Hey #cPenNetwork community! 🚀 Despite a minor glitch, the transition to $INK mining in the cPen app is now complete! This marks a major milestone in our journey—thank you for being part of it!
🔹 Update your app to version 1.2.20 or later for the best experience.
🔹 If you mined $PEN before the switch, it’s visible in your Wallet. The verified amount will show 0 until verification is completed later this month.
🔹 Referral mining rewards update: Earn 10% of your referral’s basic mining—rewards will reflect after their session ends.
🔹 Referral bonus remains: You & your referral each earn 3 $INK per new sign-up.
🔹 Your team includes all your referrals, excluding the person who referred you.
🔹 KYC & BSC wallet deadline: Complete your KYC and enter your BSC wallet address by March 11!
We appreciate your support! More updates coming soon.
#cPenNetwork is committed to becoming a revolutionary Web3 platform, powered by blockchain and AI technology.
Join me and start mining for free by downloading the app through this link: https://t.co/aq2Fjk25hw
Invitation code: LE3X
Have stopped telling people they can get job in good organizations, including public sector organizations, without any connection.
Have come to realize that it doesn’t make any difference. And it’s an agelong thing.
In 1991, a young graduate secondary school teacher in Ilorin called Babs came to hustle for jobs in Lagos. He walked around Marina etc submitting his paper CVs. On the day he was returning to his family in Ilorin, he bought a newspaper at the motor park and saw Shell advert.
When he got to Ilorin, he told his friend, Ade, a fellow job seeker, about it. Ade told him the job was not meant for people like him, job already reserved for children of elite. He did not listen to Ade. He wrote his application letter, photocopied his documents, went to the post office, and posted them to Shell in PH.
Babs was invited for test, later interview, in PH. The friend kept discouraging him. “You will travel to Port Harcourt? Why are you wasting your time? They know the people they want to pick already. This is just formality”.
All through the process, Ade was discouraging him. Until he received Shell offer letter. He couldn’t believe it.
Babs would go ahead to rise from a young warehouse stock officer in Shell PH to become the #3 person in Shell Nigeria at some point, later seconded to NLNG as CEO, and after NLNG assignment, moved to Shell global HQ in Hague, Netherlands, as Global VP for Upstream covering about 50 countries.
There are many Ades here. Choose who listen to.
If an Ade here tells you, “that was 1991, not now”, move to page 2 on this thread.
1/5
When luck smiles at us, we murmur to ourselves, 'everything happens for a reason’. We commit the same error as the turkey who, after being fed for 1,000 days, believes in the benevolence of the farmer—right until Thanksgiving.
I remember finding my grandfather's journal after he passed. In it, he wrote about meeting my grandmother: 'Of all the cafes in Budapest, I walked into hers.' He called it destiny. But he never mentioned the three failed engagements before her, the other cafes, the other chances. I understand it though, after all, we're pattern-seeking creatures in a world that offers both order and chaos.