Kush Tracey reflects on faith, obedience, and letting go in 2026 message

Gospel artiste Teresia Ndoti Wambui, widely known as Kush Tracey, has shared a reflective message as 2026 unfolds, encouraging her followers to embrace faith, obedience, and the courage to let go of what no longer serves them.
Taking to her Instagram account on Sunday, January 4, 2026, Kush, in her message, urged people to release things that no longer fit their lives, even when doing so feels uncomfortable.
She emphasised the importance of obedience, noting that growth often requires trusting the process despite uncertainty.
The musician also encouraged her followers to place their trust in God, especially in situations where outcomes are not yet visible.
“2026 release what no longer fits, obey even when it’s uncomfortable and trust in God with what you can’t yet see,” Kush Tracey wrote.
She highlighted faith as a guiding principle, reminding fans that belief often comes before clarity.

Kush on sobriety
This comes after she marked three years of sobriety with an emotional and faith-driven reflection on healing, freedom, and personal restoration.
In a message shared on Instagram on Sunday, December 28, 2025, Kush revealed that reaching the three-year milestone represents far more than giving up substances.
She explained that the decision to step away from alcohol, vaping, cigarettes, bhang, khat, pills, and other substances was not the result of sudden strength, but rather the outcome of honesty about deep-seated pain and a willingness to seek help.
“Today marks 3 years since I lay down the alcohol, vapes/sheesha, cigarettes, bhang, khat, pills, ecstasy/molly & kuber at the foot of the cross✝️,” she wrote.
She noted that behaviours such as addiction, recklessness, rebellion, and promiscuity were never her true identity, but coping mechanisms used to escape unresolved emotional wounds.
According to Kush Tracey, confronting that pain marked the beginning of genuine healing.

“I didn’t quit because I was suddenly strong – Nope, I have been on a journey of breaking and healing because I finally became honest about my pain and cried out for help from the one true healer. Promiscuity, rebellion, recklessness, addiction etc, were never my identity, but it was easier to use them as a coping mechanism & a way to escape my deepest wounds💔,” Kush added.
“Psychologically, I’ve learned this: When pain goes unprocessed, it looks for relief😮💨 and relief, when repeated, can quietly become a chain or rather a stronghold in life ⛓️💥,” she added.
Spiritually, she acknowledged that what once appeared to be running away from God was, in reality, a search for comfort, unconditional love, and acceptance in the wrong places.
“Spiritually, I’ve learned this: I wasn’t running from God—I was searching for comfort and looking for unconditional love in all the wrong places.How can we truly know love if we do not know God when God is love? 😬,” she wrote.









