Dear Blessing,
I just came across your tweet, and it truly inspired me.
To graduate with a First Class in Mathematics from UNILORIN and then earn a fully funded Master's admission in Italy is an extraordinary achievement. You have demonstrated excellence and the promise that exists in so many young Nigerians.
No young person who has worked this hard should have such an opportunity limited by the cost of getting there. It would be my privilege to support your journey by covering what is left in the cost of your relocation.
@nancy_i_i from my office will reach out to you today.
Congratulations once again. Go, excel, and continue to make Nigeria proud.
The Ashanti Regional Minister, Dr. Frank Amoakohene along with the Kumasi Mayor, Hon. Richard Ofori Agyemang, has led a large-scale desilting exercise across major drains in the Ashanti Region as part of proactive efforts to improve drainage systems and reduce the risk of flooding.
[🎥: Gists Online]
Fisayo buying 11 pairs of shoes for her wedding is excessive for most people, but context matters. She owns Kai Collective, she’s in fashion, her whole brand is built on aesthetics, visibility, and curated presentation. For someone in that industry, multiple shoes aren’t just wedding prep, they’re content, branding, and inventory.
The problem is the comparison culture. People will see her choices and start measuring their own lives against it. But she’s not operating from a normal financial or professional reality. She’s spending from a fashion business budget, not a regular salary. It’s like comparing your grocery money to someone’s marketing budget the numbers will never align.
Two truths can sit together:
Excessive spending is normal in fashion because image is part of the job.
Comparison culture makes ordinary people feel inadequate over things that aren’t even in their lane.
People forget that visibility isn’t the same as affordability. What you see online is often business expense dressed as lifestyle.