I don't worship money, nor is it my greatest motivation in life.
My highest priority is to worship and glorify God. Everything else comes after that.
Matthew 5:14-16
One of the few things I’m extremely grateful for in this season of my life is seeing my sisters enjoy their time in uni.
I didn’t get to enjoy my time in uni, but I’m so so so grateful that I can give them that experience now.
One of the few things I’m extremely grateful for in this season of my life is seeing my sisters enjoy their time in uni.
I didn’t get to enjoy my time in uni, but I’m so so so grateful that I can give them that experience now.
Prayer in waiting,
Prayer when heaven holds your rain
In weeping and watching
The sorrow of harvest that delays
Hope is an anchor;
Wait for the laughter of the Lord
Your God is before you —
El-Nacham; He soothes you.
You don’t want to be popular without riches in Nigeria. Nigerians are cruel low lives. They’ll hurt you if they find out you’re not rich but still look good with prospects. The ones who do well may leverage on this in a bid to demystify you. Do what you must to protect yourself.
I learned from one of my international students that some UK universities have classification regulations allowing an Assessment Board to award a higher classification, known as borderline or discretionary classification.
This means that if a student's CGPA is close to a 2:1, such as 58-59% (equivalent to our 3.3-3.4 CGPA), the board can award a 2:1. I have a student who benefited from this. Similarly, if close to first class, such as 68-69% (our 4.3-4.4), they can be awarded first class based on overall performance.
I wish Nigeria had this to compensate students' efforts with borderline CGPAs.
We prayed for this day. 🤲 Today, it is finally here🕺
Every prayer, every sacrifice, every setback, every late night, every tear, and every victory led to this moment.
To God alone be all the glory for bringing a lifelong dream to fruition🎊
Reintroducing:
K. O. KIKIOWO, ESQ.
Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Nigeria🤗🤗
B.A. English (Ife) – Second Class Upper Division (2014–2018)
LL.B (Ibadan) – First Class Honours (2018–2024)
B.L. (Abuja) – First Class Honours (2025–2026)
Every good thing will come ❤️
#doublefirst #GodDid
I swear that was the first time I heard the word “twin”. I knew I had a sister but what in God's name was “twin”?
The strange woman pointed at a dark girl looking around, searching for someone. She said:
“That's your twin sister. Go and stay with her. She's looking for you.”
“Where's your second?”
I was confused. I did not have any “second” as far as I knew. I was the only Olajiga Kehinde Stephen Oluwasemilore in the world.
“Where's your twin sister?”
I swear that was the first time I heard the word “twin”.
The earliest memory I have of Taiwo is at a party and there are different children playing with jollof. I was separate from them, of course, away from the smell of pepper and oil. I was tired and just wanted to be back home.
Then a strange woman comes up to me and asks:
In the spirit of TGIF, if you’re a dancehall lover like me, here’s a playlist for you.
I recommend listening to it on shuffle.
Bon appétit!
https://t.co/927e6AbApk
I round up all my Uber rides to the next thousand, and so if you ever compare my transactions on my bank app vs Uber itself, you'd find a huge disparity, which is always presents a personal accounting nightmare.
God demands that I be generous to others; he too was generous to me with his life. There's this scripture I love so much in Romans. It says: He who did not spare his own son, how will he not willingly give you all things. It always moves me to tears.
The heart that understands the magnitude of the gift he has received is inspired to radical generosity. This is how we know that we are beginning to comprehend God's gift to us.