• Real Madrid is cruising to a 3 -1 victory with a man down
    Real Madrid is cruising to a 3 -1 victory with a man down
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  • THE WISE VILLAGE GIRL

    In a small village nestled in the rolling hills of the countryside, there lived a young girl named Akua. She was known throughout the village for her wisdom beyond her years. One day, a severe drought hit the land, and the villagers were struggling to find water. Akua suggested they dig deeper wells, using an ancient technique she had learned from her grandmother. The villagers were skeptical at first, but Akua's confidence and knowledge convinced them to give it a try.

    To their surprise, the wells yielded abundant water, saving the village from certain disaster. The villagers were amazed and grateful for Akua's wisdom, and from that day on, she was known as "The Wise Village Girl." Her insight and resourcefulness had brought life-giving water to their parched lands, and her reputation as a wise and knowledgeable young woman was solidified.


    JB WORLD
    THE WISE VILLAGE GIRL In a small village nestled in the rolling hills of the countryside, there lived a young girl named Akua. She was known throughout the village for her wisdom beyond her years. One day, a severe drought hit the land, and the villagers were struggling to find water. Akua suggested they dig deeper wells, using an ancient technique she had learned from her grandmother. The villagers were skeptical at first, but Akua's confidence and knowledge convinced them to give it a try. To their surprise, the wells yielded abundant water, saving the village from certain disaster. The villagers were amazed and grateful for Akua's wisdom, and from that day on, she was known as "The Wise Village Girl." Her insight and resourcefulness had brought life-giving water to their parched lands, and her reputation as a wise and knowledgeable young woman was solidified. JB WORLD
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  • Topic:
    *DEFEATING HOUSEHOLD WICKEDNESS*

    *Job 14:1* makes it very clear to us that this world is a world full of trouble. The second name for this world is trouble.
    Some start their battles from the womb. Some start as young men and women. Some start at middle age. Some start at old age. The majority of these battles are being fuelled by enemies within.
    Job 14:1 (KJV) says, ‘Man that is born of a woman is of few days, and full of trouble.”

    The book of John gives the world another name. It says, “The whole world lieth in wickedness.”

    That is, there is a big bed on which the whole world is lying, which is *wickedness.*
    Wickedness is when you have done nobody harm, offended nobody, yet they are doing you harm. So this Job 14:1 tells us that this is a world of battles.

    In the school of warfare, there are sixty categories of battles that men fight. You may be fighting your battles now; you may have started already, but it is good for you that is here to know that the devils that fought your parents will fight you. You may say, “But I am okay now.” No, they are just waiting for you to grow up so that you can be mature enough for them to fight you. So, everybody has a battle to fight.

    *There is:*

    • a battle called the rage of the wicked. They are raging against you; you do not need to commit any offence.

    • the battle of the crying blood. You shed blood, probably through abortions, and the blood is now crying against you.

    • the pursuing avenger, where you have done something wrong and the enemy is now pursuing you to avenge it.

    • the wicked household.
    • the battle called ‘the affliction of the righteous’, from which the Lord said that He will deliver you out of them all. Not the affliction of the sinner.

    • the battle for destiny. Sometimes, when the destiny of somebody is announced in heaven, the enemy hears it and fights the person because of the destiny.
    • the battle for fulfilment.
    • the battle for relevance.
    • The battle for wholeness (your health). A lot of people are battling this daily.
    • The battle for your staff of bread. The enemy may be attacking your career.
    • the battle for promotion. The enemy does not want you to be elevated. He wants to keep you where you are. Let your amen be sevenfold volcanic.

    There is the battle:
    • to enlarge your coast. For you to expand or enlarge what you are doing is a battle. You started your business from a kiosk or small shop. To now expand it to a bigger shop is a battle.
    • against marriage. There is a great battle going on against marriages now, and I want you to understand this very well.
    A man of God was flying to South Africa. There was a man beside him in the plane who was mumbling words, and it was as if he was praying. For a long time, he kept mumbling those words like a prayer. So the man of God was happy that a prayer warrior was beside him. When he stopped, the man of God said, “Oh, that is nice! I can see that you were praying here.” The man replied, “Yes”. Then the man of God asked, “What were you praying about?” He then replied that he was actually not praying; he was cursing marriages, especially Christian marriages. There is an attack on marriages.
    • that is programmed. It waits for you to get to a level before pulling you down.
    • of the yoke with unbelievers. When you want to bless whom God has cursed, you will have problems.
    • of conspiracy in the heavenlies.
    • of envious enemies. You have not done anything wrong; it is just out of pure envy.
    • of vandalised destiny.
    • called “Jonah syndrome”, which applies to many here. That is, God is giving you an assignment, but you are dodging it. That kind of battle – no deliverance or man of God can help you; you need to repent and do what God wants you to do.
    • against the wasters. They wait for people to gather things and then waste them.
    • against the emptiers. They wait for a person’s cup to be full and then empty it.
    • against anti-prosperity powers. That is, the person can be alive and can be strong but cannot prosper.
    • known as ‘the marine warfare’. As a matter of fact, many people’s benefits are inside the bank in the waters. And this is a very, very serious situation.

    There is the:
    • battle against children.
    • mystery of strongholds.
    • battle of closed doors.
    • near-success syndrome battle.
    • battle called “the embargo”.
    • battle of environmental attacks.
    • battle with the spirit of death and hell. If you come from a family where people are dying very young, this is the problem.
    • battle of Star Hunters.
    • battle of collective captivity.
    • battle of dream criminals.
    • the mystery of seduction.
    • the battle of stagnancy.
    • the battle of loneliness.
    • the battle of territorial bondage.
    • the battle of spiritual load upon the head.
    • the battle of placental bondage.
    • the battle from the palace, for those from royal families.
    • character battle.
    • ‘fighting the devil that fought your parents’ battle.
    • the battle of covenants and curses. Curses have strong power, and this is a very serious matter.
    • battle against the strongman.
    • battle against attacks from the womb.
    • battle of sexual pollution.
    • altar attack, if you worship idols in your family.
    • battle against polygamous witchcraft.
    But then, it is only a counter battle that can deliver from all these.

    *PRAYER POINTS:*

    1. I plug my life into the resurrection power of the blood of Jesus.

    2. Evil bank requesting for my blood; catch fire in the name of Jesus.
    3. Every internal chain in my body, breaks, in the name of Jesus.
    4. Every instrument of poison in my body, get out, in the name of Jesus.
    5. (Pray these three hot times) O God, you are my God: arise, show it, in the name of Jesus.
    Topic: *DEFEATING HOUSEHOLD WICKEDNESS* *Job 14:1* makes it very clear to us that this world is a world full of trouble. The second name for this world is trouble. Some start their battles from the womb. Some start as young men and women. Some start at middle age. Some start at old age. The majority of these battles are being fuelled by enemies within. Job 14:1 (KJV) says, ‘Man that is born of a woman is of few days, and full of trouble.” The book of John gives the world another name. It says, “The whole world lieth in wickedness.” That is, there is a big bed on which the whole world is lying, which is *wickedness.* Wickedness is when you have done nobody harm, offended nobody, yet they are doing you harm. So this Job 14:1 tells us that this is a world of battles. In the school of warfare, there are sixty categories of battles that men fight. You may be fighting your battles now; you may have started already, but it is good for you that is here to know that the devils that fought your parents will fight you. You may say, “But I am okay now.” No, they are just waiting for you to grow up so that you can be mature enough for them to fight you. So, everybody has a battle to fight. *There is:* • a battle called the rage of the wicked. They are raging against you; you do not need to commit any offence. • the battle of the crying blood. You shed blood, probably through abortions, and the blood is now crying against you. • the pursuing avenger, where you have done something wrong and the enemy is now pursuing you to avenge it. • the wicked household. • the battle called ‘the affliction of the righteous’, from which the Lord said that He will deliver you out of them all. Not the affliction of the sinner. • the battle for destiny. Sometimes, when the destiny of somebody is announced in heaven, the enemy hears it and fights the person because of the destiny. • the battle for fulfilment. • the battle for relevance. • The battle for wholeness (your health). A lot of people are battling this daily. • The battle for your staff of bread. The enemy may be attacking your career. • the battle for promotion. The enemy does not want you to be elevated. He wants to keep you where you are. Let your amen be sevenfold volcanic. There is the battle: • to enlarge your coast. For you to expand or enlarge what you are doing is a battle. You started your business from a kiosk or small shop. To now expand it to a bigger shop is a battle. • against marriage. There is a great battle going on against marriages now, and I want you to understand this very well. A man of God was flying to South Africa. There was a man beside him in the plane who was mumbling words, and it was as if he was praying. For a long time, he kept mumbling those words like a prayer. So the man of God was happy that a prayer warrior was beside him. When he stopped, the man of God said, “Oh, that is nice! I can see that you were praying here.” The man replied, “Yes”. Then the man of God asked, “What were you praying about?” He then replied that he was actually not praying; he was cursing marriages, especially Christian marriages. There is an attack on marriages. • that is programmed. It waits for you to get to a level before pulling you down. • of the yoke with unbelievers. When you want to bless whom God has cursed, you will have problems. • of conspiracy in the heavenlies. • of envious enemies. You have not done anything wrong; it is just out of pure envy. • of vandalised destiny. • called “Jonah syndrome”, which applies to many here. That is, God is giving you an assignment, but you are dodging it. That kind of battle – no deliverance or man of God can help you; you need to repent and do what God wants you to do. • against the wasters. They wait for people to gather things and then waste them. • against the emptiers. They wait for a person’s cup to be full and then empty it. • against anti-prosperity powers. That is, the person can be alive and can be strong but cannot prosper. • known as ‘the marine warfare’. As a matter of fact, many people’s benefits are inside the bank in the waters. And this is a very, very serious situation. There is the: • battle against children. • mystery of strongholds. • battle of closed doors. • near-success syndrome battle. • battle called “the embargo”. • battle of environmental attacks. • battle with the spirit of death and hell. If you come from a family where people are dying very young, this is the problem. • battle of Star Hunters. • battle of collective captivity. • battle of dream criminals. • the mystery of seduction. • the battle of stagnancy. • the battle of loneliness. • the battle of territorial bondage. • the battle of spiritual load upon the head. • the battle of placental bondage. • the battle from the palace, for those from royal families. • character battle. • ‘fighting the devil that fought your parents’ battle. • the battle of covenants and curses. Curses have strong power, and this is a very serious matter. • battle against the strongman. • battle against attacks from the womb. • battle of sexual pollution. • altar attack, if you worship idols in your family. • battle against polygamous witchcraft. But then, it is only a counter battle that can deliver from all these. *PRAYER POINTS:* 1. I plug my life into the resurrection power of the blood of Jesus. 2. Evil bank requesting for my blood; catch fire in the name of Jesus. 3. Every internal chain in my body, breaks, in the name of Jesus. 4. Every instrument of poison in my body, get out, in the name of Jesus. 5. (Pray these three hot times) O God, you are my God: arise, show it, in the name of Jesus.
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 48 Views
  • Buy you kitchen utensils and appliances from us at an affordable rate check out our profile to make enquiry contact us on 08038521814 on WhatsApp or just call
    Thanks for patronising us you won't regret it
    Buy you kitchen utensils and appliances from us at an affordable rate check out our profile to make enquiry contact us on 08038521814 on WhatsApp or just call Thanks for patronising us you won't regret it 🙏
    Like
    1
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  • "NO VICTOR, NO VANQUISHED”? NO, SIR. JUST THE BLOOD OF THE INNOCENT
    A Truthful Dissection of Gen. Gowon’s Crocodile Tears

    ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu

    "I always remember the Civil War. It was the most difficult period of my life. It was not my choice…” So says General Yakubu Gowon: decades after the fact, as if the burden of memory alone could exonerate a man from the burden of responsibility.

    But memory, stripped of remorse, becomes theatre. And this latest performance by the old General, wrapped in prayerful tones and wistful platitudes, is exactly that a theatre of moral evasion. What was presented as reflection was in fact deflection. A man who presided over the darkest chapter in Nigeria’s history now seeks to launder his conscience with the sponge of spirituality, mouthing prayers as if that were enough to bury three million truths beneath the soil of forgetfulness.

    No, sir. You did not pray. You played. You played politics with people’s lives. You played Russian roulette with the destiny of a region. You played central command while entire communities burned. You stood at the gates of peace and walked away. The blood did not flow because you had no choice, it flowed because you made a choice. And the choice was war.

    You stood beside Odumegwu Ojukwu at Aburi in Ghana. There, both of you spoke, agreed, shook hands and made a pact. You returned to Lagos to a hero’s welcome, but before the ink of trust could dry, you tore it apart. You listened to federal hawks, buried Aburi under the rubble of Decree No. 8, and turned your face from peace. You betrayed a solemn covenant for the sake of power. That betrayal, not the first shot fired, is where the war truly began.

    The records are stubborn. They do not bend to nostalgia. They remind us that before a single Biafran soldier took up arms, thousands of Igbos had been hacked down in the North. Pregnant women butchered. Children beheaded. Men dismembered in full daylight. Railway stations were turned into morgues. Churches, into chambers of death. Kaduna. Kano. Jos. The North descended into madness, and the East was served grief on a plate of silence.

    You, sir, presided over that silence. You were Commander-in-Chief, not a curious passerby. You issued words but withheld justice. You gave speeches, but not shelter. You watched a people bleed and called it unfortunate. And now, years later, you whisper: "It was never out of hatred." But hatred needs no introduction when its fruit is genocide.

    And then came your famous phrase, carved into Nigeria’s post-war psyche: “No victor, no vanquished.” It sounded noble. It rang loud. But it rang false. Because the war ended, yes, but justice never began. Biafrans were not vanquished by force alone, they were buried beneath the rubble of reconstruction. Their economy was stripped. Their currency devalued. Their children starved. Their land mined and their dignity mocked. What you called reintegration, we lived as retribution. What you labeled reconciliation, we endured as marginalisation. The victor danced in national attire. The vanquished crawled through national amnesia.

    Sir, you had the chance to become a Mandela long before South Africa birthed one. You had the moment. The world watched. The African continent stood still. But you chose empire over empathy. You chose command over compassion. You chose to keep Nigeria one by breaking a people in half. And now, the same mouth that sanctioned the guns says, "I prayed to God." Perhaps you did. But God is not mocked by crocodile tears. Not when the skulls of infants still haunt the red soil of Nsukka, Aba, Umuahia, and Onitsha.

    Prayer is not repentance. Repentance begins with truth. And the truth is that you, along with others, enabled a war that was avoidable. You squandered the peace we almost had at Aburi. You enabled pogroms with your silence. You denied justice its wings and handed the world a bullet instead. And when it was all done, you wrapped the pain in poetry and hoped the music would make us forget.

    But we remember. Not because we hate. But because we bleed.

    This is not a call to bitterness. It is a call to honesty. To name what happened. To look the children of Biafra in the eye and say: Yes, you were wronged. Yes, we failed you. Yes, the war was avoidable. And no, it should never have happened.

    Until then, sir, do not cloak yourself in prayer while justice lies unclothed. Do not speak of love when you could not uphold truth. Do not say “it was not my choice” when history has proven otherwise. And above all, do not try to rewrite what we lived.

    You may now carry the Bible in one hand. But the other hand still drips with memories. Your legacy may wear the robe of elder statesmanship. But it remains stained by silence, by betrayal, and by the bones of those who trusted your word at Aburi.

    So here, General Gowon, is what history truly says:
    You may cry now, but the tears do not wash the blood away.
    You may kneel today, but that does not undo the horror of yesterday.
    You may pray, but the ghosts still answer with questions.
    And until Nigeria confronts its past with courage, it will never know peace that lasts.

    We forgive. But we do not forget. We move on. But we do not move blind.

    Because truth, bitter as it may be - is still better than convenient lies.

    ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu
    Social Cum Political Analysis|Tuesday, June 10, 2025
    "NO VICTOR, NO VANQUISHED”? NO, SIR. JUST THE BLOOD OF THE INNOCENT A Truthful Dissection of Gen. Gowon’s Crocodile Tears ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu "I always remember the Civil War. It was the most difficult period of my life. It was not my choice…” So says General Yakubu Gowon: decades after the fact, as if the burden of memory alone could exonerate a man from the burden of responsibility. But memory, stripped of remorse, becomes theatre. And this latest performance by the old General, wrapped in prayerful tones and wistful platitudes, is exactly that a theatre of moral evasion. What was presented as reflection was in fact deflection. A man who presided over the darkest chapter in Nigeria’s history now seeks to launder his conscience with the sponge of spirituality, mouthing prayers as if that were enough to bury three million truths beneath the soil of forgetfulness. No, sir. You did not pray. You played. You played politics with people’s lives. You played Russian roulette with the destiny of a region. You played central command while entire communities burned. You stood at the gates of peace and walked away. The blood did not flow because you had no choice, it flowed because you made a choice. And the choice was war. You stood beside Odumegwu Ojukwu at Aburi in Ghana. There, both of you spoke, agreed, shook hands and made a pact. You returned to Lagos to a hero’s welcome, but before the ink of trust could dry, you tore it apart. You listened to federal hawks, buried Aburi under the rubble of Decree No. 8, and turned your face from peace. You betrayed a solemn covenant for the sake of power. That betrayal, not the first shot fired, is where the war truly began. The records are stubborn. They do not bend to nostalgia. They remind us that before a single Biafran soldier took up arms, thousands of Igbos had been hacked down in the North. Pregnant women butchered. Children beheaded. Men dismembered in full daylight. Railway stations were turned into morgues. Churches, into chambers of death. Kaduna. Kano. Jos. The North descended into madness, and the East was served grief on a plate of silence. You, sir, presided over that silence. You were Commander-in-Chief, not a curious passerby. You issued words but withheld justice. You gave speeches, but not shelter. You watched a people bleed and called it unfortunate. And now, years later, you whisper: "It was never out of hatred." But hatred needs no introduction when its fruit is genocide. And then came your famous phrase, carved into Nigeria’s post-war psyche: “No victor, no vanquished.” It sounded noble. It rang loud. But it rang false. Because the war ended, yes, but justice never began. Biafrans were not vanquished by force alone, they were buried beneath the rubble of reconstruction. Their economy was stripped. Their currency devalued. Their children starved. Their land mined and their dignity mocked. What you called reintegration, we lived as retribution. What you labeled reconciliation, we endured as marginalisation. The victor danced in national attire. The vanquished crawled through national amnesia. Sir, you had the chance to become a Mandela long before South Africa birthed one. You had the moment. The world watched. The African continent stood still. But you chose empire over empathy. You chose command over compassion. You chose to keep Nigeria one by breaking a people in half. And now, the same mouth that sanctioned the guns says, "I prayed to God." Perhaps you did. But God is not mocked by crocodile tears. Not when the skulls of infants still haunt the red soil of Nsukka, Aba, Umuahia, and Onitsha. Prayer is not repentance. Repentance begins with truth. And the truth is that you, along with others, enabled a war that was avoidable. You squandered the peace we almost had at Aburi. You enabled pogroms with your silence. You denied justice its wings and handed the world a bullet instead. And when it was all done, you wrapped the pain in poetry and hoped the music would make us forget. But we remember. Not because we hate. But because we bleed. This is not a call to bitterness. It is a call to honesty. To name what happened. To look the children of Biafra in the eye and say: Yes, you were wronged. Yes, we failed you. Yes, the war was avoidable. And no, it should never have happened. Until then, sir, do not cloak yourself in prayer while justice lies unclothed. Do not speak of love when you could not uphold truth. Do not say “it was not my choice” when history has proven otherwise. And above all, do not try to rewrite what we lived. You may now carry the Bible in one hand. But the other hand still drips with memories. Your legacy may wear the robe of elder statesmanship. But it remains stained by silence, by betrayal, and by the bones of those who trusted your word at Aburi. So here, General Gowon, is what history truly says: You may cry now, but the tears do not wash the blood away. You may kneel today, but that does not undo the horror of yesterday. You may pray, but the ghosts still answer with questions. And until Nigeria confronts its past with courage, it will never know peace that lasts. We forgive. But we do not forget. We move on. But we do not move blind. Because truth, bitter as it may be - is still better than convenient lies. ✍Ugochimereze Chinedu Asuzu Social Cum Political Analysis|Tuesday, June 10, 2025
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  • Be perfectly resigned, perfectly unconcerned; then alone can you do any true work. No eyes can see the real forces; we can only see the results. Put out self, forget it; just let God work, it is His business.
    Be perfectly resigned, perfectly unconcerned; then alone can you do any true work. No eyes can see the real forces; we can only see the results. Put out self, forget it; just let God work, it is His business.
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  • There is only one sin. That is weakness.... The only saint is that soul that never weakens, faces everything, and determines to die game.
    There is only one sin. That is weakness.... The only saint is that soul that never weakens, faces everything, and determines to die game.
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 76 Views
  • The degree of freedom from unwanted thoughts and the degree of concentration on a single thought are the measures to gauge spiritual progress.
    The degree of freedom from unwanted thoughts and the degree of concentration on a single thought are the measures to gauge spiritual progress.
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 97 Views
  • If we could see the miracle of a single flower clearly, our whole life would change.
    If we could see the miracle of a single flower clearly, our whole life would change.
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  • Rent is not an emergency.

    From the day you paid your first rent, you should know that in the next 12 months you'll renew your rent.

    If you're always falling behind on paying your rent, let me show you a simple strategy you can apply to your finances to make paying rent easy for you.

    If you do what I'm about to show you now, you'll never get stranded because you're low on cash when your next rent is due.

    In fact, you'll pay your rent with ease and with peace of mind.

    Step 1: Write Down Your Rent

    Pick a piece of paper and write down how much you pay as rent annually.

    Don't think it in your head, write it down.

    Is it ₦100,000, is it ₦300,000 or is it ₦1,000,000?

    Know your own figure and write it down.

    Step 2: Divide The Amount By 12 Months.

    Let's say your rent is ₦300,000, divide it by 12 months.

    ₦300,000 ÷ 12 = ₦25,000.

    Step 3: Divide The Amount In Step 2 Above By 4 Weeks

    We have 4 weeks in a month.

    ₦25,000 ÷ 4 = ₦6,250

    Again, use your own numbers.

    Step 4: Divide The Amount in Step 3 Above By 7 Days

    Why are you doing this?

    Because there are 7 days in a week.

    So ₦6,250 ÷ 7 = ₦893 (Approximately)

    Make sure you do this exercise using your annual rent.

    Step 5: Download A Fintech Savings Apps

    There are many fintech savings apps out there.

    But if you need my personal recommendation, you can go with Cowrywise.

    After you download it, sign up for an account and verify your account.

    Step 6: Choose A Savings Frequency

    Looking at the amount you're paying for rent, how often can you save up for it.

    So using our example of ₦300,000 which amount can you save easily to hit your rent target?

    You can save ₦25,000 monthly.

    You can save ₦6,250 weekly.

    You can save ₦893 daily.

    Just pick one that will be easy for you.

    Step 7: Start Saving

    Yes, if you want to make paying rent easy for you, save the money ahead.

    That way, you don't have to start running up and down looking for how to raise your rent when it's due.

    Don't say you can't save because the income is not enough.

    Savings is never about your income, it's about your mindset.

    You don't even have to save manually on the app.

    Let's say you want to save ₦893 by 8pm daily, once it's 8pm, the money will automatically be deducted from your account by Cowrywise.

    Least I forget, the good thing about using a fintech savings app to save is that you get paid interest on your savings at the end of your savings circle.

    It's better than saving your money in a traditional savings bank account where bank charges and inflation will eat it up.

    Don't just read this post, make sure you implement.

    Feel free to also share this post too so more people can learn.
    Rent is not an emergency. From the day you paid your first rent, you should know that in the next 12 months you'll renew your rent. If you're always falling behind on paying your rent, let me show you a simple strategy you can apply to your finances to make paying rent easy for you. If you do what I'm about to show you now, you'll never get stranded because you're low on cash when your next rent is due. In fact, you'll pay your rent with ease and with peace of mind. ✅ Step 1: Write Down Your Rent Pick a piece of paper and write down how much you pay as rent annually. Don't think it in your head, write it down. Is it ₦100,000, is it ₦300,000 or is it ₦1,000,000? Know your own figure and write it down. ✅ Step 2: Divide The Amount By 12 Months. Let's say your rent is ₦300,000, divide it by 12 months. ₦300,000 ÷ 12 = ₦25,000. ✅ Step 3: Divide The Amount In Step 2 Above By 4 Weeks We have 4 weeks in a month. ₦25,000 ÷ 4 = ₦6,250 Again, use your own numbers. ✅ Step 4: Divide The Amount in Step 3 Above By 7 Days Why are you doing this? Because there are 7 days in a week. So ₦6,250 ÷ 7 = ₦893 (Approximately) Make sure you do this exercise using your annual rent. ✅ Step 5: Download A Fintech Savings Apps There are many fintech savings apps out there. But if you need my personal recommendation, you can go with Cowrywise. After you download it, sign up for an account and verify your account. ✅ Step 6: Choose A Savings Frequency Looking at the amount you're paying for rent, how often can you save up for it. So using our example of ₦300,000 which amount can you save easily to hit your rent target? You can save ₦25,000 monthly. You can save ₦6,250 weekly. You can save ₦893 daily. Just pick one that will be easy for you. ✅ Step 7: Start Saving Yes, if you want to make paying rent easy for you, save the money ahead. That way, you don't have to start running up and down looking for how to raise your rent when it's due. Don't say you can't save because the income is not enough. Savings is never about your income, it's about your mindset. You don't even have to save manually on the app. Let's say you want to save ₦893 by 8pm daily, once it's 8pm, the money will automatically be deducted from your account by Cowrywise. Least I forget, the good thing about using a fintech savings app to save is that you get paid interest on your savings at the end of your savings circle. It's better than saving your money in a traditional savings bank account where bank charges and inflation will eat it up. Don't just read this post, make sure you implement. Feel free to also share this post too so more people can learn.
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 88 Views
  • I think my neighbour has opened church in his room with his girlfriend since 1:30I'm only hearing; Oh my God ,oh my gosh
    I think my neighbour has opened church in his room with his girlfriend since 1:30🙆‍♂️🙆‍♂️I'm only hearing; Oh my God ,oh my gosh😱😂
    Like
    1
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  • I think my neighbour has opened church in his room with his girlfriend since 1:30I'm only hearing; Oh my God ,oh my gosh
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