If you’ve been working in a particular field for long, but you don’t have a degree in that field.
You can actually convert your work experience into credits and use it to do something like direct entry into a University and complete a degree in 2 years.
Degree with @AltSchoolAfrica is coming.
The ungodly used to avoid church and preaching because such atmospheres convicted them of sin and reminded hearts that there was a consequence for rejecting God's loving grace.
But Unbelievers today love the church because it is cool and fashionable.
They love gospel music because it is enjoyable and trendy.
They love preaching because it is humorous and fun.
They love prayer because it serves as a good mask, giving others a favourable impression of them.
They also seem to like Jesus, although they don't believe He must be worshipped or obeyed.
Some consider these changes as progress in terms of reaching the lost.
I respectfully do not think so.
PCOS will now be called Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome (PMOS).
Dear Women,
What If PCOS Was Never Really About “Cysts”?
READ. REPOST. SHARE TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW.
Medicine, sometimes, behaves like an old relative who has known you for years and yet keeps calling you by the wrong name. And because the family has repeated it for so long, the name begins to sound true. Familiar. Permanent.
And so for decades, we have called this condition Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, PCOS. We have said it in clinics and lecture halls and whispered it into frightened consultations. We have printed it on blood request forms and ultrasound reports and fertility referrals. And yet, perhaps, the name has always been telling only half the story. Because many women diagnosed with PCOS do not actually have cysts.
And the condition, as many gynaecologists know too well, is not merely an ovarian affair. It does not politely sit inside the pelvis and mind its business. No. It spills. Quietly. Persistently. Into the entire body.
Into hormones. Into metabolism.
Into insulin resistance and weight regulation and ovulation and fertility. Into the skin that suddenly erupts with acne at twenty-eight. Into the chin that grows hair where softness once lived. Into exhaustion. Into mental health. Into long-term cardiovascular risk.
And so experts have begun asking a difficult but necessary question:
What if we have been naming the condition incorrectly all along?
Which is why there has been growing discussion around renaming PCOS to:
Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome, PMOS.
And at first glance, it sounds like one of those intimidating medical names that make patients blink twice before pronouncing it. But if you lean closer, if you listen carefully, the name is actually trying to confess something medicine should perhaps have admitted earlier. That this condition is bigger than the ovaries. That multiple hormonal systems are involved. That metabolism matters. That insulin resistance is not a side note but often part of the central plot.
That the ovaries are affected, yes, but they are not the entire story.
And perhaps most importantly, that this syndrome wears different faces in different women.
Because one woman may struggle with irregular periods and infertility. Another may battle acne so stubborn it chips away at confidence one mirror at a time.
Another gains weight despite trying, despite dieting, despite walking past bakery aisles with the discipline of a saint.
And another may look slim, the kind people casually call “healthy”, and yet carry profound insulin abnormalities quietly beneath the skin. That is the thing about this condition. It refuses simplicity.
And names matter more than we sometimes realize.
Because when a patient hears the words polycystic ovary, she may understandably think:
“So… I just have cysts?” And language, once planted wrongly, can narrow understanding. It can delay diagnosis. It can create stigma. It can make a woman feel her symptoms are disconnected accidents instead of chapters from the same book.
But a more accurate name can widen the lens. And widened lenses save people. Now, to be clear, PCOS remains the globally recognized medical term today. PMOS is still part of ongoing scientific discussion and evolving understanding. So this is not a “new disease.” Nobody woke up with a fresh diagnosis because medicine decided to rearrange some words.
It is the same condition.
The same women.
The same struggles.
Only that medicine, perhaps, is finally trying to describe them more honestly. And honesty matters in healthcare.
Because sometimes the difference between suffering silently and seeking help early begins with something as deceptively simple as a name.And perhaps that is the deeper lesson here: That women’s bodies have too often been simplified. Reduced. Misunderstood. And when science finally learns to name a condition more completely, what it is really doing is learning to see women more completely too.
Dear woman, cohabitation does not favour you in any way
You get the shorter end of the stick always
My parents have been married for over 30 years and they are still learning each other.
People are still constantly evolving and there is no such thing as getting to know someone before you marry them.
Even that person does not know who exactly they would be in 20 years. Marriage is about knowing the basics and who has the same fundamental values as you and trusting God and taking that leap
So all these things they say about knowing who you can live with and all that is rubbish.
It’s all a ploy to get benefits of marriage without actually committing to you
You’re not a car to be test run.
Any man that cannot respect you enough to do the needful and make an honest woman out of you does not deserve you.
You’re a person with intrinsic value that matured and grows and evolves over time and marriage is about learning each other, accepting and adjusting as you both grow.
A man puts you in a house that’s most likely his, so you don’t grow and have you own stuff, you’ll be there mostly likely cooking and cleaning and doing wifely duties, some will even get pregnant and have children,
and tomorrow he can wake up and decide that you’re not compatible.
You better wise up.
So here will be the NIGERIAN WEDDING REFORM BILL to be passed by the Senate House because Nigerian weddings clearly need regulation.
1. Disband Aso ebi, groomsmen and bridesmaids. Everybody should attend in peace.
2. Set a strict limit to the number of guests. Some weddings now look like a national convention.
3. No open-breast clothes. We are gathered for a wedding, not a fashion contest. We came to eat rice.
4. Anything after 6pm, everything should be wrapped up. Pack chairs and go home.
5. At most, your wedding should be done within two days. This three-day or one week festival must end.
6. Aso ebi must not exceed one fabric. If we see part 1 and part 2, the wedding will be shut down by the board.
7. No guest should have to buy more than one thing to attend your wedding. We are not investors.
8. The MC must not shout “make some noise” more than five times per hour. We're conserving the energy for election.
9. Keep your children at home, it's not children's day celebration.
10. If the bride changes outfit more than three times, the program will be paused for immediate questioning.
11. Couples must submit a clear schedule. If we reach 12pm without food, the guests are free to protest with placards.
12. No wedding introduction longer than the sermon. We didn’t come to know the family tree.
13. If the guest list crosses 150 people, it automatically becomes a concert. And you'll be taxed.
14. Spray money must be done responsibly. This is a wedding, not a showerhead.
15. If we hear “the couple is on the way” or "we'll be getting started soon" for more than an hour, the guests are free to leave with their tfare returned.
16. Once we see smoke machines, fireworks and dorime signs, we will assume it’s a concert.
Let me know if you agree so we can raise this concerning issue.
Been working on something for this for a while.
Built GovPulse to help people track government actions, elections and public accountability, because civic awareness should be easy to access.
Still in beta, would love your thoughts: https://t.co/eIChsP8xi3
@ThatPHCBoy Lmao. 🤣🤣🤣
If you want to form a Christian hair brand so bad, why not something that gives women confidence in their natural hair? Doing this with synthetic borrowed wig is straight up hilarious. Build confidence in your God-given hair, Lmao. 🤣🤣
Please could you repost when you see this? We need lots of eyeballs!
Onobiren from @lajuirenfilms is coming to cinemas March 6 to herald the women’s month! But you can preorder tickets from January 30th at https://t.co/4wSDNnyEES
@ThePChris Lol. There's no point responding jare. Like it is not the Deeper life we know. Deeper Life that called my mum a sinner coz she relaxed her hair, and refused to associate with my dad claiming he went into the world to pick a wife. 🤣 This person is speaking ignorantly
Oga, Christmas has everything to do with Christ.
The name is "Christ's Mass", a mass held to celebrate the birth of Christ.
It is Christian ontologically and Etymologically.
The old English "Cristes Maesse" from which we get ChristMas, is the eucharistical gathering in which the church celebrates Christ.