“…Malawi is a landlocked country in the sub-Sahara that is referred to globally as "… one of the poorest … in the world" (International Monetary Fund, 2017, p. 4), is ranked 174th out of 187 in terms of poorest and least developed (UNDP, 2014, p. 162), and the United Nations describes it in terms of being impoverished (Gwede, 2015). If anyone has romantic ideas of local contentment in opposition to these poverty definers, local rural Malawians shatter this illusion when they self-identify as "… very poor" (Stonebanks, 2008, p. 389;Emory, 2015, p. 10), with academics equally echoing the people's state of living (Miller et al, 2010;Chowns, 2015;Mchenga et al, 2017;Kretzer et al, 2017). With extreme economic poverty, education (Durston & Nashire, 2001;Roche, 2016) and healthcare (Makwero, 2018;Makaula et al, 2019) sectors (despite best efforts) are overwhelmed and unable to provide basic services to a population of 19 million.…”