

On August 1st, I finished my internship with Microsoft in Redmond, and made my way back to Lansing.
Just like that, the slower pace of summer gave way to the quickening rhythm of campus life. Classes are resuming, student leadership is stirring back to life, and recruiting season is already at the door.
And now that we are at the end of August, it means something else is also true: on the 14th of August, I turned 30!
With that transition, I published my second (or third, depending on how you are counting) book, which is now available for purchase via Amazon, Traversing Your Terrible twenties.
If you are not yet a subscriber, please feel free to subscribe below to get the updates directly in your mailbox. If you are already a subscriber, thanks for tagging along in the journey thus far.
Happy New Week, Happy (U.S.) Labor Day, and wishing you a Fabulous September ahead!
All my love,
As I wrapped up my first year of the MBA, I was honored to be appointed President of the Black MBA Association at Broad. This, to me, means more than a title โ itโs a responsibility to carry forward the work of creating community, representation, and opportunity within our program.
Coming back to campus this August, our focus is clear: supporting each other through recruiting season, amplifying voices that deserve to be heard, and ensuring that our presence is felt not just in the classroom, but in the industries we step into next.
On the 14th of August, I turned 30. Entering a new decade feels both surreal and grounding โ a reminder that time moves, but also that growth carries its own rhythm.
My twenties were defined by exploration: moving countries, launching ventures, publishing books, and learning to hold my ground in spaces that werenโt always designed for me. My thirties, I feel, will be about clarity, sustainability, and building with deeper intention.
Read More:
Thereโs something liberating about stepping into this new chapter without the need to perform certainty. I no longer feel pressured to have all the answers โ instead, I want to ask better questions, build stronger systems, and create space for balance.
On August 1st, I wrapped up my internship at Microsoft Xbox โ twelve weeks of learning, growth, and perspective. It was a summer that stretched me in the best ways: from analytics and global expansion research, to 80 coffee chats that taught me as much about people as about business.
As the new year begins, for MBAs, this means recruitment has also already begun. Coffee chats, applications, and networking sessions are in full swing โ long before classes even settle into rhythm.
Read More:
Itโs a reminder that professional growth in business school isnโt just about academic rigor, itโs about timing, preparation, and being intentional with the opportunities that come your way.
Since January this year, I have been working on a new company. Initially, I thought these would be two different businesses โ one focused on supply chain and agriculture, the other on gaming. But the deeper I went, the clearer it became: they are two sides of the same vision.
Q2 Corporation is that bridge. Born from my supply chain dream, shaped by my MBA, and sharpened through my internship at Xbox, Q2 is designed to future-proof communities by combining agriculture, technology, and gaming. What started as a logistics model is now evolving into simulations and systems that can teach, engage, and transform.
Read More:
We piloted this thinking through our innovation hub in Mangochi, and now, Q2 is beginning to take shape as a global company โ with Malawi as its heartbeat.
Since moving back to Lansing, flowers have become an anchor in my weekly rhythm. What started as a small gesture has grown into a ritual โ fresh blooms that remind me to pause, breathe, and embrace softness in the middle of everything else.
A bit of lore: ever since I published my second book Feminine Silence, which carries a peach-pink theme, my Sundays have been filled with peach flowers. Itโs funny how love pays attention โ now every grocery run includes flowers, and my vases rarely sit empty.
Read More:
Itโs a reminder that joy can be simple, intentional, and renewable. And Lansing has quickly become a place where that joy is easy to find.
On the 14th of September, I will be officially launching my second book, Feminine Silence. For now, the book is available for preread via Kindle, and I am deeply grateful for the early readers who are already engaging with its message.
This work is deeply personal โ exploring the weight of expectation, the cost of silence, and the power of reclaiming voice. It is a book written not only for women, but for anyone navigating systems that demand conformity at the expense of authenticity.
As part of the launch, we will also be highlighting conversations with powerful voices, like Chief Theresa Kachindamoto, who has dedicated her life to ending child marriage in Malawi. These stories remind us why silence must be broken, and why courage โ however quiet โ can change the world.
Fall is absolutely my favorite season in the U.S., though spring comes close. This being my fourth fall here, it feels both familiar and new โ a rhythm Iโve grown to love, but one that still surprises me every time the leaves turn.
This year, fall also marks transition: from summer internships back into classrooms, from reflection into recruiting, and from personal milestones into collective momentum. For me, itโs a season to lean into clarity โ about where Iโm headed, what Iโm building, and how to carry the lessons of the past year forward.
Don’t forget to subscribe to get the updates directly in your mailbox!
As September begins, Iโm excited to share more about my journey โ from the upcoming launch of Feminine Silence, to Q2โs next steps, to the everyday balance of life in Lansing. Change is in the air, and Iโm ready for it.
This November, Iโll be heading to Accra, Ghana, as a nominee for the Global Entrepreneurs Award in the Social Impact category at the Global Entrepreneurship Festival. Itโs an incredible honor to see the work of the Ntha Foundation and Kwathu Kollective recognized on such a global stage.
With over 10,000 participants, 70+ countries represented, and 60+ global speakers, this festival is one of the largest gatherings of innovators and changemakers in the world. To stand among them as a nominee is not only humbling but also affirming of the vision weโre building from Malawi to the world.
If youโd like to go deeper into my journey โ from Malawi, through the United Nations to Microsoft, you can find it in my books:
Each book is a piece of the story, written for those navigating uncertainty and building with intention, in often systems made without them in mind.
with care,
Ntha