are we truly choosing our identities, or are they chosen for us by society, culture, and history?
In this episode, we unpack the weight of identity in an African context, from job titles and income classes to marital status, gender, and race. We ask how much of who we are is self-defined, and how much is shaped by expectation, surveillance, and power.Subscribe & follow us:Instagram: @sheknowsbestpodTikTok: @sheknowsbestpod
The dysfunction is real. But so is the love.
Kampala is equal parts thrilling and exhausting. It’s where the hustle never sleeps, but neither do the traffic jams. A city where entrepreneurship thrives despite weak systems, garbage piles up alongside our dreams, and the air itself can choke you. And yet… we can’t imagine living anywhere else.
In this episode, we break down the wild contradictions of our city: from the boda boda lifeline to the GDP we’re losing in traffic, from air that’s 7x dirtier than it should be to a nightlife that never dies. It’s messy, it’s maddening, and it’s magic, and we’re asking if Kampala is organized chaos or just… chaos.
Subscribe & follow us:Instagram: @sheknowsbestpodTikTok: @sheknowsbestpod
We grow up in cultures that tell us: be respectful, get educated, keep your head down, stay “in the right lane,” and everything will fall into place. But what happens when you do all of that, and the life you were promised still doesn’t come to fruition?
In this episode, we unpack the Good Girl Syndrome in the Ugandan and African context: the grief of a life that never came to pass, the shame and respectability politics that keep women stuck, and the exhaustion of being “the dependable one.”
From chronic people-pleasing to cultural expectations of sacrifice, we ask, how do you reclaim your life when you’ve lived it for everyone else? And what does healing look like in a society that’s still watching, still judging?
Subscribe & follow us:
Instagram: @sheknowsbestpod
TikTok: @sheknowsbestpod
Friendships shape us in ways romance never can. For many women, friends are the therapist, cheerleader, co-parent, and financial backup all rolled into one. But what happens when these bonds shift, fade, or break apart?In this episode, we dive into the unspoken truths of adult female friendships, from the joy of chosen family to the heartbreak of friendship breakups. We ask why losing a best friend can feel more devastating than losing a partner, and how adulthood, careers, motherhood, and money reshape the way we connect.It’s not therapy, but it might help.👉🏾 Subscribe & follow us:Instagram: @sheknowsbestpodTikTok: @sheknowsbestpod
Dating in Kampala feels less like romance and more like a survival strategy dressed up in aesthetics. From influencers selling soft life and pseudo-trad wife dreams, to toxic red-pill content flooding TikTok and WhatsApp groups, the landscape of modern love has never been messier.In this episode, we unpack:The rise of trad-wife culture and influencer “stay-at-home girlfriend” vibes.The 50/50 debate — love vs. economics, and how pay gaps reshape relationships.Talking stages, situationships, and the death of “courtship.”Is marriage an achievement — or just added labour for women? (the care gap).Identity in relationships and love dilemmas unique to Kampala’s messy eco-system.We dig into the scandals, the culture shifts, and the real-life contradictions shaping how we date, love, and survive today.It’s not therapy, but it might help.👉🏾 Subscribe & follow us:Instagram: @sheknowsbestpodTikTok: @sheknowsbestpod
Dating in Kampala feels less like romance and more like a survival strategy dressed up in aesthetics. From influencers selling soft life and pseudo-trad wife dreams, to toxic red-pill content flooding TikTok and WhatsApp groups, the landscape of modern love has never been messier.In this episode, we unpack:The rise of trad-wife culture and influencer “stay-at-home girlfriend” vibes.The 50/50 debate — love vs. economics, and how pay gaps reshape relationships.Talking stages, situationships, and the death of “courtship.”Is marriage an achievement — or just added labour for women? (the care gap).Identity in relationships and love dilemmas unique to Kampala’s messy eco-system.We dig into the scandals, the culture shifts, and the real-life contradictions shaping how we date, love, and survive today.It’s not therapy, but it might help.👉🏾 Subscribe & follow us:Instagram: @sheknowsbestpodTikTok: @sheknowsbestpod
Uganda is in the middle of a quiet mental health emergency — and it’s hiding behind selfies, brunches, and the phrase “I’m fine.”
In this episode, we dig into the realities of mental health in Uganda, from the alarming statistics to the personal stories that never make the headlines. With fewer than 50 psychiatrists for a population of 45 million, and less than 1% of the health budget allocated to mental health, access to care is almost nonexistent. Meanwhile, suicide rates remain high, stigma keeps conversations underground, and many young people are turning to parties, alcohol, and drugs as coping mechanisms.
In this episode, we dig into the uncomfortable truths of mental health in Uganda:
We ask the hard questions:
It’s not therapy, but it might help.
🔗 Sources & References Mentioned
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💙 Need Support? You Are Not Alone.
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This is She Knows Best, for the girls who feel too much, question everything, but keep going anyway.
In our very first episode, we set the record straight on why this podcast exists, who it’s for, and what it’s definitely not. Think of it as a soft landing into the messy, magical, and sometimes maddening realities of being a millennial African woman.
We open with real intros, no LinkedIn bios, just the raw, relatable reasons that brought us to the mic: quiet rage, soft life dreams, and the DMs that made us scream "same, sis."
Then we dive into the heart of this podcast:
This podcast is not therapy… but it might help.
Because sometimes healing sounds like uncomfortable truths and belly laughs in the same breath.
We challenge the most common misconceptions about women like us:
“Wanting more doesn’t mean we hate men.”
“Softness is not weakness.”
“Being single at 30? We’re thriving, not failing.”
“We love our families, and still roll our eyes at their group chat toxicity.”
And finally, we get honest about modern love in Kampala & beyond, from “I’m not ready for a relationship” energy to side-chic economics and the emotional gymnastics of dating while ambitious.
Expect sass, soul, and serious substance , plus a hint of what’s coming next: money, love, identity, and maybe that one episode your mum shouldn’t hear.
Hit play.
Hit subscribe.
Send this to your bestie and your situationship.
Because this… is She Knows Best.
(Or at least, we think we do.)
A podcast by millennial girlies, for millennial girlies, unpacking taboo truths at the intersection of healing, identity, and culture, with sass, soul, and serious substance.She Knows Best is a refreshing, intelligent, and deeply relatable podcast that explores the layered realities of modern African womanhood. Hosted by Afsa and Liz, two dynamic African millennial women from different sectors of culture and public life, the show brings honest, thought-provoking conversations on everything from mental health and identity to relationships, power, and purpose.Each episode offers a mix of lived experience, cultural critique, and candid reflection, unpacking the complex issues that define life for African women today. Whether it's navigating motherhood and ambition, examining gender norms, or exploring faith and emotional wellbeing, She Knows Best invites listeners into conversations that are bold, grounded, and necessary.
This isn't about perfection. It's about perspective, and creating space for clarity, vulnerability, and growth in a rapidly changing world.