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Monday isn’t a burden, it’s a reset button for people who refused to quit last week.
Most people hate Monday because they’re still stuck in old energy, but life doesn’t move forward like that.
You don’t need a perfect mood, you need movement.
One starts today, the other waits to feel ready.
Your goals don’t care about feelings, they respond to consistency.
Stop restarting your life every Monday, start building from where you are.
This week is not pressure, it’s a test of discipline.
New week. Same goal. Different level.
Let’s work.
Good morning Mutual 🌄🌅
Nigeria’s Unseen Class of 2026: Three Graduates, One Thread of Unbreakable Resilience
~Mathias Iteji
In a year when Nigeria’s public debt hit ₦159.28 trillion, insecurity dominated headlines, and politics revolved around 2027, three young graduates wrote a far more powerful story. No scholarships. No hostels. Just pure determination.
Jubril Agbalaya Ayomide, 21, graduated with First Class honours in Economics from Ladoke Akintola University of Technology in Ogbomoso (CGPA 4.86/5.0), emerging as second overall best student. By day he carried cement bags on construction sites for as little as ₦300 per load. By night he studied through hunger. “I suffered hunger, carried cement bags to have first class,” he said.
Offiong Bassey Edet was named Overall Best Graduating Student at the University of Calabar’s 38th convocation (Business Education, CGPA 4.77). For 13 months he slept on classroom floors, using textbooks as pillows. Four hundred cold nights did not stop him from topping his class and winning a ₦500,000 prize.
Ahmad Isa, once a barefoot Almajiri boy begging on Kano streets, graduated with Second Class Upper in Criminology and Security Studies from Federal University Dutse. A stranger, Alan Maiyaki — a Christian civil servant from Edo State — sponsored his entire education from primary school through university. One Nigerian became another’s lifeline across tribal and religious lines.
These three did not wait for perfect conditions. Jubril hauled cement sacks. Offiong turned lecture halls into his home. Ahmad embraced unexpected kindness. In 2026, amid tough national headlines, their stories offer the emotional refuge many Nigerians seek.
They prove that talent exists in construction sites, on tiled floors, and in Quranic schools. Nigeria does not lack brains — it lacks scaled opportunity and more citizens ready to invest in strangers.
The country’s future will not be built only in Abuja. It is rising through the resilience of young people who refuse to let hardship write their final chapter.
Let these journeys inspire more scholarships, better hostels, mentorships, and goodwill across regions.
Which story touched you most?
#NigerianResilience #ClassOf2026 #HopeForNigeria