Make it a habit to learn something new as often as possible — whether from mentors, books, podcasts, seminars, or other sources.
Remember: You don’t know what you don’t know.
@Chimamaka_fav You may be right. Grief often lingers from love, guilt, or fear of losing the person again. Yet sometimes pride quietly resists releasing control. Entrusting grief to God requires humility: admitting the weight is more than we can bear alone.
The greatest tragedy of life isn’t unanswered prayer — it’s unoffered prayer. Let prayer be the key that opens your day and the lock that closes your night.
@_JoeyParsons_ “Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us.”
Hebrews 12:1 KJV
Run with patience since it is a marathon.
What’s the essence of life?
King Solomon—the wisest man who ever lived—came to a sobering realisation: life is meaningless.
Wait, what? The very life the youth are fighting to live? Meaningless?
That’s right—according to the man who had everything the world could offer.
Flowers need both rain and sunshine to bloom — and so do you. Don’t fear the storms. In your hardest moments, remember: you are stronger than your struggles. Be kind to yourself. You’ll come through this — wiser, stronger, more resilient.
You don't have to destroy your future on purpose. Just neglect it.
Neglect your health-sickness will find you.
Neglect your mind-confusion will grow.
Neglect your soul-emptiness will settle in.
Neglect is powerful.
It doesn't shout.
It whispers, "Just leave it for now."
And before you know it, things start to fall apart—quietly, slowly, but surely.
Most people don't reject God outright.
We just get... busy. Distracted. Worn out.
And without even realising it—we start to drift.
It happens quietly. Slowly.
But the danger is real.
The Apostle Paul asks:
"How shall we escape if we neglect so great a salvation?" (Hebrews 2:3)
He didn't say reject.
He said neglect.
You don't have to curse God to drift—just stop paying attention.
Distraction is enough.
Just as you hunger for success, you must fight for deliverance. A gazelle doesn’t stroll out of a trap — it bolts. Escape bad habits, wrong decisions, toxic ties with the same urgency. Freedom belongs to those who refuse to rest until they’re truly free.
Success isn’t casual — it’s survival.
When you want your destiny as badly as your next breath, excuses die, distractions fall, and purpose takes over.
Jesus had it right, “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”
I once had a colleague who always said, "I'm just waiting for my breakthrough."
But he wasn't building skills. He wasn't making moves. He had no real plan — just hope.
Years went by. The breakthrough never came.
Don't spend your prime years waiting on a miracle or riding the momentum of someone else's hustle.
The world doesn't reward excuses — it respects results.
You wouldn’t serve stale water to an honoured guest—so why pour leftovers into the cup of the Living God? He deserves your finest, your best.
Put Him first. Then get to work.
Build high-quality habits.
Master new skills.
Nurture your relationships.
Increase your income.
The greatest purpose we have on this earth is to worship God with all our heart. Next to that, it’s treating others with the same care we want for ourselves.
When you build with the Creator of life, every other piece finds its place.
Most youth get it wrong: chasing people before chasing God, leaning on relationships before building themselves. That mindset will cost you everything.
The best investment you’ll ever make in your youth? Give God your best energy — not leftovers.
The greatest purpose we have on this earth is to worship God with all our heart. Next to that, it’s treating others with the same care we want for ourselves.
Imagine if every heart lived this truth—what a reflection of heaven it would be. But for now, it is what it is.