Alison Muthamagazine File
Soon, people started sending Alison their own problems. A teenager asked, “How do I tell my parents I’m struggling with school without disappointing them?” A single dad wrote, “How do I braid my daughter’s hair for picture day?” A retiree asked, “I’m lonely after my spouse died. What do I do on Sundays?”
That night, she opened her laptop and typed a title: . alison muthamagazine
Within a year, The Alison Muthama Magazine had no website, no app, no subscription list—but it was read in six countries. People translated issues by hand. Photocopies appeared in doctors’ waiting rooms, prison libraries, and homeless shelters. A man in Brazil wrote her a letter: “Page 3 taught me how to change my baby’s diaper. I was too ashamed to ask anyone else.” Soon, people started sending Alison their own problems