"Please help me. I don't know what to do and I'm feeling very confused. Kindly review my case and assist me. I would be grateful for any help from the medical/support team."
😭😭😭😭😭😭 good by dosto
Dosto, mera monetization X (Twitter) par permanently hata diya gaya hai 😔
1 saal ki mehnat thi… samajh nahi aa raha kya galti hui.
Aap log batao—mujhe kya karna chahiye? Appeal karu ya naya start karu?”
X (Twitter) is a fraud platform. Without any mistake or proper reason, it removes a creator from revenue sharing. This is unfair—I’ve been working hard for a whole year, and this happened to me.
—-—-—-—
Reply above this line.
Hello,
After a thorough review, our team has determined that your account does not comply with X's creator monetization standards.
Specifically, your account is in violation of the Platform manipulation and spam section of our standards. This means your account has been permanently suspended from our creator revenue sharing program.
Your support case is now closed, and this email is not monitored for replies.
For any further assistance, check out Premium FAQs or feel free to contact @Premium for support.
Best,
X Support Team
@kletlape@makoyafontein Most people chase heavy weights for showI ll drop the weight slow every rep down and make it burn properly Looks stupid works insanely well
@NarendraJa47432@esenu_shem Correct. It’s a staple of any busy OPD. The challenge for us is often convincing the patient that it’s a mechanical barrier issue rather than an internal systemic illness. Good observation
Superstition ( Andhvishwas)
has once again stolen a childs smile💔
👉 Just yesterday he was smiling, today hes on a ventilator because of superstition
As I mentioned earlier
a small child was brought with high sugar and heat stroke complaints
He was first brought unconscious because of jaad-fuk
then with proper treatment he became stable
There was also a financial problem
We advised them to take him to another hospital
but instead they took him back home again for jaad-fuk
Today the same child came back
but this time he was on a ventilator 😔💔
It was my evening duty
I just stood there shocked and speechless
Just yesterday I saw him smiling and playing in the ward
and today seeing him in that condition brought tears to my eyes
Honestly it felt really painful
🙏 Please
dont fall into superstition
Diseases are treated in hospitals not by jaad-fuk
(Averness post)
#Reality #NursingLife #SadTruth #StopSuperstition
HOW DO YOU BECOME A NURSE? Prt. 1
Quick one; so, you don’t just wake up and become a Nurse.
It’s not something you “learn by watching” or pick up in a few months from a doctor or Nurse. Nursing is something you study, practice, and get trained for over time, anything other than this makes you a quack, like those ones we see called auxiliary.
To become a Nurse, you have to go through a proper school, where you learn the foundation of how the human body works. Anatomy, physiology, foundation of Nursing, microbiology, pharmacology & pharmacodynamics, medical surgical nursing etc and how diseases affect the body, how medications work, all of that.
But it doesn’t just stop in the classroom. You’ll spend a lot of time in the hospital during training. Real wards, real patients, real situations. That’s where you learn how to actually care for people, how to check vital signs properly, how to give medications safely, how to respond when something is not going well.
And it’s not as easy as it sounds. You’re being supervised, corrected, and trained to think. Not just “do this,” but “why are you doing this?” and “what could go wrong if you don’t do it properly?”
Sometimes you’ll be tired and things won’t go perfectly, but all this process is what builds skill and confidence.
After all of this, you don’t just start working immediately. You have to be licensed. That means you’ve met the required standard and you’re legally allowed to care for patients. Because at the end of the day, this is people’s lives we’re talking about. Not trial and error.
So when you see a Nurse, just know, there are years of learning, practice, and real-life experience behind that uniform. No be something wey person just “pick up.”
HOW DO YOU BECOME A NURSE? Prt. 1
Quick one; so, you don’t just wake up and become a Nurse.
It’s not something you “learn by watching” or pick up in a few months from a doctor or Nurse. Nursing is something you study, practice, and get trained for over time, anything other than this makes you a quack, like those ones we see called auxiliary.
To become a Nurse, you have to go through a proper school, where you learn the foundation of how the human body works. Anatomy, physiology, foundation of Nursing, microbiology, pharmacology & pharmacodynamics, medical surgical nursing etc and how diseases affect the body, how medications work, all of that.
But it doesn’t just stop in the classroom. You’ll spend a lot of time in the hospital during training. Real wards, real patients, real situations. That’s where you learn how to actually care for people, how to check vital signs properly, how to give medications safely, how to respond when something is not going well.
And it’s not as easy as it sounds. You’re being supervised, corrected, and trained to think. Not just “do this,” but “why are you doing this?” and “what could go wrong if you don’t do it properly?”
Sometimes you’ll be tired and things won’t go perfectly, but all this process is what builds skill and confidence.
After all of this, you don’t just start working immediately. You have to be licensed. That means you’ve met the required standard and you’re legally allowed to care for patients. Because at the end of the day, this is people’s lives we’re talking about. Not trial and error.
So when you see a Nurse, just know, there are years of learning, practice, and real-life experience behind that uniform. No be something wey person just “pick up.”
@ToviaMonday@dagbananurse Being a nurse isnt just a job its a responsibility built on knowledge skill, and compassion Behind every uniform are years of hard work sleepless nights and a commitment to save lives
Postmortem erection (rigor erectus) is an involuntary, non-sexual phenomenon seen shortly after death, especially in violent deaths like hanging. It results from blood pooling in dependent areas and reflexes triggered by spinal cord or cerebellar disruption.
Postmortem erection (rigor erectus) is an involuntary, non-sexual phenomenon seen shortly after death, especially in violent deaths like hanging. It results from blood pooling in dependent areas and reflexes triggered by spinal cord or cerebellar disruption.
Patient is perfectly healthy, but frustrated. Every few months, his fingertips start peeling like this. I see this all the time in the OPD; identify the cause