This thread is for young people who are trying to change their lives within the next 12 months.
If you've remained in a zone where it feels like nothing is working out & you want to optimize for better outcomes.
I tried this. It worked for me. Now I share with you.
7 steps:
@pookieugee@Steadi_lady@officialABAT If I own the account and give you to work on it. It’s my responsibility to report the total earnings on the account. Including the ones with you, because every dollar earned is under my name. It’s starting to feel like you’re intentionally being ignorant, “educated one.”
@pookieugee@Steadi_lady@officialABAT It’s a breach of contract, pookie. Outsourcing in this case can be escalated to civil fraud or identity theft. The owner of the account also has to report the earnings for tax purposes, and failure to do that would be a crime. I hope you understand, “educated one.”
@Steadi_lady@pookieugee@officialABAT Ms. Oiza is right with what she’s saying. It’s not legal. And if you check the terms and conditions it’s among the things you’re not allowed to do. Convincing yourself that what you’re doing isn’t wrong is not the right way to go. It’s a punishable crime so understand that too.
Adding to this, Apple still hasn’t figured out how to add clipboard history to their keyboard. This was one of the things that still piss me off about iPhones. Overall, Android’s Gboard is best out there. Even better than the native keyboards of most phones.
It cannot be the reason you sold it cos Samsung actually uses Android operating system and everyone who uses any android keyboard, let us not even go as high as Google’s Gboard, knows that the android keyboard has the most accurate word predictions, most times unbelievably accurate.
It makes your life easy. Apple’s iPhone, in this aspect, is a technological embarrassment.
You can mock Nigerian girls all you want for lacking communication skills, but the truth is that Nigerian society is generally hostile to honest conversation.
The more Nigerians you deal with, the more you notice a pattern: people avoid saying things directly. They deflect, suppress, and sidestep difficult discussions until, seemingly out of nowhere, there's an emotional outburst.
Many of our siblings, parents, lecturers, bosses, and peers exhibit this trait to varying degrees: avoid, deflect, avoid—then suddenly, get mad.
@tobyasky@_dreamchaxer I respect your take, but it’s really flawed in my opinion. Especially when you consider moments of genius like Trent-Origi vs Barca. Bruno-martial vs city. The one where he just lobbed it and martial finished. These are not random. They train for them that’s why they take them
This thing makes sense. So If I’m meant to give you 1m then I’ll give you 500k from the 1m. Which means I haven’t given you the remaining 500k, then when you’re meant to collect the remaining 500k from me I don’t need to collect it again since you already owe 500k.
I feel you G.
“Even a genius will struggle if they do not prepare” is a fact.
The truth is many people think they must see something for it to exist, but what is, is — and not seeing it does not mean it isn’t.
Many times I tell my classmates that I read a lot and that I have 24 hours in a day. Those 24 hours are enough for me to attend classes, party, play football, and still read, with the time allocated for these activities varying from day to day. People never saw me read because I did it alone in my room at my father’s house, which was fortunately close to school.
I consider myself a genius because I pick up calculation courses easily, and even courses involving drawings, thanks to my strong photographic memory. However, I read almost every day, if not every day — sometimes 20 minutes, sometimes 30 minutes, sometimes 2 hours, actively or passively. I engaged my brain academically every day, and over time my genius brain registered it. I still remember many concepts because I studied and understood them.
People saw me as nonchalant because they never saw me read or attend overnight classes (I never read overnight). They thought I had it easy and that my brain was just magnetic. While I have great photographic memory and am good with numbers and interpolations, I still studied a lot — not in the conventional 5-hour-a-day, two-weeks-before-exams way with overnight sessions, but in 20- or 30-minute sessions after waking, before class or football, or before sleeping at night, spread over 2–3 months before exams. Cumulatively, I ended up reading more hours than many non-geniuses.
In the end, while I may rightly pass for an academic genius, I worked diligently for my results. Some “scholars” lie about how much they prepare because you don’t see them 24/7. If anybody is doing well academically, they actually prepared well. That is why some “I never read at all” scholars get As in courses they claim not to have studied. It’s all a charade.
They may prepare less than you, but they prepared very well regardless. That you don’t see them prepare does not mean they didn’t.