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.”
Instead, she started a “Help Chain.” Every issue ended with the same instruction:
That night, she opened her laptop and typed a title: . alison muthamagazine
One rainy evening, Alison noticed a stack of glossy magazines in the library’s recycling bin. “Celebrity diets,” “10 ways to impress your boss,” “The perfect vacation home”—all full of beautiful photos but no real substance. Alison frowned. “What if a magazine answered the questions people are too afraid to ask?” she thought.
The magazine grew. A local baker offered to print it for free in exchange for one recipe per issue. A retired teacher became the “Grammar for Grown-ups” columnist. A high school art club drew the covers. Within a year, The Alison Muthama Magazine had
The last page of every issue read: “You are holding this magazine because someone wanted you to struggle a little less. When you’re done, pass it on. And remember: the most helpful thing you can do is to tell the truth, kindly.” So if you ever find a crumpled, photocopied zine on a bus seat with the words “Alison Muthama Magazine” on the cover—pick it up. Someone made it just for you.
And that was enough.
Alison never became rich or famous. But every Sunday, she walked to the town square with a fresh stack of magazines, and people would line up—not for autographs, but to say: “This month’s question helped me save my marriage,” or “Your guide to applying for disability benefits changed my life.”