• *GARRI AND YOUR EYES : THE MYTHS*

    Does Garri really cause Eye Problem?


    Cassava tubers usually contain a substance called cyanide.

    Before cassava is processed into Garri and Fufu, it usually contains cyanide at an unsafe level.

    This is why you should never consider eating raw cassava.


    Now, the level of cyanide in cassava depends on the cassava species.

    The sweet cassava contains a lower level of cyanide, while the bitter cassava is highly rich in cyanide

    Remember, Garri is gotten through cassava….


    Normally, this cyanide is available to protect the cassava plant from herbivores and insects because it’s toxic to them.

    However, for humans, we are not exposed to this harmful amount of cyanide because of the processed form of cassava we consume.


    Cassava goes through fermentation, drying, and frying process before we get Garri.
    These processes help to reduce the cyanide concentration to a harmless level.
    But what’s the guarantee that all farmers do it the right way?


    Now, some farmers are not patient enough to go through the normal processes.
    They may skip some steps or reduce the number of days required for an ideal Garri processing.
    They probably do this to make their money faster, save time , or reduce stress.


    When Garri is processed without going through the required steps and processes, the end product will usually contain some unsafe amount of cyanide.
    If you’ve been taking properly processed Garri, you have nothing to worry about.
    But if you have been buying a poorly processed Garri, you may have been taking in an unsafe amount of cyanide.


    If this is consistent, it can lead to poor oxygen supply to eye tissues, leading to severe macular degeneration.

    Some symptoms include

    -Blurry vision
    - Needing brighter than usual light to read
    -Difficulty adapting to an environment with low light.
    You may also be viewing straight lines as though they are bent.


    Button line
    Garri does not necessarily blind the eyes, but poorly processed Garri has some negative effects on the eyes and can lead to eye problems.

    This is strictly due to high cyanide content.

    Also, it is important to note that cyanide effects can also affect the brain and heart where oxygen is in high demand.

    I hope our farmers see this and help us do better

    Encourage the ones you know to do it the right way.

    If you are tired of eating junk disguised as food, it's time to take charge of your kitchen and process these natural foods yourself to be 100% sure of what you are consuming.

    For protection and cure of your eyesight, embrace Spidex12, Faforon, and Salud tightly. Also take FaforDitoz 3 nights every 2 weeks to mop out free radicals you may have consumed unknownly including cyanide from cassava products
    *GARRI AND YOUR EYES : THE MYTHS* Does Garri really cause Eye Problem? 👇 📌Cassava tubers usually contain a substance called cyanide. Before cassava is processed into Garri and Fufu, it usually contains cyanide at an unsafe level. This is why you should never consider eating raw cassava. 📌Now, the level of cyanide in cassava depends on the cassava species. The sweet cassava contains a lower level of cyanide, while the bitter cassava is highly rich in cyanide Remember, Garri is gotten through cassava…. 📌Normally, this cyanide is available to protect the cassava plant from herbivores and insects because it’s toxic to them. However, for humans, we are not exposed to this harmful amount of cyanide because of the processed form of cassava we consume. 📌Cassava goes through fermentation, drying, and frying process before we get Garri. These processes help to reduce the cyanide concentration to a harmless level. But what’s the guarantee that all farmers do it the right way? 📌Now, some farmers are not patient enough to go through the normal processes. They may skip some steps or reduce the number of days required for an ideal Garri processing. They probably do this to make their money faster, save time , or reduce stress. 📌When Garri is processed without going through the required steps and processes, the end product will usually contain some unsafe amount of cyanide. If you’ve been taking properly processed Garri, you have nothing to worry about. But if you have been buying a poorly processed Garri, you may have been taking in an unsafe amount of cyanide. 📌If this is consistent, it can lead to poor oxygen supply to eye tissues, leading to severe macular degeneration. 🍭Some symptoms include -Blurry vision - Needing brighter than usual light to read -Difficulty adapting to an environment with low light. You may also be viewing straight lines as though they are bent. 📌Button line Garri does not necessarily blind the eyes, but poorly processed Garri has some negative effects on the eyes and can lead to eye problems. This is strictly due to high cyanide content. Also, it is important to note that cyanide effects can also affect the brain and heart where oxygen is in high demand. I hope our farmers see this and help us do better 🙏 Encourage the ones you know to do it the right way. If you are tired of eating junk disguised as food, it's time to take charge of your kitchen and process these natural foods yourself to be 100% sure of what you are consuming. For protection and cure of your eyesight, embrace Spidex12, Faforon, and Salud tightly. Also take FaforDitoz 3 nights every 2 weeks to mop out free radicals you may have consumed unknownly including cyanide from cassava products ✍️
    Like
    1
    0 Σχόλια 2 Μοιράστηκε 96 Views
  • We sell different types kitchen utensils and appliances please patronize us
    We sell different types kitchen utensils and appliances please patronize us
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 80 Views
  • I FOUND OUT MY REAL MOTHER WAS THE HOUSEMAID

    All my life, I called her “Mama Rose” — the house help.
    She cleaned our floors, cooked our food, and always looked at me with sad eyes.
    I never knew why.

    Until one day, she bent to pick up a broken glass…
    And I saw the exact same birthmark on her back that I had on mine.
    A jagged crescent. Like a tear.

    That’s when I started asking questions.
    And my entire childhood… fell apart.

    I grew up thinking I was the daughter of a wealthy woman named Florence Okonkwo.

    My “mother” was elegant, cold, and proud.
    She dressed me in lace. Drove me to school. Smiled for photos.
    But never once told me she loved me.

    Not once.

    Then there was Mama Rose.

    She wore second-hand clothes.
    She called me “My Angel.”
    She made jollof rice exactly the way I liked it — slightly burnt, with fried goat meat on top.

    And every time I was sick,
    she cried like her own soul was breaking.

    I was 19.

    Mama Florence was in London for a conference.
    I was home from university on holiday.

    That morning, I dropped a glass of water.
    It shattered on the kitchen tiles.

    As Mama Rose bent to sweep it up, her blouse shifted…
    And I saw it.

    That strange C-shaped birthmark.
    Exactly like mine.
    Same shape. Same position. Same darkness.

    I froze.

    > “Mama Rose… where did you get that mark?”

    She paused.
    Her hands trembled.
    Then she whispered:
    “I prayed you’d never see it.”

    That night, I went into Mama Florence’s room.

    I wasn’t sure what I was looking for.
    Maybe an explanation. Maybe proof I was imagining things.

    Instead, I found a journal, hidden in a velvet box under her bed.

    The first entry was dated February 2003 — the year I was born.

    And the very first sentence shattered my identity.

    > “The house girl gave birth in the guest room.
    I told the nurses to list me as the mother.”

    Page after page revealed the truth.

    Florence was barren.
    Her husband had an affair with the house girl — Rose.

    But instead of kicking her out, she made a plan:

    > “I’ll raise the child.
    She will never know where she came from.
    Rose can stay. But she must be invisible.
    No hugs. No photos. No motherly attachment.
    She is not the mother anymore. I am.”*

    I sat across from Mama Rose that evening.

    I couldn’t breathe.
    Couldn’t cry.
    Couldn’t even form full sentences.

    Just three words: “Is it true?”

    She didn’t deny it.

    She just walked over to the small wooden box she always kept in her room.

    Opened it.

    Inside were dozens of photos…
    of me as a baby.
    Cuddled in her arms.
    Kissed on the forehead.
    Wrapped in an old blue cloth I still slept with at night.

    And then she said:

    > “I wasn’t strong enough to fight for you.
    But I never stopped being your mother.”

    Then she added…
    “Your father didn’t die in a car crash.
    He’s still alive.
    He’s just… in the other house.”

    I opened Facebook.

    Typed in the name Rose gave me.

    And when I found the man’s profile…

    My heart dropped.

    He had another daughter.
    She looked just like me.
    And her name…
    was also Adaeze.

    Follow my pageIhemekwele Daniel Onyedikachi to get notifications whenever I posts..
    @highlight
    Favour ChizarIhemekwele Daniel OnyedikachiFavour Chizaram Grace
    I FOUND OUT MY REAL MOTHER WAS THE HOUSEMAID All my life, I called her “Mama Rose” — the house help. She cleaned our floors, cooked our food, and always looked at me with sad eyes. I never knew why. Until one day, she bent to pick up a broken glass… And I saw the exact same birthmark on her back that I had on mine. A jagged crescent. Like a tear. That’s when I started asking questions. And my entire childhood… fell apart. I grew up thinking I was the daughter of a wealthy woman named Florence Okonkwo. My “mother” was elegant, cold, and proud. She dressed me in lace. Drove me to school. Smiled for photos. But never once told me she loved me. Not once. Then there was Mama Rose. She wore second-hand clothes. She called me “My Angel.” She made jollof rice exactly the way I liked it — slightly burnt, with fried goat meat on top. And every time I was sick, she cried like her own soul was breaking. I was 19. Mama Florence was in London for a conference. I was home from university on holiday. That morning, I dropped a glass of water. It shattered on the kitchen tiles. As Mama Rose bent to sweep it up, her blouse shifted… And I saw it. That strange C-shaped birthmark. Exactly like mine. Same shape. Same position. Same darkness. I froze. > “Mama Rose… where did you get that mark?” She paused. Her hands trembled. Then she whispered: “I prayed you’d never see it.” That night, I went into Mama Florence’s room. I wasn’t sure what I was looking for. Maybe an explanation. Maybe proof I was imagining things. Instead, I found a journal, hidden in a velvet box under her bed. The first entry was dated February 2003 — the year I was born. And the very first sentence shattered my identity. > “The house girl gave birth in the guest room. I told the nurses to list me as the mother.” Page after page revealed the truth. Florence was barren. Her husband had an affair with the house girl — Rose. But instead of kicking her out, she made a plan: > “I’ll raise the child. She will never know where she came from. Rose can stay. But she must be invisible. No hugs. No photos. No motherly attachment. She is not the mother anymore. I am.”* I sat across from Mama Rose that evening. I couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t cry. Couldn’t even form full sentences. Just three words: “Is it true?” She didn’t deny it. She just walked over to the small wooden box she always kept in her room. Opened it. Inside were dozens of photos… of me as a baby. Cuddled in her arms. Kissed on the forehead. Wrapped in an old blue cloth I still slept with at night. And then she said: > “I wasn’t strong enough to fight for you. But I never stopped being your mother.” Then she added… “Your father didn’t die in a car crash. He’s still alive. He’s just… in the other house.” I opened Facebook. Typed in the name Rose gave me. And when I found the man’s profile… My heart dropped. He had another daughter. She looked just like me. And her name… was also Adaeze. Follow my pageIhemekwele Daniel Onyedikachi to get notifications whenever I posts.. @highlight Favour ChizarIhemekwele Daniel OnyedikachiFavour Chizaram Grace
    Like
    1
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 100 Views
  • I WAS ERASED BY MY OWN SISTER
    PART 3
    Nneka’s home was a sanctuary of warmth and success—a spacious modern penthouse in the heart of Lagos, filled with natural light, elegant furniture, and the scent of her luxury skincare products. It was a reflection of her: beautiful, inviting, and full of life.
    And now, Ngozi was inside.
    Ngozi had arrived with a single suitcase and a smile so sweet it could rot teeth.
    "Sis, I just missed you so much," she had said, hugging Nneka tightly at the door. "Living alone has been so lonely… and with your wedding coming up, I thought—why not spend more time with my favorite twin?"
    Nneka, ever trusting, melted instantly. "Of course! This is your home too!"
    She didn’t see the way Ngozi’s eyes flickered over the expensive decor, the way her fingers lingered a little too long on Emeka’s jacket hanging by the door.
    She didn’t see the snake slithering into her paradise.
    Ngozi played her role flawlessly.
    She woke up early to make breakfast, humming as she set the table. "You work so hard, Nneka. Let me take care of you for once!"
    She offered to help with wedding plans, flipping through bridal magazines with exaggerated excitement. "Oh my God, this dress would look stunning on you!"
    She even volunteered to test Nneka’s new skincare line, raving about it to her followers online. "My sister is a genius! You all need to try this!"
    But behind every smile, every compliment, was a blade waiting to strike.
    Ngozi’s first mission? Emeka.
    She waited until Nneka was busy with a business call, then "accidentally" bumped into Emeka in the kitchen, spilling her wine on his crisp white shirt.
    "Oh no! I’m so sorry!" she gasped, dabbing at his chest with a napkin, her touch lingering just a second too long.
    Emeka, ever the gentleman, laughed it off. *"It’s fine, Ngozi. No harm done."
    But Ngozi wasn’t done.
    Later that night, as they all watched a movie, she made sure to sit a little too close to Emeka, her bare leg brushing against his. When Nneka got up to take a call, Ngozi sighed dramatically.
    "I wish I had a man as patient as you, Emeka. Nneka is so lucky… but honestly, I don’t know how you put up with her workaholic ways. She barely has time for you."
    Emeka frowned. "She’s just passionate."
    Ngozi gave a small, pitying smile. "Of course. But a man like you deserves… more."
    The seed was planted.
    Nneka’s skincare samples for an important client meeting vanished the night before the presentation. She turned the house upside down, panic rising in her chest.
    "Ngozi, did you see the box of Naturé samples? They were right here!"
    Ngozi widened her eyes in fake concern. "Oh no! Maybe the cleaner misplaced them?"
    But Nneka’s cleaner was meticulous. And Ngozi had been the last one near the samples.
    The meeting was a disaster. Nneka had to apologize profusely, her reputation taking a hit.
    And Ngozi? She comforted her sister with a hug, hiding her smirk in Nneka’s shoulder.
    "Don’t worry, sis. These things happen."
    The final blow came at Nneka’s birthday dinner.
    Nneka had stepped away to take an urgent call from a supplier, leaving Emeka and Ngozi alone at the table.
    Ngozi seized her chance.
    She leaned in, her voice a whisper. "Emeka… I’ve always admired you. The way you love my sister… it’s so beautiful." She let her hand rest on his. *"But does she even see how amazing you are? Or is she too busy chasing her next big deal?"
    Emeka pulled back, uncomfortable. *"Ngozi, don’t."
    But Ngozi wasn’t deterred. With tears glistening in her eyes, she whispered, "I just hate seeing you taken for granted. If you were mine… I’d never let you feel second best."
    Just then, Nneka returned, her smile fading as she took in the tense scene.
    "Everything okay?" she asked.
    Ngozi blinked away her "tears" and laughed lightly. "Of course! Emeka was just telling me how much he loves you."
    But the doubt was already in the air.
    As the days passed, Ngozi’s schemes grew bolder.
    She "accidentally" sent Emeka flirty texts meant for a "mystery man," then gasped in horror when he confronted her. "Oh my God! That was for my friend’s brother! My phone must have glitched!"
    She whispered to Nneka’s friends that her sister was "stressed and acting strange lately," planting the idea that Nneka was unstable.
    And every night, she lay in bed, replaying her victories with a grin.
    Because soon, very soon, Nneka’s perfect life would crumble.
    And Ngozi would be there to pick up the pieces.
    To Be Continued…)
    I WAS ERASED BY MY OWN SISTER PART 3 Nneka’s home was a sanctuary of warmth and success—a spacious modern penthouse in the heart of Lagos, filled with natural light, elegant furniture, and the scent of her luxury skincare products. It was a reflection of her: beautiful, inviting, and full of life. And now, Ngozi was inside. Ngozi had arrived with a single suitcase and a smile so sweet it could rot teeth. "Sis, I just missed you so much," she had said, hugging Nneka tightly at the door. "Living alone has been so lonely… and with your wedding coming up, I thought—why not spend more time with my favorite twin?" Nneka, ever trusting, melted instantly. "Of course! This is your home too!" She didn’t see the way Ngozi’s eyes flickered over the expensive decor, the way her fingers lingered a little too long on Emeka’s jacket hanging by the door. She didn’t see the snake slithering into her paradise. Ngozi played her role flawlessly. She woke up early to make breakfast, humming as she set the table. "You work so hard, Nneka. Let me take care of you for once!" She offered to help with wedding plans, flipping through bridal magazines with exaggerated excitement. "Oh my God, this dress would look stunning on you!" She even volunteered to test Nneka’s new skincare line, raving about it to her followers online. "My sister is a genius! You all need to try this!" But behind every smile, every compliment, was a blade waiting to strike. Ngozi’s first mission? Emeka. She waited until Nneka was busy with a business call, then "accidentally" bumped into Emeka in the kitchen, spilling her wine on his crisp white shirt. "Oh no! I’m so sorry!" she gasped, dabbing at his chest with a napkin, her touch lingering just a second too long. Emeka, ever the gentleman, laughed it off. *"It’s fine, Ngozi. No harm done." But Ngozi wasn’t done. Later that night, as they all watched a movie, she made sure to sit a little too close to Emeka, her bare leg brushing against his. When Nneka got up to take a call, Ngozi sighed dramatically. "I wish I had a man as patient as you, Emeka. Nneka is so lucky… but honestly, I don’t know how you put up with her workaholic ways. She barely has time for you." Emeka frowned. "She’s just passionate." Ngozi gave a small, pitying smile. "Of course. But a man like you deserves… more." The seed was planted. Nneka’s skincare samples for an important client meeting vanished the night before the presentation. She turned the house upside down, panic rising in her chest. "Ngozi, did you see the box of Naturé samples? They were right here!" Ngozi widened her eyes in fake concern. "Oh no! Maybe the cleaner misplaced them?" But Nneka’s cleaner was meticulous. And Ngozi had been the last one near the samples. The meeting was a disaster. Nneka had to apologize profusely, her reputation taking a hit. And Ngozi? She comforted her sister with a hug, hiding her smirk in Nneka’s shoulder. "Don’t worry, sis. These things happen." The final blow came at Nneka’s birthday dinner. Nneka had stepped away to take an urgent call from a supplier, leaving Emeka and Ngozi alone at the table. Ngozi seized her chance. She leaned in, her voice a whisper. "Emeka… I’ve always admired you. The way you love my sister… it’s so beautiful." She let her hand rest on his. *"But does she even see how amazing you are? Or is she too busy chasing her next big deal?" Emeka pulled back, uncomfortable. *"Ngozi, don’t." But Ngozi wasn’t deterred. With tears glistening in her eyes, she whispered, "I just hate seeing you taken for granted. If you were mine… I’d never let you feel second best." Just then, Nneka returned, her smile fading as she took in the tense scene. "Everything okay?" she asked. Ngozi blinked away her "tears" and laughed lightly. "Of course! Emeka was just telling me how much he loves you." But the doubt was already in the air. As the days passed, Ngozi’s schemes grew bolder. She "accidentally" sent Emeka flirty texts meant for a "mystery man," then gasped in horror when he confronted her. "Oh my God! That was for my friend’s brother! My phone must have glitched!" She whispered to Nneka’s friends that her sister was "stressed and acting strange lately," planting the idea that Nneka was unstable. And every night, she lay in bed, replaying her victories with a grin. Because soon, very soon, Nneka’s perfect life would crumble. And Ngozi would be there to pick up the pieces. To Be Continued…)
    Like
    1
    1 Σχόλια 1 Μοιράστηκε 147 Views
  • They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate,
    She was just the house help.
    She served their meals but ate leftovers.
    She washed their clothes but wore rags.

    Lagos, Southwest, Nigeria 1995…

    Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the

    Okoye family.

    Her job?
    Clean the house,
    Fetch water,
    Cook,
    Wash,
    Repeat the same.

    She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch,
    Not allowed to eat with the children,
    She ate on the kitchen floor,
    Sometimes she slept near the store room.

    They said:

    “Know your place, you are lucky to be here.”

    But she was Kind,
    obedient, and every night she read old textbooks she found in the bin.

    One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said:

    “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?”

    She smiled and said:

    “Maybe one day, God will.”

    After four years, she was sent back to her village;
    No certificate,
    No savings,
    No promise.

    But Amarachi didn’t stop.

    She farmed.
    Saved,
    Taught children in village.
    Later got admitted into one of the Federal Polytechnic.
    Made an Upper Credit in her OND, thereafter graduated with a Distinction in HND in Business Administration.
    She soon started a local food brand,
    Expanded into Raw Food Export.

    By 2024, she became one of the leading Agro-entrepreneurs in Southeast, Nigeria.

    One day, she saw a social media Post, the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor.

    She put a call through.

    Used her now married name.

    She was invited, not knowing who she was.

    On the day of the launch, she walked in, head high, dressed in white lace.

    The family froze.

    Chidera blinked,

    The father gasped,

    She smiled and said:

    25 years ago, I served your food in silence. Today, I came to serve your future with Love.

    She handed them a cheque of ₦20 million donation to their Foundation.

    Then added:

    “This is not revenge. It’s a remembrance.
    Because the girl you ignored, grew in Grace.”

    The hall fell silent.

    Even Chidera wept,

    Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered:

    The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at, God gave me the tools to build my own.

    She didn’t come to repay the pain,
    She came to rewrite history.

    Because sometimes, the girl they made to eat in the kitchen, returns to fund the Banquet.

    Life is a teacher!
    Learn to treat people with respect.
    Everybody is Somebody!

    ENDOWED PRINCESS BRENDA
    They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate, She was just the house help. She served their meals but ate leftovers. She washed their clothes but wore rags. Lagos, Southwest, Nigeria 1995… Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family. Her job? Clean the house, Fetch water, Cook, Wash, Repeat the same. She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch, Not allowed to eat with the children, She ate on the kitchen floor, Sometimes she slept near the store room. They said: “Know your place, you are lucky to be here.” But she was Kind, obedient, and every night she read old textbooks she found in the bin. One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said: “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?” She smiled and said: “Maybe one day, God will.” After four years, she was sent back to her village; No certificate, No savings, No promise. But Amarachi didn’t stop. She farmed. Saved, Taught children in village. Later got admitted into one of the Federal Polytechnic. Made an Upper Credit in her OND, thereafter graduated with a Distinction in HND in Business Administration. She soon started a local food brand, Expanded into Raw Food Export. By 2024, she became one of the leading Agro-entrepreneurs in Southeast, Nigeria. One day, she saw a social media Post, the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor. She put a call through. Used her now married name. She was invited, not knowing who she was. On the day of the launch, she walked in, head high, dressed in white lace. The family froze. Chidera blinked, The father gasped, She smiled and said: 25 years ago, I served your food in silence. Today, I came to serve your future with Love. She handed them a cheque of ₦20 million donation to their Foundation. Then added: “This is not revenge. It’s a remembrance. Because the girl you ignored, grew in Grace.” The hall fell silent. Even Chidera wept, Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered: The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at, God gave me the tools to build my own. She didn’t come to repay the pain, She came to rewrite history. Because sometimes, the girl they made to eat in the kitchen, returns to fund the Banquet. Life is a teacher! Learn to treat people with respect. Everybody is Somebody! ENDOWED PRINCESS BRENDA 👸 💖
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 77 Views
  • SAFETY INCIDENT REPORT

    Title: Fatal Gas Explosion Claims Entire Family in Warri, Delta State

    Location: Warri, Delta State, Nigeria
    Date of Incident: 30th May 2025
    Date Reported: 14th June 2025
    Reported by: Engr. John Perede Akpoyibo.

    Incident Summary:
    On the 30th of May, 2025, a devastating domestic gas explosion occurred at a family residence in Warri, Delta State, resulting in the eventual loss of an entire family of three. The incident happened as the family was preparing for the birthday of their last daughter, who had also recently secured her visa and was scheduled to travel abroad.

    While using a standard LPG gas cylinder for cooking, an additional mini gas cylinder was introduced into the same kitchen to support the cooking process. During the installation of a burner onto the smaller cylinder, the father accidentally triggered a sharp gas leak. The active flame from the larger gas cooker in close proximity ignited the escaping gas, leading to a sudden explosion.

    The mother, who was exiting the bathroom at the moment, was also caught in the blast.

    Casualties:

    Father: Sustained fatal injuries and was pronounced dead shortly after the incident.

    Mother: Sustained severe burns, was rushed to the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), and later passed on during treatment.

    Last Daughter: Suffered critical first-degree burns and was admitted to intensive care at UBTH, where she sadly died on 14th June 2025.

    All three family members later passed on as a result of injuries sustained in the explosion.

    Root Cause Analysis:

    Simultaneous use of multiple LPG gas cylinders within an enclosed kitchen space.

    A gas leak occurred during the installation of the burner on a mini gas cylinder while another flame was active.

    Lack of proper ventilation and absence of gas leak detection equipment.

    No immediate access to fire extinguishing or suppression tools.

    Lessons Learned / Safety Recommendations:

    1. Do not install or operate a gas burner near any active flame. Always turn off existing gas sources before introducing another.

    2. Avoid using multiple gas cylinders in confined or enclosed spaces.

    3. Only install gas appliances in well-ventilated areas, away from ignition sources.

    4. Equip homes with gas leak detectors, fire extinguishers, and smoke alarms.

    5. Encourage community-wide training on domestic gas safety and emergency response.

    6. Conduct regular safety checks on gas cylinders, hoses, valves

    This tragic incident, which claimed the lives of a father, mother, and their last daughter, underscores the urgent need for heightened awareness and safety practices in the use of domestic LPG. The simultaneous use and poor handling of gas equipment in confined spaces remains a serious public safety hazard. It is imperative that communities, safety regulators, and households take proactive measures to prevent such avoidable tragedies.

    Issued By:
    Engr. John Perede Akpoyibo

    Safety Advocate & Community Development Leader. *(NOTE :- The above is for our information, carefulness and lessons to learn please).*
    SAFETY INCIDENT REPORT Title: Fatal Gas Explosion Claims Entire Family in Warri, Delta State Location: Warri, Delta State, Nigeria Date of Incident: 30th May 2025 Date Reported: 14th June 2025 Reported by: Engr. John Perede Akpoyibo. Incident Summary: On the 30th of May, 2025, a devastating domestic gas explosion occurred at a family residence in Warri, Delta State, resulting in the eventual loss of an entire family of three. The incident happened as the family was preparing for the birthday of their last daughter, who had also recently secured her visa and was scheduled to travel abroad. While using a standard LPG gas cylinder for cooking, an additional mini gas cylinder was introduced into the same kitchen to support the cooking process. During the installation of a burner onto the smaller cylinder, the father accidentally triggered a sharp gas leak. The active flame from the larger gas cooker in close proximity ignited the escaping gas, leading to a sudden explosion. The mother, who was exiting the bathroom at the moment, was also caught in the blast. Casualties: Father: Sustained fatal injuries and was pronounced dead shortly after the incident. Mother: Sustained severe burns, was rushed to the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), and later passed on during treatment. Last Daughter: Suffered critical first-degree burns and was admitted to intensive care at UBTH, where she sadly died on 14th June 2025. All three family members later passed on as a result of injuries sustained in the explosion. Root Cause Analysis: Simultaneous use of multiple LPG gas cylinders within an enclosed kitchen space. A gas leak occurred during the installation of the burner on a mini gas cylinder while another flame was active. Lack of proper ventilation and absence of gas leak detection equipment. No immediate access to fire extinguishing or suppression tools. Lessons Learned / Safety Recommendations: 1. Do not install or operate a gas burner near any active flame. Always turn off existing gas sources before introducing another. 2. Avoid using multiple gas cylinders in confined or enclosed spaces. 3. Only install gas appliances in well-ventilated areas, away from ignition sources. 4. Equip homes with gas leak detectors, fire extinguishers, and smoke alarms. 5. Encourage community-wide training on domestic gas safety and emergency response. 6. Conduct regular safety checks on gas cylinders, hoses, valves This tragic incident, which claimed the lives of a father, mother, and their last daughter, underscores the urgent need for heightened awareness and safety practices in the use of domestic LPG. The simultaneous use and poor handling of gas equipment in confined spaces remains a serious public safety hazard. It is imperative that communities, safety regulators, and households take proactive measures to prevent such avoidable tragedies. Issued By: Engr. John Perede Akpoyibo Safety Advocate & Community Development Leader. *(NOTE :- The above is for our information, carefulness and lessons to learn please).*
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 61 Views
  • HOW TO TAKE YOUR SODA DRINKS IN A WAY IT WON'T AFFECT YOU

    Do This And Thank Me Later.

    WARNING: If you skip any of these steps, you kiss your health goodbye.


    Step 1: Buy any of the Soda drinks. Ensure it's chilled.

    Step 2: Take it to the kitchen.

    Step 3: Grab a glass cup (don't drink directly from the bottle and don't use straw).

    Step 4: Pour into the glass cup and allow it to settle for 2 minutes.

    Step 5: Ensure there are no fizzy bubbles anymore.

    Step 6: Cover it.

    Step 7: Carry it to your toilet and pour round the inside of the toilet.

    Step 8: Get a toilet brush, add some little soap and scrub the toilet.


    Mama Sadé, stop sipping confusion.

    You have zobo, fenugreek tea, saffron tea E.t.c.


    If this slaps like lime, share this to a friend who still sips liquid regrets to calm herself down.

    HOW TO TAKE YOUR SODA DRINKS IN A WAY IT WON'T AFFECT YOU Do This And Thank Me Later. ⚠️WARNING: If you skip any of these steps, you kiss your health goodbye. Step 1: Buy any of the Soda drinks. Ensure it's chilled. Step 2: Take it to the kitchen. Step 3: Grab a glass cup (don't drink directly from the bottle and don't use straw). Step 4: Pour into the glass cup and allow it to settle for 2 minutes. Step 5: Ensure there are no fizzy bubbles anymore. Step 6: Cover it. Step 7: Carry it to your toilet and pour round the inside of the toilet. Step 8: Get a toilet brush, add some little soap and scrub the toilet. Mama Sadé, stop sipping confusion. You have zobo, fenugreek tea, saffron tea E.t.c. If this slaps like lime, share this to a friend who still sips liquid regrets to calm herself down.
    Love
    1
    1 Σχόλια 2 Μοιράστηκε 231 Views
  • HOW TO TAKE YOUR SODA DRINKS IN A WAY IT WON'T AFFECT YOU

    Do This And Thank Me Later.

    WARNING: If you skip any of these steps, you kiss your health goodbye.


    Step 1: Buy any of the Soda drinks. Ensure it's chilled.

    Step 2: Take it to the kitchen.

    Step 3: Grab a glass cup (don't drink directly from the bottle and don't use straw).

    Step 4: Pour into the glass cup and allow it to settle for 2 minutes.

    Step 5: Ensure there are no fizzy bubbles anymore.

    Step 6: Cover it.

    Step 7: Carry it to your toilet and pour round the inside of the toilet.

    Step 8: Get a toilet brush, add some little soap and scrub the toilet.


    Mama Sadé, stop sipping confusion.

    You have zobo, fenugreek tea, saffron tea E.t.c.


    If this slaps like lime, share this to a friend who still sips liquid regrets to calm herself down.

    HOW TO TAKE YOUR SODA DRINKS IN A WAY IT WON'T AFFECT YOU Do This And Thank Me Later. ⚠️WARNING: If you skip any of these steps, you kiss your health goodbye. Step 1: Buy any of the Soda drinks. Ensure it's chilled. Step 2: Take it to the kitchen. Step 3: Grab a glass cup (don't drink directly from the bottle and don't use straw). Step 4: Pour into the glass cup and allow it to settle for 2 minutes. Step 5: Ensure there are no fizzy bubbles anymore. Step 6: Cover it. Step 7: Carry it to your toilet and pour round the inside of the toilet. Step 8: Get a toilet brush, add some little soap and scrub the toilet. Mama Sadé, stop sipping confusion. You have zobo, fenugreek tea, saffron tea E.t.c. If this slaps like lime, share this to a friend who still sips liquid regrets to calm herself down.
    1 Σχόλια 2 Μοιράστηκε 235 Views
  • THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS
    PART 14
    The sterile air of the hospital room tasted like despair. Sebastian Scar floated in a grey limbo, tethered to life by whirring machines and dripping IVs. Visions flickered – Jessica’s tear-streaked face, Amanda’s venomous smile, the bitter taste of coffee, the terrifying convulsions, the suffocating white foam. Pain was a distant throb beneath layers of sedation. Time lost meaning.
    Then, slowly, agonizingly, consciousness seeped back. It wasn't a sudden awakening, but a cruel, dragging emergence from the depths. His eyelids felt like lead weights. Light stabbed his pupils, blurred shapes resolving slowly. The rhythmic beep… beep… beep of the heart monitor was the first anchor to reality. Then came the ache – deep, pervasive, bone-deep exhaustion layered over a raw, burning sensation in his gut. He tried to move, to speak, but his body felt alien, unresponsive.
    "Sebastian? Darling? Can you hear me?"
    The voice, dripping with saccharine concern, cut through the fog. Amanda. He forced his eyes to focus. She sat perched elegantly on a chair beside his bed, dressed in somber, expensive silk, her blonde curls artfully arranged. Her hand rested lightly on his forearm, her touch feeling like ice despite the room's warmth. Her dark eyes, usually sharp with malice, were wide with a carefully constructed simulation of worry.
    "Doctor! He's waking!" she called out, her voice trembling with theatrical relief.
    A flurry of activity followed. Doctors checked vitals, adjusted IVs, shone lights in his eyes. Sebastian endured it, his gaze fixed on Amanda, a silent question burning in his exhausted eyes. What happened? Where is Jessica?
    Amanda waited until the doctors finished their brief assessment, assuring them she’d stay with him. As the door clicked shut, her expression shifted. The worry remained, but beneath it, a cold, calculating gleam surfaced.
    "Oh, Sebastian," she breathed, leaning closer, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "We were so scared. You’ve been fighting for a week."
    A week? Panic flared weakly. "Jess…" he managed, the word a raw croak.
    Amanda’s face contorted instantly into a mask of profound sorrow and righteous anger. Tears welled in her eyes – real or expertly faked, he couldn’t tell. "Sebastian… my love…" she choked out. "It’s… it’s Jessica."
    His heart monitor spiked. Beep… beep… beep… beep…
    "She… she poisoned you," Amanda whispered, her voice thick with tears she let spill down her cheeks. "The coffee. She made it. She gave it to you. They found traces… aconite… a terrible poison. She was the only one who touched it. The only one with access." Amanda squeezed his arm, her grip surprisingly strong. "She must have planned it… planned to kill you, take everything… or maybe she was working with your enemies? We don’t know."
    Sebastian tried to shake his head, denial roaring silently inside his shattered body. No. Impossible. Not Jessica. But the memory was fractured, terrifying. The coffee. Her handing him the cup. The immediate, violent reaction. The white foam.
    "And then…" Amanda’s voice hardened, the tears replaced by cold fury. "When they realized you were poisoned, when they confronted her, she panicked. She tried to run. Ghost… he helped her escape! He betrayed you too! They fled together into the night." She spat the words. "She left you here dying, Sebastian. She poisoned you and ran away with one of your own men!"
    The accusation crashed over him like a tidal wave. Betrayal. Poison. Escape. Each word was a shard of ice driven into his heart. The image of Jessica, the woman he loved, the woman he’d built a fragile future with, deliberately poisoning him… It clashed violently with the memory of her tender touch, her whispered love. But the evidence Amanda presented – the coffee, the poison, the flight – seemed damning. And the blinding rage that surged through his weakened body felt real, fueled by the violation, the near-death experience, the utter shock.
    A guttural sound escaped his throat, part pain, part fury. His hands clenched weakly on the sheets.
    Amanda saw it – the dawning horror, the spark of rage. She pressed her advantage, her voice dropping to a venomous hiss. "She played you, Sebastian. Used you. That gutter rat was always a gold-digging whore. She saw her chance and tried to take everything, including your life."
    The crude insults, echoing those she’d hurled before, struck a different chord now, amplified by the context of betrayal. The fragile trust, the sanctuary of their love, felt like a grotesque lie. The rage crystallized, cold and lethal. He remembered her fleeing the room when he’d aimed the gun at Amanda… Had that been guilt? Fear of being caught?
    "Find… her," he rasped, the words scraping his ravaged throat. His eyes, though clouded with pain and medication, burned with a terrifying intensity. He locked eyes with William, who had entered silently during Amanda’s tirade, his face grim. "Find Jessica… and Ghost. Bring them… to me." He took a shuddering breath, summoning every ounce of his fading strength. "Alive. I will… kill her… myself."
    The command hung in the sterile air, heavy with finality. William nodded curtly, his own expression hardened by Amanda’s narrative and his boss’s suffering. "Consider it done, Boss."
    Amanda leaned back, a flicker of triumph quickly masked by concern. "We checked the penthouse security immediately, Sebastian," she added smoothly. "Trying to find proof. But… the CCTV footage from the kitchen and balcony during that time… it’s gone. Deleted. No traces left." She shook her head sadly. "She covered her tracks well. Ghost must have helped her erase it."
    The missing footage felt like the final nail. Paranoia, a familiar old friend, crept in. *How could she? Why?* The questions screamed in his mind, drowned out by the roar of betrayal. "I gave her… everything," he whispered, the words laced with bewildered agony. "Everything…" The image of her family, safe in the mansion he’d given them, flashed in his mind. "The family…" he managed. "Leave them… in the house. Guarded. But… untouched." It was a concession to a past love, a lingering doubt he couldn’t fully quash, even amidst his fury. He ignored Amanda’s immediate, sharp protest.
    "But Sebastian! They could be involved! They—"
    "Leave them!" he growled, the effort sending a spasm of pain through him. His order stood. Jessica’s family remained under house arrest, but protected, a confusing testament to the war raging within him.
    Miles away, in a small, sun-drenched village house nestled among palm trees and vibrant bougainvillea, Jessica existed in a state of suspended terror. Ghost’s fiancée, Chioma, a woman with kind eyes and hands hardened by work, had become her unexpected guardian angel. The modest house, a world away from Scar’s penthouse luxury, was a fragile sanctuary.
    Days bled into each other, filled with gnawing fear for Sebastian, crushing guilt over her family’s imprisonment, and the paralyzing knowledge that she was hunted. She scanned local news on a burner phone Ghost provided, dreading the headline announcing Scar’s death. The silence was almost worse.
    Then, the nausea started. Not the sharp anxiety she was used to, but a deep, rolling sickness that hit her most mornings. At first, she blamed the stress, the unfamiliar village food. But when it persisted, accompanied by a profound exhaustion and a strange tenderness in her breasts, a terrifying, wondrous possibility began to dawn.
    One morning, after retching into a basin behind the small house, Chioma found her pale and trembling. The older woman took one look at her, her gaze softening with sudden understanding. Without a word, she disappeared into the village market and returned an hour later, pressing a small, unmarked paper packet into Jessica’s hand. Inside was a simple pregnancy test.
    Hands shaking, Jessica locked herself in the tiny bathroom. The wait for the result felt like an eternity. She stared at the small plastic window, her heart hammering against her ribs, her mind a whirlwind of fear and impossible hope. Then, two clear, unmistakable lines appeared.
    Pregnant.
    The world tilted. She sank onto the cool concrete floor, the test clutched in her hand. Sebastian’s child. Conceived in the deep, healing love they’d shared after Amanda’s first assault, before the poison, before the betrayal. A life growing inside her while its father lay poisoned, believing she’d tried to kill him, vowing to end her life himself.
    Terror threatened to engulf her. They were fugitives. Hunted. Scar wanted her dead. Amanda wanted her destroyed. How could she bring a child into this nightmare? How could she protect it?
    But then, gazing at those two lines, a fierce, primal resolve ignited within her, burning away the despair. This wasn't just about her anymore. This was about their child. Scar’s heir. The living proof of their love, conceived before the poison, before the lies.
    She placed a trembling hand on her still-flat stomach. The fear didn't vanish, but it was joined by a steely determination. She couldn't run forever. She couldn't let her child be born into a life of hiding, branded by its mother's supposed crime. She had to clear her name. Not just for herself, not just for Sebastian, but for this tiny, fragile life growing inside her.
    She had to prove her innocence. Find the real traitor. Expose Amanda. And she had to reach Sebastian, make him see the truth, before his rage or Amanda’s schemes destroyed them all. For the sake of their child, she had to fight. Or they would all die – her, the baby, Sebastian, consumed by the poisonous lies.
    Emerging from the bathroom, Jessica met Chioma’s knowing gaze. There were no words. Jessica simply nodded, her eyes no longer filled with just fear, but with the fierce, terrifying light of a mother’s resolve. The hunted woman was gone. In her place stood a lioness, ready to fight for her cub and its father, even if the father himself held the gun. The battle for truth, for love, and for the future of their child had truly begun.
    TO BE CONTINUED...
    THE DEVIL'S MISTRESS PART 14 The sterile air of the hospital room tasted like despair. Sebastian Scar floated in a grey limbo, tethered to life by whirring machines and dripping IVs. Visions flickered – Jessica’s tear-streaked face, Amanda’s venomous smile, the bitter taste of coffee, the terrifying convulsions, the suffocating white foam. Pain was a distant throb beneath layers of sedation. Time lost meaning. Then, slowly, agonizingly, consciousness seeped back. It wasn't a sudden awakening, but a cruel, dragging emergence from the depths. His eyelids felt like lead weights. Light stabbed his pupils, blurred shapes resolving slowly. The rhythmic beep… beep… beep of the heart monitor was the first anchor to reality. Then came the ache – deep, pervasive, bone-deep exhaustion layered over a raw, burning sensation in his gut. He tried to move, to speak, but his body felt alien, unresponsive. "Sebastian? Darling? Can you hear me?" The voice, dripping with saccharine concern, cut through the fog. Amanda. He forced his eyes to focus. She sat perched elegantly on a chair beside his bed, dressed in somber, expensive silk, her blonde curls artfully arranged. Her hand rested lightly on his forearm, her touch feeling like ice despite the room's warmth. Her dark eyes, usually sharp with malice, were wide with a carefully constructed simulation of worry. "Doctor! He's waking!" she called out, her voice trembling with theatrical relief. A flurry of activity followed. Doctors checked vitals, adjusted IVs, shone lights in his eyes. Sebastian endured it, his gaze fixed on Amanda, a silent question burning in his exhausted eyes. What happened? Where is Jessica? Amanda waited until the doctors finished their brief assessment, assuring them she’d stay with him. As the door clicked shut, her expression shifted. The worry remained, but beneath it, a cold, calculating gleam surfaced. "Oh, Sebastian," she breathed, leaning closer, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "We were so scared. You’ve been fighting for a week." A week? Panic flared weakly. "Jess…" he managed, the word a raw croak. Amanda’s face contorted instantly into a mask of profound sorrow and righteous anger. Tears welled in her eyes – real or expertly faked, he couldn’t tell. "Sebastian… my love…" she choked out. "It’s… it’s Jessica." His heart monitor spiked. Beep… beep… beep… beep… "She… she poisoned you," Amanda whispered, her voice thick with tears she let spill down her cheeks. "The coffee. She made it. She gave it to you. They found traces… aconite… a terrible poison. She was the only one who touched it. The only one with access." Amanda squeezed his arm, her grip surprisingly strong. "She must have planned it… planned to kill you, take everything… or maybe she was working with your enemies? We don’t know." Sebastian tried to shake his head, denial roaring silently inside his shattered body. No. Impossible. Not Jessica. But the memory was fractured, terrifying. The coffee. Her handing him the cup. The immediate, violent reaction. The white foam. "And then…" Amanda’s voice hardened, the tears replaced by cold fury. "When they realized you were poisoned, when they confronted her, she panicked. She tried to run. Ghost… he helped her escape! He betrayed you too! They fled together into the night." She spat the words. "She left you here dying, Sebastian. She poisoned you and ran away with one of your own men!" The accusation crashed over him like a tidal wave. Betrayal. Poison. Escape. Each word was a shard of ice driven into his heart. The image of Jessica, the woman he loved, the woman he’d built a fragile future with, deliberately poisoning him… It clashed violently with the memory of her tender touch, her whispered love. But the evidence Amanda presented – the coffee, the poison, the flight – seemed damning. And the blinding rage that surged through his weakened body felt real, fueled by the violation, the near-death experience, the utter shock. A guttural sound escaped his throat, part pain, part fury. His hands clenched weakly on the sheets. Amanda saw it – the dawning horror, the spark of rage. She pressed her advantage, her voice dropping to a venomous hiss. "She played you, Sebastian. Used you. That gutter rat was always a gold-digging whore. She saw her chance and tried to take everything, including your life." The crude insults, echoing those she’d hurled before, struck a different chord now, amplified by the context of betrayal. The fragile trust, the sanctuary of their love, felt like a grotesque lie. The rage crystallized, cold and lethal. He remembered her fleeing the room when he’d aimed the gun at Amanda… Had that been guilt? Fear of being caught? "Find… her," he rasped, the words scraping his ravaged throat. His eyes, though clouded with pain and medication, burned with a terrifying intensity. He locked eyes with William, who had entered silently during Amanda’s tirade, his face grim. "Find Jessica… and Ghost. Bring them… to me." He took a shuddering breath, summoning every ounce of his fading strength. "Alive. I will… kill her… myself." The command hung in the sterile air, heavy with finality. William nodded curtly, his own expression hardened by Amanda’s narrative and his boss’s suffering. "Consider it done, Boss." Amanda leaned back, a flicker of triumph quickly masked by concern. "We checked the penthouse security immediately, Sebastian," she added smoothly. "Trying to find proof. But… the CCTV footage from the kitchen and balcony during that time… it’s gone. Deleted. No traces left." She shook her head sadly. "She covered her tracks well. Ghost must have helped her erase it." The missing footage felt like the final nail. Paranoia, a familiar old friend, crept in. *How could she? Why?* The questions screamed in his mind, drowned out by the roar of betrayal. "I gave her… everything," he whispered, the words laced with bewildered agony. "Everything…" The image of her family, safe in the mansion he’d given them, flashed in his mind. "The family…" he managed. "Leave them… in the house. Guarded. But… untouched." It was a concession to a past love, a lingering doubt he couldn’t fully quash, even amidst his fury. He ignored Amanda’s immediate, sharp protest. "But Sebastian! They could be involved! They—" "Leave them!" he growled, the effort sending a spasm of pain through him. His order stood. Jessica’s family remained under house arrest, but protected, a confusing testament to the war raging within him. Miles away, in a small, sun-drenched village house nestled among palm trees and vibrant bougainvillea, Jessica existed in a state of suspended terror. Ghost’s fiancée, Chioma, a woman with kind eyes and hands hardened by work, had become her unexpected guardian angel. The modest house, a world away from Scar’s penthouse luxury, was a fragile sanctuary. Days bled into each other, filled with gnawing fear for Sebastian, crushing guilt over her family’s imprisonment, and the paralyzing knowledge that she was hunted. She scanned local news on a burner phone Ghost provided, dreading the headline announcing Scar’s death. The silence was almost worse. Then, the nausea started. Not the sharp anxiety she was used to, but a deep, rolling sickness that hit her most mornings. At first, she blamed the stress, the unfamiliar village food. But when it persisted, accompanied by a profound exhaustion and a strange tenderness in her breasts, a terrifying, wondrous possibility began to dawn. One morning, after retching into a basin behind the small house, Chioma found her pale and trembling. The older woman took one look at her, her gaze softening with sudden understanding. Without a word, she disappeared into the village market and returned an hour later, pressing a small, unmarked paper packet into Jessica’s hand. Inside was a simple pregnancy test. Hands shaking, Jessica locked herself in the tiny bathroom. The wait for the result felt like an eternity. She stared at the small plastic window, her heart hammering against her ribs, her mind a whirlwind of fear and impossible hope. Then, two clear, unmistakable lines appeared. Pregnant. The world tilted. She sank onto the cool concrete floor, the test clutched in her hand. Sebastian’s child. Conceived in the deep, healing love they’d shared after Amanda’s first assault, before the poison, before the betrayal. A life growing inside her while its father lay poisoned, believing she’d tried to kill him, vowing to end her life himself. Terror threatened to engulf her. They were fugitives. Hunted. Scar wanted her dead. Amanda wanted her destroyed. How could she bring a child into this nightmare? How could she protect it? But then, gazing at those two lines, a fierce, primal resolve ignited within her, burning away the despair. This wasn't just about her anymore. This was about their child. Scar’s heir. The living proof of their love, conceived before the poison, before the lies. She placed a trembling hand on her still-flat stomach. The fear didn't vanish, but it was joined by a steely determination. She couldn't run forever. She couldn't let her child be born into a life of hiding, branded by its mother's supposed crime. She had to clear her name. Not just for herself, not just for Sebastian, but for this tiny, fragile life growing inside her. She had to prove her innocence. Find the real traitor. Expose Amanda. And she had to reach Sebastian, make him see the truth, before his rage or Amanda’s schemes destroyed them all. For the sake of their child, she had to fight. Or they would all die – her, the baby, Sebastian, consumed by the poisonous lies. Emerging from the bathroom, Jessica met Chioma’s knowing gaze. There were no words. Jessica simply nodded, her eyes no longer filled with just fear, but with the fierce, terrifying light of a mother’s resolve. The hunted woman was gone. In her place stood a lioness, ready to fight for her cub and its father, even if the father himself held the gun. The battle for truth, for love, and for the future of their child had truly begun. TO BE CONTINUED...
    Wow
    1
    1 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 206 Views
  • HOW DISCIPLINE HELPS YOUR SUCCESS

    Many at times, after setting an alarm to determine when you will wake up in the morning, you go to sleep.

    The next morning, when the alarm starts ringing, not feeling like you want to wake up just yet, you get up and turn off the alarm only to go back to sleep.

    Then you sleep and when you wake up again, another two hours is gone and you have lost the time you were supposed to use to do the things you wanted to do.

    There are also a lot of people, who set diet and fitness goals, using a diet and fitness plan.

    Such a plan may include not eating in the morning, or at certain times of the day, and not eating junks and certain types of food.

    However, when early in the morning their nostrils perceive the aroma of something delicious coming out of the kitchen, they lose their plans and go out to eat.

    Or sometimes, when they come across junks that look really tasty, they begin to salivate and over time, they indulge.

    Why do people behave like this?

    Because majority of the human population lack the discipline that will make them stay consistent in doing the things they plan to do.

    And since they can't discipline themselves enough to work for themselves, they end up having to work for other people, because a business in the hand of an undisciplined person will soon fail.

    No matter what success principles or knowledge or strategy you learn, if you lack discipline, it will all fail because it take discipline to make you do the things you said you will do.

    Without discipline, you will start deferring tasks you don't like, and pushing back on things you don't want to do, even though you know that they are essential to your success.

    Listen, if you are going to start and scale your business, part of what you must know is that you will have to do things you don't really like, or want to do.

    Consider doing such a sacrifice for your future, so that your financial life can survive and thrive.

    Remember, there is no success without discipline.

    The more disciplined you are, the more you will have the capacity to build success.

    Hard work is nothing but a fruit of discipline, so if you lack discipline, you can't even be hardworking.

    © Emmanuel Salem
    HOW DISCIPLINE HELPS YOUR SUCCESS Many at times, after setting an alarm to determine when you will wake up in the morning, you go to sleep. The next morning, when the alarm starts ringing, not feeling like you want to wake up just yet, you get up and turn off the alarm only to go back to sleep. Then you sleep and when you wake up again, another two hours is gone and you have lost the time you were supposed to use to do the things you wanted to do. There are also a lot of people, who set diet and fitness goals, using a diet and fitness plan. Such a plan may include not eating in the morning, or at certain times of the day, and not eating junks and certain types of food. However, when early in the morning their nostrils perceive the aroma of something delicious coming out of the kitchen, they lose their plans and go out to eat. Or sometimes, when they come across junks that look really tasty, they begin to salivate and over time, they indulge. Why do people behave like this? Because majority of the human population lack the discipline that will make them stay consistent in doing the things they plan to do. And since they can't discipline themselves enough to work for themselves, they end up having to work for other people, because a business in the hand of an undisciplined person will soon fail. No matter what success principles or knowledge or strategy you learn, if you lack discipline, it will all fail because it take discipline to make you do the things you said you will do. Without discipline, you will start deferring tasks you don't like, and pushing back on things you don't want to do, even though you know that they are essential to your success. Listen, if you are going to start and scale your business, part of what you must know is that you will have to do things you don't really like, or want to do. Consider doing such a sacrifice for your future, so that your financial life can survive and thrive. Remember, there is no success without discipline. The more disciplined you are, the more you will have the capacity to build success. Hard work is nothing but a fruit of discipline, so if you lack discipline, you can't even be hardworking. © Emmanuel Salem
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 131 Views
  • "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate."
    She was “just the help.”
    She served their meals but ate leftovers.
    She washed their clothes but wore rags.
    But one day…
    She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless.

    She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry
    Written by Rosyworld CRN

    1999. Lagos, Nigeria.

    Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family.

    Her job?
    Clean the house.
    Fetch water.
    Cook.
    Wash.
    Repeat.

    She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch.
    Not allowed to eat with the children.
    She ate on the kitchen floor.
    Sometimes slept near the store room.

    They said:

    “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.”

    But she was kind.
    Obedient.
    And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin.

    One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said:

    “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?”

    She smiled and said:

    “Maybe one day, God will.”

    After four years, she was sent back to her village.
    No certificate.
    No savings.
    No promise.

    But Amarachi didn’t stop.

    She farmed.
    Saved.
    Taught children.
    Got into a polytechnic.
    Graduated in business.
    Started a food brand.
    Expanded into export.

    By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria.

    ---

    One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor.

    She made a call.

    Used her married name.

    They invited her… not knowing who she was.

    On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace.

    The family froze.

    Chidera blinked.

    The father gasped.

    She smiled and said:

    “25 years ago, I served your food in silence.
    Today, I came to serve your future with love.”

    She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation.

    Then added:

    “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance.
    Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.”

    The hall fell silent.

    Even Chidera wept.

    Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered:

    “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at…
    God gave me the tools to build my own.”

    She didn’t come to repay pain.
    She came to rewrite history.

    Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen…
    Returns to fund the banquet.
    "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate." She was “just the help.” She served their meals but ate leftovers. She washed their clothes but wore rags. But one day… She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless. She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry Written by Rosyworld CRN 1999. Lagos, Nigeria. Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family. Her job? Clean the house. Fetch water. Cook. Wash. Repeat. She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch. Not allowed to eat with the children. She ate on the kitchen floor. Sometimes slept near the store room. They said: “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.” But she was kind. Obedient. And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin. One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said: “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?” She smiled and said: “Maybe one day, God will.” After four years, she was sent back to her village. No certificate. No savings. No promise. But Amarachi didn’t stop. She farmed. Saved. Taught children. Got into a polytechnic. Graduated in business. Started a food brand. Expanded into export. By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria. --- One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor. She made a call. Used her married name. They invited her… not knowing who she was. On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace. The family froze. Chidera blinked. The father gasped. She smiled and said: “25 years ago, I served your food in silence. Today, I came to serve your future with love.” She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation. Then added: “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance. Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.” The hall fell silent. Even Chidera wept. Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered: “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at… God gave me the tools to build my own.” She didn’t come to repay pain. She came to rewrite history. Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen… Returns to fund the banquet.
    0 Σχόλια 3 Μοιράστηκε 310 Views
  • "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate."
    She was “just the help.”
    She served their meals but ate leftovers.
    She washed their clothes but wore rags.
    But one day…
    She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless.

    She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry
    Written by Rosyworld CRN

    1999. Lagos, Nigeria.

    Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family.

    Her job?
    Clean the house.
    Fetch water.
    Cook.
    Wash.
    Repeat.

    She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch.
    Not allowed to eat with the children.
    She ate on the kitchen floor.
    Sometimes slept near the store room.

    They said:

    “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.”

    But she was kind.
    Obedient.
    And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin.

    One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said:

    “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?”

    She smiled and said:

    “Maybe one day, God will.”

    After four years, she was sent back to her village.
    No certificate.
    No savings.
    No promise.

    But Amarachi didn’t stop.

    She farmed.
    Saved.
    Taught children.
    Got into a polytechnic.
    Graduated in business.
    Started a food brand.
    Expanded into export.

    By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria.

    ---

    One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor.

    She made a call.

    Used her married name.

    They invited her… not knowing who she was.

    On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace.

    The family froze.

    Chidera blinked.

    The father gasped.

    She smiled and said:

    “25 years ago, I served your food in silence.
    Today, I came to serve your future with love.”

    She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation.

    Then added:

    “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance.
    Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.”

    The hall fell silent.

    Even Chidera wept.

    Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered:

    “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at…
    God gave me the tools to build my own.”

    She didn’t come to repay pain.
    She came to rewrite history.

    Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen…
    Returns to fund the banquet.
    "They told her to wait in the corridor while the family ate." She was “just the help.” She served their meals but ate leftovers. She washed their clothes but wore rags. But one day… She knocked on their door — not to beg, but to bless. She Was the House Girl Who Wasn’t Allowed to Eat at the Table — 25 Years Later, She Returned With a Surprise That Made the Whole Family Cry Written by Rosyworld CRN 1999. Lagos, Nigeria. Amarachi was 13 when she was sent from her village to Lagos to work as a housemaid for the Okoye family. Her job? Clean the house. Fetch water. Cook. Wash. Repeat. She wasn’t allowed to sit on the couch. Not allowed to eat with the children. She ate on the kitchen floor. Sometimes slept near the store room. They said: “Know your place. You’re lucky to be here.” But she was kind. Obedient. And every night, she read old textbooks she found in the bin. One of the children, Chidera, once caught her studying and said: “You? School? Who will pay for your brain?” She smiled and said: “Maybe one day, God will.” After four years, she was sent back to her village. No certificate. No savings. No promise. But Amarachi didn’t stop. She farmed. Saved. Taught children. Got into a polytechnic. Graduated in business. Started a food brand. Expanded into export. By 2024, she became one of the leading agro-entrepreneurs in Southern Nigeria. --- One day, she saw a social media post — the Okoye family was launching a foundation and needed a major sponsor. She made a call. Used her married name. They invited her… not knowing who she was. On the day of the launch, she walked in — head high, dressed in white lace. The family froze. Chidera blinked. The father gasped. She smiled and said: “25 years ago, I served your food in silence. Today, I came to serve your future with love.” She handed them a cheque — ₦20 million donation to the foundation. Then added: “This is not revenge. It’s remembrance. Because the girl you ignored… grew in grace.” The hall fell silent. Even Chidera wept. Amarachi turned, hugged the family’s grandmother, and whispered: “The table I once wasn’t allowed to sit at… God gave me the tools to build my own.” She didn’t come to repay pain. She came to rewrite history. Because sometimes, the girl they made eat in the kitchen… Returns to fund the banquet.
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 197 Views
Αναζήτηση αποτελεσμάτων