Wow! Considering this is coming 13 or 14 years later! 😂 Thank you!!!! That was a whole other season of my life, back in Clemson. I surprisingly enjoyed teaching you guys. I was initially terrified but my students were awesome 🤩 and that made it so much better.
Collaboration Announcement ❗️
A thread
@hollardghana x @porials_pitch ✌🏾
We're thrilled to announce our collaboration with @hollardghana as our official insurance partner for this year’s Porials Pitch hosted by the amazing Dulcie.
The Deputy Chairman of the Electoral Commission, Dr. Bossman Asare, has reassured registered voters who have misplaced their voter ID cards that, such persons are still eligible to cast their votes at their respective polling stations.
Source: @Graphicgh
You’re so right—somewhere along the line, Instagram stopped being about capturing the moment and became about curating the perfect image. Millennials were the pioneers of those raw, over-filtered shots of coffee cups and sunsets, and it was pure because it wasn’t about perfection. But now? Everyone’s paralyzed by this need to produce rather than share. It’s like we forgot the magic of just… posting whatever made us smile that day.
People started overthinking it—obsessing over engagement, over the right caption, the perfect lighting, and the algorithm’s unpredictable whims. It all got so complicated. No wonder the stories are alive while the feeds are ghost towns—stories are easy, they disappear, there’s no pressure. But that pressure robbed the feed of its authenticity. The joy of sharing something imperfect, something ordinary—like your cat basking in the morning light or that poorly framed sunset from your balcony—is lost in the pursuit of some curated aesthetic.
We need to get back to basics. Forget the photoshoot-level expectations. Who cares if it’s grainy or the angle is weird? Post the damn sunrise, post the messy dinner you cooked, the selfie that’s just okay. The beauty of Instagram used to be the glimpses into real life—those imperfect, spontaneous slices of what’s actually happening. The quiet moments, the everyday things, the genuine smiles and bad hair days. The app is for images, for moments—let’s take it back to that. Let’s remind ourselves that it’s not about the likes or making everything a spectacle—it’s about sharing a little piece of our world with the people who want to see it.
Join us May 2 on Spaces for an #Africa Fintech Roundtable with @circle and @yellowcard_app to learn how open protocols, stablecoins and digital identity can make fintech more interoperable and inclusive.
2 May at 19:00 WAT / 21:00 EAT
https://t.co/v0sk2BvhDE