โจ Welcome to Sheldon Codes โจ
This is where tech meets creativity ๐
Here youโll find:
๐น Frontend projects & tutorials (React, Tailwind, Flask, Appwrite, etc.)
๐น Deep dives into cybersecurity & ethical hacking ๐ก๏ธ
๐น Helpful tips for devs + students learning to code
๐น Community-driven projects and open collabs
๐ Follow along if you want clean code, practical builds, and real dev insights.
๐ This post stays pinned so you always know what Sheldon Codes is all about.
#CodeNewbie #100DaysOfCode #SheldonCodes
@Shillz_Official Do you need dedicated Instagram accounts to like, comment and reshare your reels?
I have 30 accounts to do that for you on all your posts
@ChainChaserVN Do you need dedicated Instagram accounts to like, comment and reshare your reels?
I have 30 accounts to do that for you on all your posts
What if I decide to become a BANDIT/KIDNAPPER tomorrow?
I mean pick up a gun, block a road, collect people like luggage and demand a price for their lives. It already happens every day in Zamfara, in Kaduna. Men...sorry even teenagers just like me woke up one morning and decided to start.
What stopped me from being one of them? Now multiply that question by 220 million Nigerians. Then by 8 billion humans.
The Nigerian Police Force has 370,000+ officers for 220 million+ people. That is one officer to every 600 of us. The entire Nigerian military, army, navy, airforce, does not exceed 200,000 active personnel.
There are over 8 billion people on earth. Every army, every police force, every prison guard combined does not reach 50 million.
You see the cage was never big enough.
What if every boy who grew up in Ajegunle and watched opportunity walk past him decided to take it by force instead? What if every girl who was failed by every system that was supposed to protect her decided the street owed her something back? What if every graduate selling pure water, every man who lost his job, every woman who buried a child she could not afford to treat, what if they all collected their debt the violent way?
There would be no city left standing.
Not Lagos. Not London. Not anywhere.
But they don't.
The man who carried your load at Terminus and handed you your change. The okada rider who knew you were alone on that road at night and dropped you safely. The agbero who sized you up and let you walk. The hungry boy who saw your phone on the table and looked away.
Nobody gave them a reason to be decent. Decency just costs them something every day and they pay it anyway.
The world is not held together primarily by laws, prisons, or politicians. It is held together by Billions of ordinary people who obey rules even when nobody is watching.
Don't you ever forget:
Women make rules for men they don't like. Women break rules for men they like.
What a woman says she cannot do for you or with you is often not a personal conviction, but a reaction to her regrets about the things she did for and with her previous men.
If she made those rules because of them, and those rules apply to you, then it means that, like her ex, you fall into the category of men she does not like.
She does not like you. That is why she is telling you, "Let's wait until marriage before sex." Because if she could turn back the hands of time, she would have done the same with the ex she now "hates."
She does not like you. That is why she will ghost you if you ever tell her to come and cook for you.
She is celibate with you not because she is the most decent girl, but because you are not the guy she likes enough to break the rules she made because of her exes.
Point is, the first sign that a woman does not like you is that she starts making rules.
A while ago, this guy whoโs famous for carrying cement blocks at crypto events asked me for career advice.
I told him to stop carrying cement blocks and start acting mature.
Today, he poured paint on himself, danced in the middle of the road, and won โฆ1 million from Odumodu.
As you can see, sometimes your mentors donโt know what theyโre talking about.