Thank you, Sir.
I don't formulate things. If it's not my life and experience, I won't own it.
All of them are so fresh in my head. Ability to talk and breathe says a lot about what makes us human. Once both is shut down that's the end. From watching the hair breaks... It is well.
I see a lot of people mention, "Mortuâry Attendant."
Work wey I don do? Owners are cashing out big time.
It will teach you real life. That after the ability to talk and breathe, there's nothing more. Stay humble. You won't remain the same. You will learn kindness by force.
Whether you be big man or small man. It ends there.
Them go just play with formalin for your body. Forget the unnecessary classism of cold room and ordinary room. All nah dead body with tags.
Nothing catches fire more than human bones.
You see those abandoned and forgotten bodies, I think the government gives order for evacuation after 10 years. By then everything is gone except the bones. You won't believe the fire and oil that drips.
Yes, I have experienced those 2 AM sounding unreal stories. What's my own with them? Shout up and sleep. Let me document new clients' details and create space for them.
Wahala people carry their wahala till death.
If I talk some people will think it's the normal social media jargons. You see those trouble makers in real life. It doesn't end when they took their last breathe.
Life is deep there. One village Chief that was deposited for just a night, scattered the entire room at night with enough shout.
Sounding like AsabaHood, right? But it is real.
One of the biggest career mistakes many young professionals make is confusing movement with progress.
They move from Customer Service Representative to Social Media Manager, then to Facility Manager, then to Product Manager, and perhaps later to Administrative Officer. Eight years later, they have accumulated years of work experience, but very little career capital.
Career capital is built through depth, not just activity. The labor market rewards expertise. Employers are usually looking for people who have spent enough time in a particular function to develop mastery, credibility, and measurable accomplishments.
The challenge with constantly changing career directions is that each move resets the experience clock.
A professional who spends two years in Customer Service, two years in Social Media Management, two years in Facility Management, and two years in Product Management may have eight years of work experience, but they do not have enough depth in any of those disciplines to compete effectively with specialists.
When a company needs someone with three years of Customer Service experience, they fall short.
When a company needs someone with three years of Facility Management experience, they fall short.
When a company needs someone with three years of Product Management experience, they fall short.
Ironically, someone who has spent just three to four years consistently building expertise in one of those functions may be more employable than a person who has worked for eight years across multiple unrelated roles.
This becomes even more painful at the mid career stage. Promotions, leadership opportunities, and higher salaries are often reserved for professionals who have demonstrated sustained competence in a specific area. Employers are more comfortable paying a premium for proven expertise than for generalized exposure.
This is not to say career transitions are wrong. Sometimes changing careers is necessary and beneficial. The problem arises when there is no deliberate direction behind the moves. Random transitions create fragmented experience. Strategic transitions create cumulative experience.
Young professionals should regularly ask themselves a simple question:
“Am I building a career, or am I merely collecting job titles?”
Because there is a significant difference between having eight years of experience and having one year of experience repeated eight times in different places.
In the long run, depth creates value. Expertise creates opportunities. Consistency creates career capital.
@Femiforge It's a serious indices to consider. Some of us if we keep waiting on the career path, there won't be food on the table. Responsibility is piling up.
We meet this country at the wrongest curve.
Money cannot buy my happiness, keh? Right now, all my problems can be solved with money.
When I was living on medication for 5 years and hoping with tiny pieces of hope to be whole again, maybe I would have said that.
All of my problems now are money.
Post your work. Post your demo videos. Post your screenshot.
Also, comment on people's posts intelligently. Your next client can see you from there. It's visibility too.
Football is a wild game. You will see someone who can't even kick a ball on the pitch busy abusing a player and demonstrating how they should have done it.
Funny scenes 🤣. I was busy looking at his GP tank of a belly.