@LeonardoOkojie@IgboHistoFacts Akpabio did well as a governor, that is without saying
Built a very good stadium, but now the stadium is a shadow of itself
These projects, just like Otti wants to do ( no guarantee he will end up building that) needs proper long term maintenance plan enshrined in the contract.
@EmperorRushOTF@BettingTipsMan The only match where he looked to be actively searching for assists was against Forest, and we scored enough,and won the game
So,what's the problem exactly??
WHY ARE MORE NIGERIAN WOMEN HAVING C- SECTION?
READ. SHARE. REPOST
Dear Ifeanyi,
As a gynaecologist, I think this conversation deserves softness. And context. And honesty too. Because somewhere along the line, Caesarean section became wrapped in whispers in many Nigerian homes, spoken of as though it were a moral weakness instead of a medical decision. As though a woman’s strength can be measured by how much pain she survives. And yet, the body is not a competition ground. Pregnancy is not theatre. Childbirth is not an audition for suffering.
The truth is that more Nigerian women are having Caesarean sections because medicine has changed, and women’s lives have changed too. We are seeing more women having babies later, after careers and after years of waiting and hoping. We are seeing more IVF pregnancies, more women with fibroids removed before conception, more hypertension, more diabetes, more complicated pregnancies that require caution instead of pride. And so sometimes, the safest doorway for a baby into this world is not through prolonged labour, but through a carefully planned incision.
And there is another truth we do not say enough: many of the tragedies our mothers’ generation accepted as “God’s will” are deaths modern obstetrics now knows how to prevent. A baby starved of oxygen during endless labour. A mother bleeding while relatives pray outside a labour ward. These are the stories behind many emergency Caesarean sections. Today, we monitor babies more closely. We scan more. We intervene earlier. And yes, global bodies like the and the support Caesarean delivery when vaginal birth carries significant risk. Because sometimes the scar on the abdomen prevents the scar that would have lived forever in a family.
But also, some women ask for Caesarean sections themselves. And I think we should be brave enough to discuss that without cruelty. Fear is a powerful thing. A woman who watched her sister lose a baby in labour may fear vaginal birth differently. A woman who carries trauma in her body may want control over how she delivers. Another may simply want certainty in a world where pregnancy often feels frighteningly uncertain. And perhaps this is what we forget too often: women are not machines for producing “natural births.” They are human beings, carrying history and anxiety and hope inside the same womb.
So no, a Caesarean section is not failure. It is not laziness. It is not “less womanhood.” A healthy mother and a healthy baby remain the victory. Always. Because the best birth is not the one social media romanticises with soft music and candlelight. The best birth is the one where both mother and child come home alive. And sometimes, that story begins with a scar.
@PolymarketSport@RL_256 This is on the referee,not the VAR
VAR cannot review this,because the play came after the referee's whistle had gone (albeit wrongly).
@riskbeingdrew@chisomholic Yet somehow the same Nigerian men have one of the highest rates of mixed marriages with other races and Countries.
Talk another thing boss.