Williams Uchemba confirms Alex Ekubo was married but refuses to reveal more details, insisting the public should “go with what the family said.”
#AlexEkubo#WilliamsUchemba
12,000 received so far. Please I need us to help a brother. He needs 2 million plus to undergo surgery and post-surgery. He has been scheduled for surgery at OAU teaching hospital since last year, but they have been on strike. His surgery has been scheduled for 25th of this month. No any is small. His phone number-08142679489. Incase you want to call to confirm he’s not scam. This single act makes it hard for him to have a bank account cos of his facial features. Please help, his sister’s account number below
Access bank
Kolawole Idowu Comfort
0057815608 . Please RT
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.
There’s nothing I detest more than gatekeepers.
Here’s the link to help young seekers.
PhD or Postdoc, it’s all here even jobs.
Just filter by research field to your field of choice.
Also filter by your research level (R1 for PhDs, R2 for postdocs…).
https://t.co/R8qvbrZ09H
Eden yanked off my lash extensions while I was fast asleep.
He yanked them off using his teeth! HIS TEETH!
I’ve experienced enough motherhood for a lifetime. I’m ready to be childfree again. I packed him a little stuff and sent him away to go and start life.
Most people picture breast milk as something simple.
White. Plain. Just food.
But this is what it looks like inside.
This is a glimpse of the inside of a breast while it is making milk.
Thousands of tiny milk making sacs, each one filling, flowing, responding in real time to a baby’s needs.
Every drop is alive.
Breast milk is not just nutrition.
It is a living, adaptive system.
It changes by the hour.
By the day.
By the age of the baby.
It adjusts for illness.
For growth spurts.
For comfort.
For survival.
Your body reads your baby’s saliva and responds with antibodies.
It knows when your baby is premature.
It knows when your baby is sick.
It knows when your baby just needs closeness.
No lab can recreate this.
No formula can copy this intelligence.
No machine can replace this connection.
This is biology at its most powerful.
This is love in liquid form.
This is the miracle happening quietly inside millions of women every single day.
And if no one has told you lately
Your body is incredible!
✨🙌🏾💫
Disclaimer: This image is AI just meant to represent what it may look like. Image by Salud Articular