š¤JADAKISSš¤
š¤STOVE GOD COOKSš¤
š¤FAT JOEš¤
šæAROMAšæ
ā»ļøNEW SONGā»ļø
šØPREMIERED ON JOE AND JADAāS PODCASTšØ
āIāve been obliterating rappers for years, is this about a verse or is this about a careerā
-Jadakiss sending shots at 38 Spesh šš ??
šØ Leo Messi: āI cried because I felt that š š„šš š¦š² šššš¦š¦šššš¬ ššØš°š§ because of the penalty I missed⦠and the way I took itā.
āBut thankfully once again, God had something special for me in the end. Iām very happyā.
It's 9pm local time in London, everyone in the Royal Box has left the building, and the camera pans to the one person who stayed to watch the last match of the day...
Roger Federer, the winningest men's champion in Wimbledon history.
Cinema.
Journalist: "Do you feel like rappers should be more responsible for their lyrics?"
Tupac: "Yes"
Kendrick Lamar: "It's your choice to listen to it, but it's my responsibility to know exactly what I'm talking about and to always give you both sides of the fence"
Konbiniš„
@yoxics take notes ,look at how he humbly asked for the guy to put him on
in front of Speedās own audience
now thatās the difference!
If small boy know road follow am
humility will take you further than braggadocios any day
One conviction I hold strongly is that the greatest gift a parent can give a child is healthy self-esteem. Skills can be learned, opportunities can come and go, but believing you have inherent worth and the confidence to engage the world shapes almost everything that follows.
I was watching this Kylian Mbappe documentary on the BBC and Arsene Wenger said something that stayed with me.
He said: ā(To succeed) you first have to think I belong to this worldā.
As simple as those words are, itās the reason many people fail at anything they do. They donāt see themselves good enough. They donāt see themselves capable. They donāt deem themselves worthy or deserving of the opportunities they have.
He concluded that statement with ā(you must think)itās natural of me to express my talent and make a difference.ā
Imagine living everyday like that, going into the world with the full knowledge that you have a place in it, and everything you do to show yourself, and your qualities to the world is natural and youāre expressing yourself to make a difference.
I think thatās powerful.
I always recommend watching, listening to, and reading the stories of elite athletes. Thereās always a difference.
Itās talent, itās strength, itās some bit of luck, itās strategy, itās the environment.
No matter how good you may be, if you donāt have parents or coaches who see that talent early, and carefully make important decisions for you, youāll not become as big as your promise foretells.
Itās why Iāll always respect Victor Osimhen and his story. Becoming what he became almost against all odds isnāt what many do, as we can see from the many footballers who never lived up to their levels.
Each time I watch sportsmen, elite sportsmen and the roles coaching and their parents play in what they become, Iām convinced any Nigerian footballer born in Nigeria who makes it big on a global scale is an outlier.
And itās mentality. Some people canāt hear canāt.