👩👦💔Una madre embarazada protagonizó una escena que ha conmovido en redes sociales, pues al sentir el movimiento telúrico, la mujer se acostó sobre su hijo mientras ambos permanecían en la cama, con el objetivo de protegerlo de cualquier posible peligro.
🥺El momento, captado en video, refleja la reacción instintiva de la madre para resguardar al menor durante los segundos de mayor intensidad del sismo.
Las imágenes se han viralizado y muestran cómo priorizó la seguridad de su hijo en medio de la emergencia.🤱
#Actualidad #Tendencia #Viral
This man said he was GLAD Charlie Kirk was murdered…
Then admitted: Charlie’s videos & debates changed his life completely.
His family reconciled.
He saw through the lies that he had been fed all this time .
Charlie is now his HERO.
This is the legacy of Charlie .
Watch every second 👇
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN,
𝐒𝐊𝐈𝐋𝐋𝐒 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐄𝐑𝐈𝐀𝐍𝐒 𝐒𝐇𝐎𝐔𝐋𝐃 𝐋𝐄𝐀𝐑𝐍 𝐈𝐍 𝐍𝐈𝐆𝐄𝐑𝐈𝐀 𝐁𝐄𝐅𝐎𝐑𝐄 𝐓𝐑𝐀𝐕𝐄𝐋𝐈𝐍𝐆 𝐀𝐁𝐑𝐎𝐀𝐃, 𝐬𝐨 𝐲𝐨𝐮 𝐝𝐨𝐧’𝐭 𝐬𝐮𝐟𝐟𝐞𝐫, 𝐛𝐞𝐠, 𝐨𝐫 𝐝𝐞𝐩𝐞𝐧𝐝 𝐨𝐧 𝐩𝐞𝐨𝐩𝐥𝐞.
This is the part nobody likes to talk about. All you want is japka as if money is growing on trees abroad.
Before visa.
Before IELTS.
Before embassy prayers.
There are BASIC, LOW-LEVEL, HIGH-DEMAND skills Nigerians should already know before leaving Nigeria.
Real-life survival and money skills.
𝟏. 𝐃𝐑𝐈𝐕𝐈𝐍𝐆 𝐈𝐒 𝐍𝐎𝐓 𝐎𝐏𝐓𝐈𝐎𝐍𝐀𝐋 𝐀𝐁𝐑𝐎𝐀𝐃
If you cannot drive, you will suffer.
Full stop.
Driving gives you:
• Freedom
• Multiple income options
• Time control
• Independence
People abroad make money from:
• Uber / Bolt
• Amazon Flex
• DoorDash / Instacart
• Medical transport
• Private deliveries
• Chauffeur work
Learning to drive abroad costs:
• Thousands
• Months of delay
• Failed tests
Learn it in Nigeria cheaply.
Master it.
Arrive ready.
2. HAIR BRAIDING & BEAUTY SKILLS PRINT MONEY
People joke about “braiding hair.”
Let me tell you something.
Hair pays rent abroad.
Skills that make cash fast:
• Hair braiding
• Wig making
• Loc installation
• Barbering
• Lash extensions
• Nails
These skills:
• Need little English
• Have African clients everywhere
• Pay cash
• Travel with you
Many salons abroad are owned by Nigerians.
Clients are booked months ahead.
3. COOKING IS A BUSINESS, NOT JUST A TALENT
If you can cook well, you are sitting on money.
Abroad, people pay heavily for:
• Nigerian food
• Party trays
• Meal prep
• Catering
• Frozen meals
Learn:
• Portion control
• Food hygiene
• Packaging
• Pricing
People abroad are tired.
They buy convenience.
4. SEWING & ALTERATIONS
Fashion doesn’t disappear abroad.
People need:
• Clothes shortened
• Zips changed
• Dresses adjusted
• Wedding outfits fixed
Learn sewing properly.
Not Instagram tailoring.
Real measurements.
One sewing machine abroad can feed a family.
5. CLEANING IS A BUSINESS IF DONE RIGHT
Not house-help mentality.
Commercial cleaning pays:
• Offices
• Schools
• Airbnb
• Construction sites
Learn:
• Deep cleaning
• Equipment use
• Chemicals
• Speed & quality
Many Nigerians abroad clean quietly and own houses later.
6. HANDYMAN & REPAIR SKILLS ARE GOLD
People abroad don’t fix things themselves.
Learn:
• Painting
• Basic plumbing
• Light electrical work
• Furniture assembly
• TV mounting
Clients pay for 30 minutes what some earn in a full day.
7. LAUNDRY & IRONING IS UNDERVALUED MONEY
People hate washing and ironing.
Abroad:
• Time is money
• Convenience is king
Learn professional laundry:
• Stain removal
• Folding
• Packaging
Simple skill. Constant demand.
8. CHILDCARE & ELDER CARE SKILLS
Not just “watching children.”
Learn:
• Basic childcare
• First aid
• Safety routines
• Elder support
Care jobs are always available.
Certification helps.
Experience matters.
9. BASIC COMPUTER SKILLS SEPARATE YOU FROM SUFFERING
You don’t need to be a tech genius.
But you must know:
• Email
• Online forms
• Scheduling
• Scanning documents
• Printing
Many Nigerians abroad lose jobs because they can’t fill simple forms.
If you are still in Nigeria:
Learn something with your hands.
Learn something practical.
Learn something people pay for.
Visa expires.
Skills don’t.
Best wishes
Another perfect day to clear up some common misconceptions.
Listen:
1. You don't NEED antibiotics when you have a cold.
2. You CANNOT shift anybody's womb. You cannot even reach it. Don't be stupid.
3. Diabetes is NOT caused by adding too much sugar to your garri.
4. For the last time, Typhoid is NOT malaria and malaria is not Tyforce. Stop diagnosing yourself of typhoid everytime you are ill or have a fever or stomach upset.
5. Hypertension ISN'T caused just by too much thinking.
6. You CANNOT "flush" ur system of illness by "pissing all the sickness away". They LIED to you..6. Your body doesn't need daily supplements. Just eat normally and healthy.
7. You do not need a special kind of tea to flush your system. You are not a public toilet.
8. Putting spoon in a person's mouth during a convulsion will NOT stop ANY convulsion.
9. Taking "Hampicloss" after sexual intercourse will NOT protect you from sexually transmitted infections or pregnancy.
10. Stop the daily douching and stop washing your vaginas with antiseptics. You are only exposing yourself to infections.
Oh... and this one is very important:
Slimming tea CANNOT remove all that fat. It will only make you purge till you are dehydrated (if you are very religious with it) and land you in the accident and emergency of the nearest teaching hospital to you. Go to a Gym, work out and DIET!
Pass it on if you care.
PUBLIC APPEAL.
EVERY MOMENT MATTERS, HELP FIND EUNICE AMEH.
I deeply express my concern over the unfortunate disappearance of Miss Eunice Ameh, who was reportedly last seen on the 6th of May, 2026, at about 5:40 PM, shortly after the close of work around Lake Chad Crescent, Maitama, Abuja, while heading towards Life Camp.
This development is both painful and deeply troubling, not only to her family and loved ones, but to all members of society who value human life, safety, and dignity. Incidents such as this remind us of the urgent need for vigilance, compassion, and collective responsibility within our communities.
I hereby appeal to residents of Abuja and the general public to assist with any useful information that may aid efforts to locate Miss Eunice Ameh. No information is insignificant. Anyone who may have seen her, interacted with her, or observed anything unusual around the stated location and time is kindly urged to promptly contact the nearest security agency or reach out to her family.
I also respectfully call on the relevant security authorities to intensify efforts towards ensuring her safe and immediate return. In situations like this, every passing moment matters.
May we all stand together in humanity, empathy, and solidarity until Eunice Ameh is found safe and reunited with her family.
Aare Olumuyiwa Akinboro, SAN, FCIArb (UK), Life Bencher
Past General Secretary, Nigerian Bar Association.
This discussion about slim people makes me happy, but the fact that people are not talking about one of major problem we face…
I will talk about it.
I have a slim body, so naturally I don’t take up space inside a bus, so people smile when they are about to sit beside me or when I am about to sit beside them.😂
But plus-size people do things that make me really uncomfortable……..not all obviously, but some of them. They sit and spread their hands and legs all over my body. Sometimes I’m forced to squeeze myself into one position just to make them comfortable, but they don’t have that conscience to also sit respectfully.
You already take up so much space, so the least you can do is be considerate of the person beside you.
There’s a serious Lassa fever outbreak in Nigeria right now where 146 people have been confirmed dead in 11 weeks and there have been 582 confirmed cases.
25 doctors have been infected, and 3 have lost their lives.
If you are reading this, please stay safe. This virus spreads through the urine or droppings of infected rats, or human-to-human contact.
It starts like an ordinary fever, but it can quickly move to bleeding, a swollen face, and shock.
ALWAYS:
1. Cover your food and pots tightly.
2. Block the holes where rats enter your house.
3. Wash your hands thoroughly with soap.
4. If you have a persistent fever, stop swallowing random drugs from the chemist. Go to the hospital immediately.
Our health workers are at risk, and proper Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) is life-saving. We cannot afford to lose more people to a preventable disease.
Stay safe and retweet this to save a life today!
Public Alert No. 015/2026.
Alert on confirmed counterfeit of Avastin 400mg/16ml and Tecentriq 1200mg/20ml in Nigeria
#NAFDACAlerts
https://t.co/33Iv0cS3In
I worked 20 years for a child sex trafficking rescue group. I want you to know this:
90% of Lost Children Are Found Within 30 Minutes.
That statistic should both comfort you and wake you up.
Most lost children are found quickly. But the ones who aren’t? They usually made one mistake.
And here’s the uncomfortable truth:
It’s often the exact thing most parents teach them.
We tell our kids:
“If you get lost, come find me.”
It sounds logical. It sounds empowering.
It’s WRONG!
The Mistake Most Lost Children Make:
When children realize they’re separated, they do three things almost automatically:
They panic.
They wander.
They try to find you.
Every step makes them harder to locate.
From a search standpoint, movement creates chaos.
Parents retrace their steps.
Security scans zones.
Staff lock down areas.
Search works best when movement stops.
When a child keeps walking, they move outside the original search radius. Helpers are looking where they were last seen — not where they’ve wandered.
Stillness increases probability.
Movement expands the problem.
The first lesson is not “go find me.”
It’s this:
Stop. Stay. Yell.
Why Stillness Wins:
Think like a search team.
If a child stays put:
Parents can retrace steps.
Security can scan systematically.
Helpers converge to one fixed location.
The search radius remains small.
If a child keeps moving:
The search area expands.
Adults pass each other.
Missed connections multiply.
Minutes stretch into hours.
Stillness keeps the math on your side.
Teach Them Who to Approach:
The second mistake we make as parents?
We say, “Find an adult.”
Not any adult. Not the nearest stranger. Children need a filter.
Teach them to look for, if at all possible:
A mother with children.
Caregivers who already have kids with them are statistically among the safest people to approach in public settings. They are visible, stationary, and more likely to engage quickly.
It’s a clear, concrete instruction.
Children don’t process vague categories like “safe adult.”
They process visuals.
“Find a mom with kids” is visual.
A Phone Only Helps If the Number Is Known:
We often assume phones solve everything.
They don’t — unless your child can use one. Even young children can memorize a 10-digit phone number with repetition.
But you must train it.
Practice it like a song.
Sing it in the car.
Chant it at bedtime.
Turn it into rhythm.
Repetition becomes recall.
In an emergency, recall matters more than theory.
The Code Word Rule:
One more layer of protection.
Choose a private family code word.
Something only your household knows.
If someone approaches and says:
“Your mom sent me.”
Your child asks:
“What’s the code word?”
No word.
No go.
This simple rule eliminates manipulation attempts instantly.
It gives your child agency without requiring them to evaluate character.
Real Safety Is Training — Not Luck!
We don’t get safer by hoping.
We get safer by practicing.
Teach:
• Phone number
• Code word
• Stop, stay, yell
• Find a mom with kids
Multiple skills.
Simple instructions.
Clear visuals.
Five minutes of training can replace hours of panic. This isn’t about fear. It’s about preparation.
Because when a child gets separated, the clock starts.
And what they do in the first minute determines what the next thirty look like.
That’s real protection.
BATHROOM MISTAKES YOU NEED TO STOP
Toothpaste – use pea size only
Hand soap – 1 pump is enough
Mouth wash – skip it
Shampoo – wash scalp only
Towels – don't reuse damp towels
Hairbrush – don't brush wet hair
Toilet brush – clean after every use
Perfume – avoid on skin
Toilet paper – use bidet
Loofah – replace every 2 to 3weeks
Toilet lid – flush with lid closed
we need to learn common basic life saving skills 🙏
(save, bookmark, share, memorize)
snake / scorpion bites
1. keep person calm and still
2. immobilize bitten limb
3. remove tight items (rings, watches)
4. go to hospital ASAP
DO NOT
1. cut the wound
2. suck venom
3. apply ice, heat, alcohol, herbs
4. use tourniquets
rule: panic spreads venom faster than blood.
CPR (unresponsive + not breathing)
1. call emergency services immediately
2. hands in center of chest
3. push hard and fast (100–120/min)
4. depth: ~5-6 cm (2 inches)
5. let chest fully rise each time
6. if untrained → hands only CPR
7. don’t stop until help arrives or person revives
remember: broken ribs heal but cardiac arrest doesn’t.
swimming / drowning emergencies
rescuing others:
1. reach (stick, towel)
2. throw (bottle, float)
3. don’t jump unless trained
if YOU are drowning:
1. roll onto your back
2. spread arms/legs
3. float → breathe → signal
after rescue:
1. check breathing
2. CPR if needed
3. hospital check even if fine
fire emergencies
in a burning building:
1. stay LOW (crawl)
2. cover nose/mouth
3. close doors behind you
4. never use elevators
clothes on fire:
STOP → DROP → ROLL
if trapped:
1. seal door gaps
2. signal from window
3. stay low and visible
broken bones / severe injury
1. immobilize as found
2. control bleeding
3. keep person warm
4. treat for shock
DO NOT
1. realign bones
2. force movement
3. emergency signs
4. bone visible
5. numbness
heavy bleeding
→ hospital immediately
universal rules:
- calm saves lives
- time >> perfection
- knowledge >> strength
don’t create a second victim 🙏
buena suerte
LIKE I PROMISED, THIS IS THE FULL STORY OF HOW I WAS ROBBED IN DAYLIGHT IN LAGOS IN FRONT OF PEOPLE AND NOBODY DID ANYTHING!
So it happened in Ikeja, under bridge to be precise.
I was heading to take a bus to Oshodi where I will board bus to Ile-Ife when I remembered I had a plug for ties. So I thought I’d quickly check his spot and buy one or two for school.
I crossed the major 3-4 lane road under the bridge then I realized the place I was going to was actually where I was coming from.
So I crossed back.
From the crossing and crossing back, they probably assumed I didn’t know the area. Funny thing is I was born and bred in Lagos, Oshodi precisely. I lived there for 19 years. I know street culture. I know how these things go.
But this one? I had never heard of it before.
One guy approached me and he didn't say “give me your phone” or “bring your money”... instead he said:
“Identify yourself. Why you dey wear black?”
I was wearing just a black shirt and a blue-green jeans with ash slides.
My heart first dropped... Why I dey wear black as how?
I’ve never had any encounter with cultism in my life, and from everything I know about it, it’s something you don’t joke with or get mistaken for. People die over that kind of accusation.
I immediately told him I wasn’t part of anything. That I was just going to take a bus.
That’s when he knew I didn't know what was going on, and he sensed that fear and banked on it.
He told me to move two steps to my right to another guy to “confirm” that I wasn’t one of the people they were retaliating against.
The second guy doubled down, he said there was a cult clash going on and that I was wearing their color.
That he and the other one were sent to “validate” and “neutralize” me.
That they could drop me dead on the road and nothing would happen.
At that point, I was genuinely scared for my life.
They genuinely looked the part and sounded the part, although I didn’t see any weapon but I wasn’t ready to find out so I just cooperated.
The second guy asked me to show him my recent pictures, then collected my phone as he was checking.
He checked and saw nothing then he went to WhatsApp and searched words like “Aye” and other names but still saw nothing.
After that he gave me back my phone, that’s when I relaxed a bit and thought, maybe these guys are actually cultists doing their thing.
Then he asked a strange question:
“Is there 36 or 89 in your password?”... that those numbers are usually used by that cult.
That’s when suspicion kicked in.
While this was happening, the second guy was pacing around, watching.
I didn’t have the courage to grab my phone and run.
Because if I was wrong and they were actually cultists that mistake could cost me my life.
So I complied.
I typed my password and that was it. He memorized it and typed it somewhere else.
Then he asked what was in my bag.
My laptop was there, but somehow I managed to convince him there was nothing important.
He asked if I had cash. I said no.
He took my AirPods.
Then he told me the second guy would “take me for proper validation.” At that point, fear took over and after a couple of steps when I had a tiny opening, I ran! I ran straight to a bus about to move and just went to the nearest bus stop.
Only then did I start borrowing phones, calling friends, and trying to block my accounts.
The journey to Ife that day was the longest journey of my life.
While on the road, I kept replaying everything. And it hit me that there was a 90% chance they were not cultists but only just area boys and fraudsters using fear, language, and confidence.
When I got to school, I confirmed it. It is a common robbery style that people have also experienced in places like Under Ikeja Bridge, Berger, Ojota, Ketu under bridge.
They use lines like “Why you dey wear this color?” or “Tie your shoelace” (while the other one distracts or threatens you quietly)
And funny how everything is done in public, calmly, so nobody suspects anything.
So please, learn from my mistake.
If any stranger approaches you with cult accusations, strange commands or forced familiarity don’t explain, don't cooperate just clutch your belongings and RUN IMMEDIATELY!!
Run towards people and shout “THIEF!”
Create a scene and attention around you!
Fear is what they sell, once you buy it, they take everything else.
I’m sharing this story so someone else doesn’t learn the hard way like I did cos if I had heard of this pattern before it wouldn't have worked for me.
Nigeria is a scary place to be, you need to stay informed and alert.
God bless you.
I’ve been in debt since 2024 (about 2M) and my creditor loves me because I have never failed to pay, but right now I do not have the capacity to carry on. (Today is January 14 and I have not received a single credit alert this year) And I have used all I have to settle my debt, I am 350k away from being debt free.
I have beans (a lot of it), I want to take orders for moi moi this Saturday, PLEASE if you’re in Ilorin try to place an order starting from today till Friday.
If you’re out of Ilorin, you can pls help me retweet. This will help me get started this year.
Pls don’t drag me, I am sincerely begging 🙏🏿
Thank you ❤️
I normally don't pay too much attention to trending matters here. I just post my stories, engage with those who fw it, and block the trolls.
But this particular topic is something else, and we need to be honest with ourselves because we are setting a dangerous precedent.
Lately on twitter and tiktok, we have normalized influencers and public figures using the Police to arrest, detain, and humiliate critics or trolls under the guise of actions have consequences. We cheer. We are crusing with it, These banga boys have gone too far! Teach them a lesson!
And yes, the trolls have gone too far. The defamation is vile. The cyberbullying is wicked. But we are making a grave mistake by applauding the bypass of Due Process.
Let's not forget that Jungle Justice started the exact same way. It didn't start with burning innocent people. It started because communities felt thieves had crossed boundaries. It started because the Police were ineffective, so people said, Let us handle it ourselves. We clapped. We said, Thieves deserve no mercy.
Fast forward to today: Jungle Justice has metastasized. Now, an innocent man can be set on fire in broad daylight just because he had a misunderstanding with a debtor who decided to scream Thief! to mobilize a mob. The tool we sharpened to kill the monster is now being used to slaughter the innocent.
Look at the Believe All Women movement. It started from a place of necessary correction. Rape culture was a plague. The justice system was failing victims. So society shifted to Guilty until proven innocent to protect women.
We clapped. We said, Protect us and our sisters. But because we removed the filter of Due Process in the court of public opinion, we have now seen instances where innocent men rot in prison or lose their livelihoods over false accusations weaponized by bitter partners. The pendulum swung too far, and it knocked down the pillars of fairness.
The danger of normalizing Self-Help justice is that Power has no morality. Today, you cheer because an Alabi arrested a troll who insulted his Wife.
Tomorrow, a Politician will arrest you because you tweeted that his road project is substandard, and he will claim it is Defamation and Cyberstalking. You cannot tell him it is wrong, because you established the precedent that Disrespect justifies Arrest.
We are setting a dangerous standard where the definition of Justice is determined by who has the bigger muscles, the bigger bank account, or the bigger connection to the DPO. When we normalize decadency because a certain group is pushing boundaries and going too far, we are not fixing the system; we are merely arming our future oppressors.
The law is tedious. It is slow. It is annoying. But it is the only barrier between Civilization and the Jungle
LIVING AS AN ULCER PATIENT
There are certain lifestyle habits you must observe, change and maintain even after you have treated Ulcer.
If you don't allow the wound to heal, it shouldn't be a surprise that it will come back again and again.
Avoid the following:
Onions, garlic, chocolates and grapes are bad for them.Don't give your cat any food that contains them.
Never cut your cat's whiskers. They might get into places that they won't be able to come out of. They use their whiskers to measure if they can fit into a place.
Paracetamol is VERY toxic to them and it will kill them within a day or two. Don't give it to them. If you think they're in pain, consult a veterinarian.
Cats only mew for humans. They don't mew at one another.
Your cat’s purr could have healing powers. Their purr falls within the 25 and 150 Hertz frequencies and sound within this range have been found to promote healing.
The highest number of kittens a cat gave birth to at once is 19.
If you love cats, you're an ailurophile. The word is derived from the Greek word for cat, ailouros, and the suffix -phile, meaning "lover." If you hate cats or are scared of them, you're ailurophobe