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Mkamburi Chigogo questions the “Small girl big God” lifestyle, calls it one of the biggest scams

08:51 PM
Mkamburi Chigogo questions the “Small girl big God” lifestyle, calls it one of the biggest scams
Radio presenter Mkamburi Chigogo. PHOTO/@mkamburichigogo/Facebook

Mkamburi Chigogo has called out the popular “small girl big God” trend, claiming it is one of the biggest scams on Instagram and TikTok.

In a new message on Instagram on Tuesday, December 9, 2025, she said the lifestyle has nothing to do with God and everything to do with people hiding the real source of their funding. She warned that those who believe the idea blindly will only end up stressed while trying to understand how others seem to live a soft life every day.

Mkamburi Chigogo’s post. PHOTO/Screengrab by K24 Digital

She said the phrase “small girl big God” has become common online, but in her view, it is misleading and unfair to those who take it seriously.

“Some of the biggest scams running the streets of Instagram and TikTok are small girl big God,” she said as she explained how people use the slogan to confuse their followers.

Mkamburi says the lifestyle hides the truth

Mkamburi went on to describe what she believes really happens behind the scenes. According to her, anytime someone posts the popular line, it has nothing to do with faith.

“The minute you come across a small girl with big God energy… mhmmm… divinely protected and highly favoured. Honey, you will die of stress because you are… how exactly? Because I need your big God to locate me,” she said.

She added that the phrase is not about a real God but about someone powerful funding the lifestyle.

Radio presenter Mkamburi Chigogo. PHOTO/@mkamburichigogo/Instagram

“My friend, no one is talking about an actual big God; they are talking about the destiny collector. That is a rich… somewhere,” she said as she explained why the message is misleading.

Mkamburi also pointed out how some influencers use the line to cover up questions about how they can afford constant travel and luxury living. She said the same people will appear online with clean passports and then claim, “Content creation pays, guys, look at me, look at the life I am living.”

She noted that many people trust these statements without asking deeper questions. “Eti, you are looking at some of these babes… actually, it is babes, and men. You are there, like Oh my God, how has this person managed to travel all the time? ‘” she said.

Mkamburi ended by saying those who choose to believe such stories should deal with the consequences. “You know what, the sheep that follow them blindly, you believe every single word, shida yako,” she said.

Author

Paulette Mboga

P.M.

View all posts by Paulette Mboga

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