On Sunday, Messi fit score make I scream for top of my voice
Make lamine score too make I scream pass wetin I scream before😭😂
God I no deserve this meal chai😭❤️
Activism in Nigeria means using one hand to fight the government, and the other hand to protect yourself from being attacked by the people you are fighting on behalf of.
No fraud, drugs or sex scandal. Not a political jobber & not afraid to speak truth to power.
It’s not by speaking supri supri or preaching with a serious face, Odumeje is more of a ‘real pastor’ than many of your favorites.
Humans will forget 10,000 times you were kind, and remember 10 times you chose yourself instead.
Choose yourself more often. The world will move on without you when you finally can no longer give from your empty cup.
Today is D-day.
Our boys are now at the Università Campus Bio-Medico di Roma for the Grand Finale of the International STEM Olympiad in Rome, Italy.
I’m optimistic about their victory.
A piece of advice to anyone with ears:
If you are a nurse, a doctor, a health worker or a care worker in any professional capacity, please I beg you do not post videos like this where you are partying hard few hours before you go to attend to unwell, vulnerable, dying, helpless or sick patients.
I expect that the usual dumb clowns on social media will applaud something like this because they never think beyond the superficial on any matter, but if a patient under your medical/nursing care dies or develops a serious complication due to suspected negligence, and the family decides to sue/take it up, they can use reckless videos like this to argue a case of deliberate medical negligence on your part. Smart lawyers will argue, quite rightly so, that you intentionally chose to put patient’s lives at risk by your actions.
In addition to that,
Your professional body can suspend and/or withdraw your practising license for gross unprofessional conduct if an official complaint is made against you purely on grounds of wilfully putting the lives of vulnerable patients at risk.
Imagine your mother is sick and dying in hospital. Then you come on social media to find the nurse attending to her in the morning shift, posted herself clubbing hard till 3am just few hours before the shift. Will you not worry about your mother’s safety? If your mother died on that nurse’s shift, will a part of you not wonder if the nurse was negligent?
Nigeria is lawless so there’s a lot of daily madness that is easily excused and overlooked. But please I’m begging you, if you are a professional working in healthcare, whatever your role may be, and if you work in a sane sensible country, or even if you work in Nigeria, I’m begging you:
Please don’t make yourself a scapegoat and don’t lose your hard earned license because of a few likes online from empty-headed olodos who celebrate reckless crap like this, that can get you in serious but avoidable professional trouble that you will regret for a long time.
You are a professional.
You are a health professional.
Human lives are in your very hands.
You must never forget that. You can’t afford to be posting reckless videos that may suggest that you are intentionally putting vulnerable people’s lives at risk with your deliberately stupid decisions.
In psychology, there is a concept called the hedonic treadmill—it is the tendency of humans to quickly return to a relatively stable level of happiness despite major positive or negative events. If your happiness is tied to a specific number in your bank account, the moment you hit that number, your brain will automatically move the goalpost. You will want more. If your joy is conditional on wealth, you trap yourself in a permanent state of "not there yet."
My Takeaway? Secure your money to survive, but SECURE your APPRECIATION for the LITTLE THINGS to ACTUALLY LIVE. Don't let the pursuit of a better living stop you from enjoying the life you already have.
Money is very important. You need it to sort your bills. It is a means to an end. Still, if you put your happiness on how much money you have, you may never find happiness.
You must learn to find happiness in simple pleasures - your chosen relationship, nature, yourself and personal space, music, art, a beautiful smile. The list is endless.
Don't be too hard on yourself. You are not the only one that need money.
Peller is not the problem IMO.
The real issue is a broken system designed to neglect and ignore intellect. A system that has consistently undermined the efforts of promising talents across academia, forcing our brightest minds to “japa” or settle for less.
BBN pays 100M+ to winners, a reality show, fine. But most schools can’t even award their best graduating students ₦100k. The state can’t guarantee them jobs. In my time, our best graduating student, an exceptionally brilliant guy destined for greatness now works as a successful freelancer, digital analyst and YouTuber. He’s doing really well, but that mind was built for more. Top-tier virologist material, serving the nation. We lost that potential and so many others.
Youth unemployment is at a high, quite alarming for nation with immense potential and one of the youngest population average on the planet.
We churn out graduates yearly but fail to harness them. It’s time to fix the system and not bash the symptoms.
I don’t know why people forget I am still a surgeon, since I got the NDC House of Representative ticket for Surulere 1. People call me Honorable and have removed the surgeon from my name, anyway Saturday I had endoscopic sinus surgery by 7am and by evening I became a politician
I can never understand someone from a poor home over billing their parents that are struggling
Most times when I was in school and billing come up knowing that getting the whole money was a big deal I will reduce the money and find way to complete it.
Some that I can dodge I did
In a world that is becoming more global, never lose sight of your roots.
Carry your traditions with pride. Preserve your language. Tell your stories. Celebrate your culture.
We know about the Vikings through books and movies. Africans should invest in storytelling to preserve and share our traditions and history.
READ ME!...
SHARE... Very important discuss...
As a gynae specialist, I can confirm that giving a woman privacy to undress is mostly a courtesy for her comfort, not because we're shy. It's about respect for the patient. Privacy. Dignity.
A chaperone is always present.
By the time you walk into our clinic, we've spent years looking at anatomy, deliveries, surgeries, prolapses, cysts, fibroids, and things that would make most people cancel lunch.
The few minutes we give you to undress aren't for us, they're for you. Because no matter how routine an examination is to a gynaecologist, it may be awkward, vulnerable, or embarrassing for the patient. Dignity is important. The only areas allowed to be exposed is where an examination will be done, the rest covered.
No serious gynaecologist remembers or stores the picture of a women's body in his head... after examination.
Medicine treats bodies. Professionalism treats people. ❤️