There are people who use tomato paste and even eggs to cook their egusi, that’s their business sha. My own issue is why did she put the ugu before the proteins??🙂🙂
You people are playing in our faces with these takes, and I can talk about this cause I am the type of natural that doesn't use edge control and styles her washday jumbo twists and doesn't own a wig.
Yes, that hair could have been made to look objectively good.
It's a different climate, and the cold means the air is dryer. Frequent bathing dries out the baby's skin before they've had the chance to build an effective skin barrier.
Almost every Black baby I know born in the UK seems to have eczema.
My first daughter’s eczema was quite severe. Someone said to me, “They don’t use to bathe Black babies,” suggesting it may have been linked to her first bath or frequent bathing.
Our GP prescribed an emollient and a bath emollient, and I managed her skin with those alongside ABF cream whenever she had flare-ups.
By the time I had my second and third babies, I followed the advice I’d been given and didn’t give them regular baths for the first month. Instead, I used the bath emollient on a soft cloth to gently clean them.
Their skin has been noticeably better than my first’s. I don’t know whether that’s the reason but I’d genuinely love to hear from Nigerian parents with babies born in the UK who didn’t struggle with eczema. Did you do anything differently?
They eventually agreed. But to make sure no funny business was going on behind, I called the staff aside and asked them what the arrangement was. They told me yes that they keep all their money now but they give it to their boyfriend to save for them as they have never earned that much before