You have to be audacious about the things you want in life. Closed mouths don’t get fed. So ask for the opportunity, send the email, make the call. Apply for the job you think you’re underqualified for. Pitch the idea even when you’re not 100% ready. Tell people what you want
Living alone is such a beautiful experience I hope most people get to experience especially in their 20s. The beauty of not having to negotiate your space with anyone else, finding stuff exactly how you left them, discovering your style, girl dinner etc. Absolutely peak 🤌🏼
Honestly… I be wanting to change my number, clear my camera roll, disappear for a little while, cleanse my whole life, and just START OVER mentally, emotionally, spiritually… all that 😭✨
Today, I celebrate 4 years of being a self-taught nail technician. Every challenge shaped me, and every setback pushed me to work harder. Thank you, God, for this journey. ❤️🙏
F1 may 2022. F2 March 2026
The older you get, the more you realize luck is mostly exposure. If you sit in the same place, have the same routine, talking to the same people, nothing new really happens. You have to engage the world to win. Travel more. Talk to people.
A lot of you been asking me a lot of how's, so this is it!
Most students tend to apply for the same five popular scholarships the Chevening scholarship, DAAD, Mastercard foundation scholars program, Fulbright program and Commonwealth scholarship.
They’re all excellent opportunities no doubt but the competition is extremely intense.
At the same time there are hundreds of fully funded scholarships that receive far less attention and fewer applications but they legit.
Here’s how you can discover those hidden opportunities.
All products prices here are already calculated including transportation and runner fee inu mungolipila ndi ndikulandila next week😊…. Especially for bulk buying and businesses
Feel free to go to
Any south African stores website take a screenshot and calculate the price by 312.
My tenant has lived in my property for five years.
She treats it like her own home. She keeps it spotless. Neighbors have never complained.
She's the kind of tenant every landlord hopes for.
This morning, I got a call I wasn't expecting.
She told me she'd been hospitalized. She's exhausted. Scared. And for the first time in years, she doesn't know how she's going to make rent. She sounded embarrassed even saying it.
I told her something my father once told me:
"Good people don't become irresponsible just because life hits them."
I gave her three months with no rent. Told her we'd reassess when her health improves.
She said, "I won't forget this."
I told her she didn't need to.
Because compassion isn't a loan. It's a choice.