• > *Pen On Paper Examination Schedule for (Friday 13 June 2025)*

    *8:30am Papers:*

    * *ACC411* - Auditing II
    * *AEM504* - Rural Community Development
    * *ARD504* - Rural Community Development
    * *BED416* - Office Organization And Management
    * *BIO308* - Biogeography
    * *CHM424* - Non Aqueous Solvents
    * *CIT831* - Software Engineering Methodologies
    * *CRS412* - Gospel Of Matthew
    * *CRS826* - Greek Exegesis
    * *CSS331* - Methods Of Social Research
    * *ECO440* - Taxation And Fiscal Policy
    * *EDU822* - Advanced Educationalpsychology
    * *ENG419* - African Literature And Gender
    * *ENT709* - Start Up Funding
    * *HED324* - Vital Statistics In Health Education
    * *JIL819* - International Maritime Law I
    * *JLS814* - Communication Research
    * *LIS318* - Database Design And Management
    * *LIS415* - Bibliography in Subject Areas
    * *MAC413* - Data Analysis In Mass Communication
    * *MPA812* - Intergovernmental Relations (Igr)
    * *NSC504* - Monitoring And Evaluation Of Health
    * *PAD812* - Intergovernmental Relations(Igr)
    * *PHS803* - Principles Of Epidemiology 1
    * *YOR371* - Varieties of Poetry in Yoruba

    *11am Papers:*

    * *ACC418* - Public Sector Accounting And Financ
    * *AEA304* - Agricultural Marketing And Price
    * *ANP309* - Analytical Technique For Animal Pro
    * *BIO413* - Developmental Biology
    * *CIT305* - Networking And Communication Techno
    * *CRP512* - Crop Evolution And Adaptation
    * *CRS771* - Research Methods
    * *CRS860* - African Philosophy
    * *CSS791* - Emergency Riot And Disaster Control
    * *ECO347* - Development Economics I
    * *EDA842* - Appl. Of Managementinfor. Systems
    * *ENT707* - Project Finance And Budgeting
    * *FRE472* - Francophone Literature(Pre &Post In
    * *HCM431* - Advanced Food & Beverage Production
    * *IGB482* - Contemporary Prose Fiction In Igbo
    * *INR441* - Contemporary Strategic Studies
    * *ISL330* - Advanced Study Of Sawm And Hajj
    * *LED701* - Introduction to Legislative Drafting
    * *MKT825* - International Marketing
    * *MTH402* - General Topology II
    * *PHL321* - Contemporary Issues In Ethics
    * *PHS302* - Organization Of School Health
    * *PHY307* - Solid State Physics I
    * *POL326* - Environmental Politics
    * *PUL802* - Comparative Constitutional Law II

    *3pm Papers:*

    * *ARA323* - Arabic Novel
    * *BFN302* - Monetary Theory & Policy
    * *CHM309* - Organic Spectroscopy
    * *CIT478* - Artificial Intelligence
    * *CRP310* - Harvesting Processing And Storage O
    * *CRS841* - God and Revelation
    * *CSS452* - Victims Of Crime And Human Rights V
    * *ECE422* - The School Environment And The Chil
    * *ECO713* - Applied Econometrics
    * *EDU766* - Political Science Methods
    * *EHS303* - General Parasitology
    * *ENG833* - Pragmatics (Eng. Lang. Specialization)
    * *ENT415* - Technology Entrepreneurship And Int
    * *ESM405* - Environmental Protection Agencies:
    * *HAU303* - Syntax Of Hausa II
    * *HAU401* - Advanced Hausa Phonology
    * *HED438* - Ageing & Death
    * *INR321* - Foreign Policy Analysis
    * *MKT859* - Industrial Marketing
    * *NSC403* - Leadership And Management In Health
    * *PAD712* - Administrative Theory
    * *SED329* - Integrated Science Workshop
    * *TSM442* - Tourism Entrepreneurship
    * *YOR413* - Social Institutions and Material Culture of the Yoruba People

    Best wishes for your exams! Stay focused, believe in yourself, and remember that your hard work and preparation will guide you to success.

    1. *Course Summary:* https://puredu.net/noun-course-summary-request

    2. *Past Questions:* https://puredu.net/noun-past-questions

    3. *Course Materials:* https://puredu.net/noun-e-courseware

    4. *Personalized Timetable:* https://puredu.net/noun-personalised-exam-table

    5. *Whatsapp Updates:* https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va9Yu4nBadmgFsl1QH2T

    _Good luck and may success be your companion!_
    > *Pen On Paper Examination Schedule for (Friday 13 June 2025)* *8:30am Papers:* * *ACC411* - Auditing II * *AEM504* - Rural Community Development * *ARD504* - Rural Community Development * *BED416* - Office Organization And Management * *BIO308* - Biogeography * *CHM424* - Non Aqueous Solvents * *CIT831* - Software Engineering Methodologies * *CRS412* - Gospel Of Matthew * *CRS826* - Greek Exegesis * *CSS331* - Methods Of Social Research * *ECO440* - Taxation And Fiscal Policy * *EDU822* - Advanced Educationalpsychology * *ENG419* - African Literature And Gender * *ENT709* - Start Up Funding * *HED324* - Vital Statistics In Health Education * *JIL819* - International Maritime Law I * *JLS814* - Communication Research * *LIS318* - Database Design And Management * *LIS415* - Bibliography in Subject Areas * *MAC413* - Data Analysis In Mass Communication * *MPA812* - Intergovernmental Relations (Igr) * *NSC504* - Monitoring And Evaluation Of Health * *PAD812* - Intergovernmental Relations(Igr) * *PHS803* - Principles Of Epidemiology 1 * *YOR371* - Varieties of Poetry in Yoruba *11am Papers:* * *ACC418* - Public Sector Accounting And Financ * *AEA304* - Agricultural Marketing And Price * *ANP309* - Analytical Technique For Animal Pro * *BIO413* - Developmental Biology * *CIT305* - Networking And Communication Techno * *CRP512* - Crop Evolution And Adaptation * *CRS771* - Research Methods * *CRS860* - African Philosophy * *CSS791* - Emergency Riot And Disaster Control * *ECO347* - Development Economics I * *EDA842* - Appl. Of Managementinfor. Systems * *ENT707* - Project Finance And Budgeting * *FRE472* - Francophone Literature(Pre &Post In * *HCM431* - Advanced Food & Beverage Production * *IGB482* - Contemporary Prose Fiction In Igbo * *INR441* - Contemporary Strategic Studies * *ISL330* - Advanced Study Of Sawm And Hajj * *LED701* - Introduction to Legislative Drafting * *MKT825* - International Marketing * *MTH402* - General Topology II * *PHL321* - Contemporary Issues In Ethics * *PHS302* - Organization Of School Health * *PHY307* - Solid State Physics I * *POL326* - Environmental Politics * *PUL802* - Comparative Constitutional Law II *3pm Papers:* * *ARA323* - Arabic Novel * *BFN302* - Monetary Theory & Policy * *CHM309* - Organic Spectroscopy * *CIT478* - Artificial Intelligence * *CRP310* - Harvesting Processing And Storage O * *CRS841* - God and Revelation * *CSS452* - Victims Of Crime And Human Rights V * *ECE422* - The School Environment And The Chil * *ECO713* - Applied Econometrics * *EDU766* - Political Science Methods * *EHS303* - General Parasitology * *ENG833* - Pragmatics (Eng. Lang. Specialization) * *ENT415* - Technology Entrepreneurship And Int * *ESM405* - Environmental Protection Agencies: * *HAU303* - Syntax Of Hausa II * *HAU401* - Advanced Hausa Phonology * *HED438* - Ageing & Death * *INR321* - Foreign Policy Analysis * *MKT859* - Industrial Marketing * *NSC403* - Leadership And Management In Health * *PAD712* - Administrative Theory * *SED329* - Integrated Science Workshop * *TSM442* - Tourism Entrepreneurship * *YOR413* - Social Institutions and Material Culture of the Yoruba People Best wishes for your exams! Stay focused, believe in yourself, and remember that your hard work and preparation will guide you to success. 1. *Course Summary:* https://puredu.net/noun-course-summary-request 2. *Past Questions:* https://puredu.net/noun-past-questions 3. *Course Materials:* https://puredu.net/noun-e-courseware 4. *Personalized Timetable:* https://puredu.net/noun-personalised-exam-table 5. *Whatsapp Updates:* https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va9Yu4nBadmgFsl1QH2T _Good luck and may success be your companion!_
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  • *SOME NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER HEADLINES+, 12/06/2025*

    Democracy Day tension: Protesters mobilise as Tinubu addresses NASS

    JUNE 12: Police, CSOs agree on peaceful protest, single venue in Lagos

    Nigeria records N5.17 trn trade surplus in Q1

    Floods ravage 180,000 farms across 30 states

    Mokwa flood: NHRC seeks enhanced disaster preparedness, IDPs’ protection

    OPS pushes for refinery sell-off after $2.4bn wobbly repairs

    Plateau Attacks: 8 killed, dozens of homes razed in Mangu

    Air Peace extorting Nigerians, Oshiomhole speaks on airport incident

    UN flags 138 million kids in global child labour crisis

    Protests spread across US despite Trump threats

    Nigeria defaults in UN contributions, pays only 36%

    Ethiopia, Turkey deny owing ground rent in Abuja, pledge cooperation

    US court jails Nigerian for deadly sextortion of teen girl

    ---------------------------
    *DID YOU KNOW?*

    * If you live in the northern hemisphere, then June 21st is the longest day of the year. If you live in the southern hemisphere, then the 21st is the shortest day of the year.

    * All clown fish are born male and can become female later in life.
    ---------------------------

    Tinubu woos Wike to join APC

    Tourism has potential to enhance local entrepreneurship – Shettima

    National Assembly mulls extension of 2024 budget capital vote

    Democracy strongest when people are involved, says Abbas

    Natasha: Appeal Court strikes out Akpabio’s motions, imposes N100,000 fine

    Court orders Eko Disco to restore power to Lagos hotel

    11 to face trial for Internet fraud in Kaduna

    Insecurity: Police arrest 42 armed herders, bandits in Benue

    Federal Civil Service to go paperless by December 2025, says FG

    Blackout alert: FG commences crucial grid servicing

    Fed Govt reviewing legislations to address child labour – Minister

    N5bn oil-backed deal with Aramco has not collapsed, says FG

    No extension of BDC recapitalisation deadline – CBN

    FCCPC inaugurates joint market monitoring task force

    Container congestion: NPA enforces use of holding bays

    CBEX remains banned in Nigeria – SEC

    UBEC raises quality assurance matching grant to 5%

    NIHOTOUR enforces certification law, targets non-compliant hotels in Lagos

    ABUAD secures N480m research equipment boost

    Abiola Ajimobi Technical University secures full NUC accreditation for all six programmes

    UNILAG, Bakare’s CSG launch leadership diploma, slash tuition

    Democracy declining under APC — PDP, Afenifere, Ohanaeze, ACF, others

    Southern Kaduna leaders demand judicial probe of El-Rufai over alleged abuses

    Civil rule has come to stay, says Falae

    Democracy Day: Utomi urges Nigerians to reject ‘thugs masquerading as leaders’

    Amaechi slams Tinubu’s policies in fresh outburst

    ₦39bn ICC renovation misplaced priority — Peter Obi

    June 12: Bode George urges Tinubu to reinstate Fubara

    Eno defection illegal, says A’Ibom PDP chieftain

    2027: Anti-Tinubu’s coalition will fail, Wike declares

    Sanwo-Olu unveils housing estate, 400m road in Ibeju-Lekki

    Rivers 2025 budget plans for Fubara’s return – Ibas

    Nasarawa not involved in Benue killings – Sule

    Our intervention on Benin-Abuja highway reduced travel time, says Okpebholo

    Makinde approves N1bn gratuity for retired LG staff, others

    Nigeria not where it should be – Niger gov

    Delta commissioner bags Kwame Nkrumah award

    Cross River plans new airport to boost tourism

    LASG slams N20m fine on unlicensed electricity firms

    Jigawa, Kano, Katsina join forces against polio

    Anambra 2025: Govt agency imposes N50m on 16 governorship candidates

    Anambra CP orders detention of three policemen over corruption

    Katsina suspends NURTW chair over road closure alert

    Kaduna vows crackdown on criminal gangs

    New 7.5kv solar power system inaugurated in A’Ibom community

    Anioma group donates 50 solar streetlights to Delta community

    Edo community protests removal, appointment of new king

    Lamentation as night fire destroys goods in Rivers market

    Two killed, one injured in Kwara hotel collapse

    Petrol tanker catches fire near NASFAT camp on Lagos-Ibadan expressway

    ---------------------------

    *TODAY IN HISTORY*

    * On this day in 1964, Nelson Mandela was sentenced to life in prison. The South African anti-apartheid activist spent 27 years in prison. In 1993, he received the Nobel Peace Prize and one year later, he became President of South Africa.

    ---------------------------

    If there is no struggle, there is no progress. – Frederick Douglass

    Happy Democracy Day


    *Compiled by Hon. Osuji George [email protected], +234-8122200446*
    *SOME NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER HEADLINES+, 12/06/2025* Democracy Day tension: Protesters mobilise as Tinubu addresses NASS JUNE 12: Police, CSOs agree on peaceful protest, single venue in Lagos Nigeria records N5.17 trn trade surplus in Q1 Floods ravage 180,000 farms across 30 states Mokwa flood: NHRC seeks enhanced disaster preparedness, IDPs’ protection OPS pushes for refinery sell-off after $2.4bn wobbly repairs Plateau Attacks: 8 killed, dozens of homes razed in Mangu Air Peace extorting Nigerians, Oshiomhole speaks on airport incident UN flags 138 million kids in global child labour crisis Protests spread across US despite Trump threats Nigeria defaults in UN contributions, pays only 36% Ethiopia, Turkey deny owing ground rent in Abuja, pledge cooperation US court jails Nigerian for deadly sextortion of teen girl --------------------------- *DID YOU KNOW?* * If you live in the northern hemisphere, then June 21st is the longest day of the year. If you live in the southern hemisphere, then the 21st is the shortest day of the year. * All clown fish are born male and can become female later in life. --------------------------- Tinubu woos Wike to join APC Tourism has potential to enhance local entrepreneurship – Shettima National Assembly mulls extension of 2024 budget capital vote Democracy strongest when people are involved, says Abbas Natasha: Appeal Court strikes out Akpabio’s motions, imposes N100,000 fine Court orders Eko Disco to restore power to Lagos hotel 11 to face trial for Internet fraud in Kaduna Insecurity: Police arrest 42 armed herders, bandits in Benue Federal Civil Service to go paperless by December 2025, says FG Blackout alert: FG commences crucial grid servicing Fed Govt reviewing legislations to address child labour – Minister N5bn oil-backed deal with Aramco has not collapsed, says FG No extension of BDC recapitalisation deadline – CBN FCCPC inaugurates joint market monitoring task force Container congestion: NPA enforces use of holding bays CBEX remains banned in Nigeria – SEC UBEC raises quality assurance matching grant to 5% NIHOTOUR enforces certification law, targets non-compliant hotels in Lagos ABUAD secures N480m research equipment boost Abiola Ajimobi Technical University secures full NUC accreditation for all six programmes UNILAG, Bakare’s CSG launch leadership diploma, slash tuition Democracy declining under APC — PDP, Afenifere, Ohanaeze, ACF, others Southern Kaduna leaders demand judicial probe of El-Rufai over alleged abuses Civil rule has come to stay, says Falae Democracy Day: Utomi urges Nigerians to reject ‘thugs masquerading as leaders’ Amaechi slams Tinubu’s policies in fresh outburst ₦39bn ICC renovation misplaced priority — Peter Obi June 12: Bode George urges Tinubu to reinstate Fubara Eno defection illegal, says A’Ibom PDP chieftain 2027: Anti-Tinubu’s coalition will fail, Wike declares Sanwo-Olu unveils housing estate, 400m road in Ibeju-Lekki Rivers 2025 budget plans for Fubara’s return – Ibas Nasarawa not involved in Benue killings – Sule Our intervention on Benin-Abuja highway reduced travel time, says Okpebholo Makinde approves N1bn gratuity for retired LG staff, others Nigeria not where it should be – Niger gov Delta commissioner bags Kwame Nkrumah award Cross River plans new airport to boost tourism LASG slams N20m fine on unlicensed electricity firms Jigawa, Kano, Katsina join forces against polio Anambra 2025: Govt agency imposes N50m on 16 governorship candidates Anambra CP orders detention of three policemen over corruption Katsina suspends NURTW chair over road closure alert Kaduna vows crackdown on criminal gangs New 7.5kv solar power system inaugurated in A’Ibom community Anioma group donates 50 solar streetlights to Delta community Edo community protests removal, appointment of new king Lamentation as night fire destroys goods in Rivers market Two killed, one injured in Kwara hotel collapse Petrol tanker catches fire near NASFAT camp on Lagos-Ibadan expressway --------------------------- *TODAY IN HISTORY* * On this day in 1964, Nelson Mandela was sentenced to life in prison. The South African anti-apartheid activist spent 27 years in prison. In 1993, he received the Nobel Peace Prize and one year later, he became President of South Africa. --------------------------- If there is no struggle, there is no progress. – Frederick Douglass Happy Democracy Day *Compiled by Hon. Osuji George [email protected], +234-8122200446*
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  • Vanity and Waste Tinubu’s N39bn ICC Renovation and the Shame of Extravagance

    At a time when Nigerians are groaning under the weight of inflation, food insecurity, joblessness, and decaying infrastructure, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s decision to spend ₦39 billion renovating the International Conference Centre (ICC), Abuja, and then renaming it after himself is a stunning act of self-indulgence and tone-deaf leadership.

    The ICC was originally constructed in 1991 by Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida at a cost of just ₦240 million. Adjusted for over three decades of inflation, the cost of building a brand new, state-of-the-art conference centre today would be between ₦25 billion and ₦30 billion. That the government spent ₦39 billion merely to renovate the old one without major expansion or technological overhaul exposes just how bloated and questionable the expenditure truly is.

    More insultingly, Babangida never named the centre after himself, even though he initiated and completed it. Tinubu, however, after refurbishing it, decided to stamp his name on it converting a national landmark into a personal monument. It reeks of egotism and disrespect for public trust.

    The ICC project is only one in a disturbing pattern of vanity-driven and excessive spending under this administration.

    The Lagos to Calabar Coastal Highway, an ambitious 700-kilometre project, is has been awarded at staggering costs of ₦15 trillion, with only about 30 kilometres completed so far. It has displaced communities, triggered public outrage, and remains a drain on already overstretched national resources.

    Adding to the spree, the presidency recently acquired a new Airbus A330 aircraft for $100 million, despite an already oversized presidential fleet. At a time when the naira is battered and millions cannot afford transport fare, the government is buying luxury jets.

    Other wasteful allocations include:
       •   ₦5 billion to renovate Dodan Barracks, the President’s Lagos residence
       •   ₦4 billion for the Vice President’s Ikoyi residence
       •   ₦21 billion to complete the new official residence of the Vice President
       •   ₦5 billion for a presidential yacht, smuggled into the 2023 supplementary budget

    To the government’s credit, the minimum wage issue has been resolved, and workers are receiving their new pay. But this gain is overshadowed by a mountain of unpaid pensions, leaving retirees in penury, and the unfulfilled agreement with ASUU, which remains a bull in a china shop threatening to plunge the university system into fresh chaos.

    The administration claims to be building a legacy. But legacy is not about plastering one’s name on public buildings or cruising on billion-naira yachts. True legacy lies in reviving industries tackling insecurity and building new legacies anchored on inclusion, accountability, and shared prosperity.

    At a time like this, every naira must count. Nigeria cannot afford to spend like a wealthy nation while borrowing to survive.

    This is not responsible leadership.
    It is reckless indulgence.
    And Nigeria deserves better.
    Vanity and Waste Tinubu’s N39bn ICC Renovation and the Shame of Extravagance At a time when Nigerians are groaning under the weight of inflation, food insecurity, joblessness, and decaying infrastructure, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s decision to spend ₦39 billion renovating the International Conference Centre (ICC), Abuja, and then renaming it after himself is a stunning act of self-indulgence and tone-deaf leadership. The ICC was originally constructed in 1991 by Gen. Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida at a cost of just ₦240 million. Adjusted for over three decades of inflation, the cost of building a brand new, state-of-the-art conference centre today would be between ₦25 billion and ₦30 billion. That the government spent ₦39 billion merely to renovate the old one without major expansion or technological overhaul exposes just how bloated and questionable the expenditure truly is. More insultingly, Babangida never named the centre after himself, even though he initiated and completed it. Tinubu, however, after refurbishing it, decided to stamp his name on it converting a national landmark into a personal monument. It reeks of egotism and disrespect for public trust. The ICC project is only one in a disturbing pattern of vanity-driven and excessive spending under this administration. The Lagos to Calabar Coastal Highway, an ambitious 700-kilometre project, is has been awarded at staggering costs of ₦15 trillion, with only about 30 kilometres completed so far. It has displaced communities, triggered public outrage, and remains a drain on already overstretched national resources. Adding to the spree, the presidency recently acquired a new Airbus A330 aircraft for $100 million, despite an already oversized presidential fleet. At a time when the naira is battered and millions cannot afford transport fare, the government is buying luxury jets. Other wasteful allocations include:    •   ₦5 billion to renovate Dodan Barracks, the President’s Lagos residence    •   ₦4 billion for the Vice President’s Ikoyi residence    •   ₦21 billion to complete the new official residence of the Vice President    •   ₦5 billion for a presidential yacht, smuggled into the 2023 supplementary budget To the government’s credit, the minimum wage issue has been resolved, and workers are receiving their new pay. But this gain is overshadowed by a mountain of unpaid pensions, leaving retirees in penury, and the unfulfilled agreement with ASUU, which remains a bull in a china shop threatening to plunge the university system into fresh chaos. The administration claims to be building a legacy. But legacy is not about plastering one’s name on public buildings or cruising on billion-naira yachts. True legacy lies in reviving industries tackling insecurity and building new legacies anchored on inclusion, accountability, and shared prosperity. At a time like this, every naira must count. Nigeria cannot afford to spend like a wealthy nation while borrowing to survive. This is not responsible leadership. It is reckless indulgence. And Nigeria deserves better.
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  • Born on These 4 Dates? You're Destined for Wealth

    Numerology analyzes an individual’s behavior, characteristics, and career choices based on their birth date. The Life Path Number, derived from adding the digits of your birth date, plays a significant role in this analysis. Life Path Number 1 individuals are often seen as special, achieving notable success in both life and career.

    Lucky Birth Dates

    People born on the 1st, 10th, 19th, or 28th of any month have a Life Path Number of 1. This number is associated with the Sun’s energy, symbolizing confidence, leadership, and creativity. Those born on these dates are natural leaders.

    These individuals are confident, independent thinkers who draw others in with their unique personalities, leaving a lasting impression wherever they go. They embrace challenges and turn them into opportunities for success.

    However, their strong personalities can sometimes lead to stubbornness and arrogance. They may believe their way is the only correct way, occasionally overlooking the advice of others.

    Despite this, they have pure hearts and are always willing to help those in need. Their creativity often leads them to success in fields like art, writing, and other creative professions.

    Friendships and Relationships

    Life Path Number 1 individuals are loyal and respectful partners. While they deeply value their loved ones, they also cherish their independence within relationships. They expect mutual respect and understanding from their partners. However, their strong-willed nature, coupled with occasional stubbornness, may lead to conflicts. Maintaining balance and open communication is essential for a successful love life.

    Career Choices

    With ambitious goals, those with Life Path Number 1 are determined to achieve them. Careers that emphasize leadership, innovation, and independence are ideal. They excel in fields such as business, management, marketing, advertising, art, writing, and technology.

    Health

    While energetic and active, their dedication to their pursuits can lead to stress and fatigue. Practicing yoga, meditation, and regular exercise can help them maintain mental clarity. Their busy schedules might sometimes cause irregular eating habits, so it’s important for them to maintain a balanced diet and a healthy, active lifestyle.
    Born on These 4 Dates? You're Destined for Wealth Numerology analyzes an individual’s behavior, characteristics, and career choices based on their birth date. The Life Path Number, derived from adding the digits of your birth date, plays a significant role in this analysis. Life Path Number 1 individuals are often seen as special, achieving notable success in both life and career. Lucky Birth Dates People born on the 1st, 10th, 19th, or 28th of any month have a Life Path Number of 1. This number is associated with the Sun’s energy, symbolizing confidence, leadership, and creativity. Those born on these dates are natural leaders. These individuals are confident, independent thinkers who draw others in with their unique personalities, leaving a lasting impression wherever they go. They embrace challenges and turn them into opportunities for success. However, their strong personalities can sometimes lead to stubbornness and arrogance. They may believe their way is the only correct way, occasionally overlooking the advice of others. Despite this, they have pure hearts and are always willing to help those in need. Their creativity often leads them to success in fields like art, writing, and other creative professions. Friendships and Relationships Life Path Number 1 individuals are loyal and respectful partners. While they deeply value their loved ones, they also cherish their independence within relationships. They expect mutual respect and understanding from their partners. However, their strong-willed nature, coupled with occasional stubbornness, may lead to conflicts. Maintaining balance and open communication is essential for a successful love life. Career Choices With ambitious goals, those with Life Path Number 1 are determined to achieve them. Careers that emphasize leadership, innovation, and independence are ideal. They excel in fields such as business, management, marketing, advertising, art, writing, and technology. Health While energetic and active, their dedication to their pursuits can lead to stress and fatigue. Practicing yoga, meditation, and regular exercise can help them maintain mental clarity. Their busy schedules might sometimes cause irregular eating habits, so it’s important for them to maintain a balanced diet and a healthy, active lifestyle.
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  • A LONG READ

    How do we choose the people we fall in love with?

    The Romantic answer is that our instincts naturally guide us to individuals who are kind and good for us.

    Love is a sort of ecstasy that descends when we feel ourselves in the presence of a benign and nourishing soul, who will answer our emotional needs, understand our sadness and strengthen us for the hard tasks of our lives.

    In order to locate our lover, we must let our instincts carry us along, taking care never to impede them through pedantic psychological analysis and introspection or else considerations of status, wealth or lineage.

    Our feelings will tell us clearly enough when we have reached our destiny. To ask someone with any degree of rigour why exactly they have chosen a particular partner is – in the Romantic world-view – simply an unnecessary and offensive misunderstanding of love: true love is an instinct that accurately and naturally settles on those with a capacity to make us happy.

    The Romantic attitude sounds warm and kind. Its originators certainly imagined that it would bring an end to the sort of unhappy relationships previously brokered by parents and society. The only difficulty is that our obedience to instinct has, very often, proved to be a disaster of its own.

    Respecting the special feelings we get around certain people in nightclubs and train stations, parties and websites and that Romanticism so ably celebrated in art appears not to have led us to be any happier in our unions than a Medieval couple shackled into marriage by two royal courts keen to preserve the sovereignty of a slice of ancestral land. ‘Instinct’ has been little better than ‘calculation’ in underwriting the quality of our love stories.

    Romanticism would not at this point, however, give up the argument quite so easily. It would simply ascribe the difficulties we often have in love to not having looked hard enough for that central fixture of Romantic reverie: the right person. This being is inevitably still out there (every soul must have its soulmate, Romanticism assures us), it is just that we haven’t managed to track them down – yet.

    So we must continue the search, with all the technology and tenacity necessary, and maybe, once the divorce has come through and the house has been sold, we’ll get it right. But there’s another school of thought, this one influenced by psychoanalysis, which challenges the notion that instinct invariably draws us to those who will make us happy.

    The theory insists that we don’t fall in love first and foremost with those who care for us in ideal ways, we fall in love with those who care for us in familiar ways. Adult love emerges from a template of how we should be loved that was created in childhood and is likely to be entwined with a range of problematic compulsions that militate in key ways against our chances of growth.

    We may believe we are seeking happiness in love, but what we are really after is familiarity. We are looking to re-create, within our adult relationships, the very feelings we knew so well in childhood – and which were rarely limited to just tenderness and care.

    The love most of us will have tasted early on was confused with other, more destructive dynamics: feelings of wanting to help an adult who was out of control, of being deprived of a parent’s warmth or scared of his or her anger, or of not feeling secure enough to communicate our trickier wishes.

    How logical, then, that we should as adults find ourselves rejecting certain candidates not because they are wrong but because they are a little too right – in the sense of seeming somehow excessively balanced, mature, understanding and reliable – given that in our hearts, such rightness feels foreign and unearned.

    We chase after more exciting others, not in the belief that life with them will be more harmonious, but out of an unconscious sense that it will be reassuringly familiar in its patterns of frustration. Psychoanalysis calls the process whereby we identify our partners ‘object choice’ – and recommends that we try to understand the factors semi-consciously governing our attractions in order to interrupt the unhealthier patterns that might be at play.

    Our instincts – our strong undercurrents of attraction and revulsion – stem from complicated experiences we had when we were far too young to understand them, and which linger in the antechambers of our minds.

    Psychoanalysis doesn’t wish to suggest that everything about our attractions will be deformed. We may have quite legitimate aspirations to positive qualities: intelligence, charm, generosity… But we are also liable to be fatefully drawn towards trickier tendencies: someone who is often absent, or treats us with a little disdain, or needs to be surrounded all the time by friends, or cannot master their finances.

    However paradoxical it can sound, without these tricky behaviours, we may simply not be able to feel passionate or tender with someone.

    Alternatively, we may have been so traumatised by a parental figure, we cannot approach any partner who shares qualities with them of any kind, even ones disconnected from their negative sides. We might in love be rigidly intolerant of anyone who is intelligent, or punctual or interested in science, simply because these were the traits of someone who caused us a great deal of difficulty early on.

    To choose our partners wisely, we need to tease out how our compulsions to suffering or our rigid flights from trauma may be playing themselves out in our feelings of attraction. A useful starting place is to ask ourselves (perhaps in the company of a large sheet of paper, a pen and a free afternoon) what sort of people really put us off.

    Revulsion and disgust are useful first guides because we are likely to recognize that some of the traits that make us shiver are not objectively negative and yet feel to us distinctly off-putting. We might, for example, sense that someone who asks us too much about ourselves, or is very tender or dependable, will seem extremely eerie and frightening.

    And we might equally well, along the way, recognize that a degree of cruelty or distance belong to an odd list of the things we appear genuinely to need in order to love. It can be tricky to avoid self-censorship here, but the point isn’t to represent ourselves as reassuring, predictable people, but to get to know the curious quirks of our own psyches.

    We’ll tend to find that some ostensibly pretty nice things are getting caught in our love filters: people who are eloquent, clever, reliable, sunny can set off loud alarms. This is vital knowledge. We should pause and try to fathom where the aversions come from, what aspects of our past have made it so hard for us to accept certain sorts of emotional nourishment.

    Each time we recognize a negative, we’re discovering a crucial association in our own minds: we’re alighting on an impossibility of love based on associations from the past projected onto the present. An additional way we can get at the associations which circulate powerfully in the less noticed corners of our brains is to finish stub-sentences, that invite us to respond to things that might charm or repel us about someone.

    We get to see our own reactions more clearly when we write things down without thinking too much about our answers, catching the mind’s unconscious at work.

    For instance, we can deliberately jot the first things that come into our heads when we read the following:
    • If I tell a partner how much I need them, they will…
    • When someone tells me they really need me, I…
    • If someone can’t cope, I…
    • When someone tells me to get my act together, I …
    • If I were to be frank about my anxieties …
    • If my partner told me not to worry, I’d…
    • When someone blames me unfairly, I …

    Our honestly described reactions are legacies. They are revealing underlying assumptions we have acquired about what love can look like. We may start to get a clearer picture that our vision of what we are looking for in another person might not be an especially good guide to our personal or mutual happiness.

    Examining our emotional histories, we see that we can’t be attracted to just anyone. Getting to know the past, we come to recognise our earlier associations for what they are: generalisations we formed – entirely understandably – on the basis of just one or, hugely impressive, examples.

    We’ve unknowingly turned some local associations into strict rules for relationships. Even if we can’t radically shift the pattern, it’s useful to know that we are carrying a ball and chain. It can make us more careful of ourselves when we feel overwhelmed by a certainty that we’ve met the one, after a few minutes chatting at the bar.

    Ultimately, we stand to be liberated to love different people to our initial ‘types’, because we find that the qualities we like, and the ones we very much fear, are found in different constellations from those we encountered in the people who first taught us about affection, long ago in a childhood we are starting at last to understand and free ourselves from.

    The Counsellor
    A LONG READ How do we choose the people we fall in love with? The Romantic answer is that our instincts naturally guide us to individuals who are kind and good for us. Love is a sort of ecstasy that descends when we feel ourselves in the presence of a benign and nourishing soul, who will answer our emotional needs, understand our sadness and strengthen us for the hard tasks of our lives. In order to locate our lover, we must let our instincts carry us along, taking care never to impede them through pedantic psychological analysis and introspection or else considerations of status, wealth or lineage. Our feelings will tell us clearly enough when we have reached our destiny. To ask someone with any degree of rigour why exactly they have chosen a particular partner is – in the Romantic world-view – simply an unnecessary and offensive misunderstanding of love: true love is an instinct that accurately and naturally settles on those with a capacity to make us happy. The Romantic attitude sounds warm and kind. Its originators certainly imagined that it would bring an end to the sort of unhappy relationships previously brokered by parents and society. The only difficulty is that our obedience to instinct has, very often, proved to be a disaster of its own. Respecting the special feelings we get around certain people in nightclubs and train stations, parties and websites and that Romanticism so ably celebrated in art appears not to have led us to be any happier in our unions than a Medieval couple shackled into marriage by two royal courts keen to preserve the sovereignty of a slice of ancestral land. ‘Instinct’ has been little better than ‘calculation’ in underwriting the quality of our love stories. Romanticism would not at this point, however, give up the argument quite so easily. It would simply ascribe the difficulties we often have in love to not having looked hard enough for that central fixture of Romantic reverie: the right person. This being is inevitably still out there (every soul must have its soulmate, Romanticism assures us), it is just that we haven’t managed to track them down – yet. So we must continue the search, with all the technology and tenacity necessary, and maybe, once the divorce has come through and the house has been sold, we’ll get it right. But there’s another school of thought, this one influenced by psychoanalysis, which challenges the notion that instinct invariably draws us to those who will make us happy. The theory insists that we don’t fall in love first and foremost with those who care for us in ideal ways, we fall in love with those who care for us in familiar ways. Adult love emerges from a template of how we should be loved that was created in childhood and is likely to be entwined with a range of problematic compulsions that militate in key ways against our chances of growth. We may believe we are seeking happiness in love, but what we are really after is familiarity. We are looking to re-create, within our adult relationships, the very feelings we knew so well in childhood – and which were rarely limited to just tenderness and care. The love most of us will have tasted early on was confused with other, more destructive dynamics: feelings of wanting to help an adult who was out of control, of being deprived of a parent’s warmth or scared of his or her anger, or of not feeling secure enough to communicate our trickier wishes. How logical, then, that we should as adults find ourselves rejecting certain candidates not because they are wrong but because they are a little too right – in the sense of seeming somehow excessively balanced, mature, understanding and reliable – given that in our hearts, such rightness feels foreign and unearned. We chase after more exciting others, not in the belief that life with them will be more harmonious, but out of an unconscious sense that it will be reassuringly familiar in its patterns of frustration. Psychoanalysis calls the process whereby we identify our partners ‘object choice’ – and recommends that we try to understand the factors semi-consciously governing our attractions in order to interrupt the unhealthier patterns that might be at play. Our instincts – our strong undercurrents of attraction and revulsion – stem from complicated experiences we had when we were far too young to understand them, and which linger in the antechambers of our minds. Psychoanalysis doesn’t wish to suggest that everything about our attractions will be deformed. We may have quite legitimate aspirations to positive qualities: intelligence, charm, generosity… But we are also liable to be fatefully drawn towards trickier tendencies: someone who is often absent, or treats us with a little disdain, or needs to be surrounded all the time by friends, or cannot master their finances. However paradoxical it can sound, without these tricky behaviours, we may simply not be able to feel passionate or tender with someone. Alternatively, we may have been so traumatised by a parental figure, we cannot approach any partner who shares qualities with them of any kind, even ones disconnected from their negative sides. We might in love be rigidly intolerant of anyone who is intelligent, or punctual or interested in science, simply because these were the traits of someone who caused us a great deal of difficulty early on. To choose our partners wisely, we need to tease out how our compulsions to suffering or our rigid flights from trauma may be playing themselves out in our feelings of attraction. A useful starting place is to ask ourselves (perhaps in the company of a large sheet of paper, a pen and a free afternoon) what sort of people really put us off. Revulsion and disgust are useful first guides because we are likely to recognize that some of the traits that make us shiver are not objectively negative and yet feel to us distinctly off-putting. We might, for example, sense that someone who asks us too much about ourselves, or is very tender or dependable, will seem extremely eerie and frightening. And we might equally well, along the way, recognize that a degree of cruelty or distance belong to an odd list of the things we appear genuinely to need in order to love. It can be tricky to avoid self-censorship here, but the point isn’t to represent ourselves as reassuring, predictable people, but to get to know the curious quirks of our own psyches. We’ll tend to find that some ostensibly pretty nice things are getting caught in our love filters: people who are eloquent, clever, reliable, sunny can set off loud alarms. This is vital knowledge. We should pause and try to fathom where the aversions come from, what aspects of our past have made it so hard for us to accept certain sorts of emotional nourishment. Each time we recognize a negative, we’re discovering a crucial association in our own minds: we’re alighting on an impossibility of love based on associations from the past projected onto the present. An additional way we can get at the associations which circulate powerfully in the less noticed corners of our brains is to finish stub-sentences, that invite us to respond to things that might charm or repel us about someone. We get to see our own reactions more clearly when we write things down without thinking too much about our answers, catching the mind’s unconscious at work. For instance, we can deliberately jot the first things that come into our heads when we read the following: • If I tell a partner how much I need them, they will… • When someone tells me they really need me, I… • If someone can’t cope, I… • When someone tells me to get my act together, I … • If I were to be frank about my anxieties … • If my partner told me not to worry, I’d… • When someone blames me unfairly, I … Our honestly described reactions are legacies. They are revealing underlying assumptions we have acquired about what love can look like. We may start to get a clearer picture that our vision of what we are looking for in another person might not be an especially good guide to our personal or mutual happiness. Examining our emotional histories, we see that we can’t be attracted to just anyone. Getting to know the past, we come to recognise our earlier associations for what they are: generalisations we formed – entirely understandably – on the basis of just one or, hugely impressive, examples. We’ve unknowingly turned some local associations into strict rules for relationships. Even if we can’t radically shift the pattern, it’s useful to know that we are carrying a ball and chain. It can make us more careful of ourselves when we feel overwhelmed by a certainty that we’ve met the one, after a few minutes chatting at the bar. Ultimately, we stand to be liberated to love different people to our initial ‘types’, because we find that the qualities we like, and the ones we very much fear, are found in different constellations from those we encountered in the people who first taught us about affection, long ago in a childhood we are starting at last to understand and free ourselves from. ©️The Counsellor
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  • Who Gave Arthur Eze Ozo Igbo Ndu Title?

    Prince Arthur Eze is widely celebrated and once honored with the title Ozo Igbo Ndu—“Savior of Igbo Life.” But does this title reflect the true economic impact of his business on Igboland? Who is he actually saving( Onye Ka Ona Azo)?

    Let’s look at the facts:

    Arthur Eze is a native of Ukpo, Anambra State.But his flagship companies—Atlas Petroleum International and Oranto Petroleum—are not located in Igboland.

    *The corporate headquarters is in Abuja (12 Chari Close, Maitama) While technical base is in Lagos (Lekki Phase 1). His companies operate across Africa, but not from the East, and there’s no known major office or industrial presence in the Igbo homeland.

    So we must ask; Can someone whose business contributes more to Abuja and Lagos than to Igboland truly be called Ozo Igbo Ndu?

    True economic salvation comes from those who build, invest, and empower directly within the region. Titles must reflect action. So i ask again , Onye Ka Ona Azo ?

    I am Awuzie Frankline - Just asking Honest question. Na God dey save my life now biko

    Who Gave Arthur Eze Ozo Igbo Ndu Title? Prince Arthur Eze is widely celebrated and once honored with the title Ozo Igbo Ndu—“Savior of Igbo Life.” But does this title reflect the true economic impact of his business on Igboland? Who is he actually saving( Onye Ka Ona Azo)? Let’s look at the facts: Arthur Eze is a native of Ukpo, Anambra State.But his flagship companies—Atlas Petroleum International and Oranto Petroleum—are not located in Igboland. *The corporate headquarters is in Abuja (12 Chari Close, Maitama) While technical base is in Lagos (Lekki Phase 1). His companies operate across Africa, but not from the East, and there’s no known major office or industrial presence in the Igbo homeland. So we must ask; Can someone whose business contributes more to Abuja and Lagos than to Igboland truly be called Ozo Igbo Ndu? True economic salvation comes from those who build, invest, and empower directly within the region. Titles must reflect action. So i ask again , Onye Ka Ona Azo ? I am Awuzie Frankline - Just asking Honest question. Na God dey save my life now biko 😂
    0 Comentários 1 Compartilhamentos 84 Visualizações
  • BREAKING NEWS:
    A CURE FOR HIV/AUDS HAS JUST BEEN FOUND
    A cure for HIV could be a step closer after researchers found a new way to force the virus out of hiding inside human cells.

    The virus’s ability to conceal itself inside certain white blood cells has been one of the main challenges for scientists looking for a cure. It means there is a reservoir of the HIV in the body, capable of reactivation, that neither the immune system nor drugs can tackle.

    Now researchers from the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Melbourne, have demonstrated a way to make the virus visible, paving the way to fully clear it from the body.

    It is based on mRNA technology, which came to prominence during the Covid-19 pandemic when it was used in vaccines made by Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech.

    In a paper published in Nature Communications, the researchers have shown for the first time that mRNA can be delivered into the cells where HIV is hiding, by encasing it in a tiny, specially formulated fat bubble. The mRNA then instructs the cells to reveal the virus.

    Globally, there are almost 40 million people living with HIV, who must take medication for the rest of their lives in order to suppress the virus and ensure they do not develop symptoms or transmit it. For many it remains deadly, with UNAids figures suggesting one person died of HIV every minute in 2023.

    It was “previously thought impossible” to deliver mRNA to the type of white blood cell that is home to HIV, said Dr Paula Cevaal, research fellow at the Doherty Institute and co-first author of the study, because those cells did not take up the fat bubbles, or lipid nanoparticles (LNPs), used to carry it.

    The team have developed a new type of LNP that those cells will accept, known as LNP X. She said: “Our hope is that this new nanoparticle design could be a new pathway to an HIV cure.”

    When a colleague first presented test results at the lab’s weekly meeting, Cevaal said, they seemed too good to be true.

    “We sent her back into the lab to repeat it, and she came back the next week with results that were equally good. So we had to believe it. And of course, since then, we’ve repeated it many, many, many more times.

    “We were overwhelmed by how [much of a] night and day difference it was – from not working before, and then all of a sudden it was working. And all of us were just sitting gasping like, ‘wow’.”

    Further research will be needed to determine whether revealing the virus is enough to allow the body’s immune system to deal with it, or whether the technology will need to be combined with other therapies to eliminate HIV from the body.
    #HIVawareness #HIV #hivprevention #hivcure
    BREAKING NEWS: A CURE FOR HIV/AUDS HAS JUST BEEN FOUND A cure for HIV could be a step closer after researchers found a new way to force the virus out of hiding inside human cells. The virus’s ability to conceal itself inside certain white blood cells has been one of the main challenges for scientists looking for a cure. It means there is a reservoir of the HIV in the body, capable of reactivation, that neither the immune system nor drugs can tackle. Now researchers from the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Melbourne, have demonstrated a way to make the virus visible, paving the way to fully clear it from the body. It is based on mRNA technology, which came to prominence during the Covid-19 pandemic when it was used in vaccines made by Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech. In a paper published in Nature Communications, the researchers have shown for the first time that mRNA can be delivered into the cells where HIV is hiding, by encasing it in a tiny, specially formulated fat bubble. The mRNA then instructs the cells to reveal the virus. Globally, there are almost 40 million people living with HIV, who must take medication for the rest of their lives in order to suppress the virus and ensure they do not develop symptoms or transmit it. For many it remains deadly, with UNAids figures suggesting one person died of HIV every minute in 2023. It was “previously thought impossible” to deliver mRNA to the type of white blood cell that is home to HIV, said Dr Paula Cevaal, research fellow at the Doherty Institute and co-first author of the study, because those cells did not take up the fat bubbles, or lipid nanoparticles (LNPs), used to carry it. The team have developed a new type of LNP that those cells will accept, known as LNP X. She said: “Our hope is that this new nanoparticle design could be a new pathway to an HIV cure.” When a colleague first presented test results at the lab’s weekly meeting, Cevaal said, they seemed too good to be true. “We sent her back into the lab to repeat it, and she came back the next week with results that were equally good. So we had to believe it. And of course, since then, we’ve repeated it many, many, many more times. “We were overwhelmed by how [much of a] night and day difference it was – from not working before, and then all of a sudden it was working. And all of us were just sitting gasping like, ‘wow’.” Further research will be needed to determine whether revealing the virus is enough to allow the body’s immune system to deal with it, or whether the technology will need to be combined with other therapies to eliminate HIV from the body. #HIVawareness #HIV #hivprevention #hivcure
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 123 Visualizações
  • *SOME NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER HEADLINES+, 11/06/2025*

    Tinubu returns to Abuja, inaugurates rehabilitated ICC

    Deadly flood: Niger communities battle stench from decaying corpses

    Mokwa flood: Borno, Taraba donate N350m to victims

    NiMet workers finally receive minimum wage

    NSCDC debunks fake recruitment on social media

    Naira appreciates to N1,600/$ in parallel market

    Trump unveils $1,000 investment accounts for newborn Americans

    US to restore some medical research grants, says Trump official

    17 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes near Gaza aid site

    Seven dead, schoolchildren missing as storm hits South Africa

    World Bank projects three-year steady economic growth for Nigeria

    Saudi’s Aramco delays Nigeria’s crude-backed $5bn loan

    Lagos court jails nine Chinese for cybercrimes

    19-year-old Nigerian artiste beaten to death in Ghana


    ---------------------------
    *DID YOU KNOW?*

    * Octopuses have three hearts and blue blood. Two hearts pump blood to the gills while one pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of the body. Their blood is blue because it uses copper to transport oxygen unlike the red blood of humans which is transported with iron.

    * Joal-Fadiouth, a district in Senegal, has an island and a beach entirely made of seashells.
    ---------------------------

    Tinubu mandates MDAs to pay for Abuja conference centre

    National Assembly mulls extension of 2024 budget capital vote

    Senate pushes to move presidential inauguration venue from Eagle Square to N’Assembly

    Petroleum subsidy was a scam, Nigeria can’t go back – Orji Kalu

    Alleged N5.2b fraud: Court rejects ex-JAMB Registrar’s no-case submission

    Court to hear suit on proposed sale of Lafarge

    Court jails Afriq System’s CEO, Michael, over alleged $854.4m, N590m fraud

    Indian, Dangote workers arraigned for diverting N4bn diesel

    Court jails three for vandalising IKEDC cables

    Woman jailed three years for child abuse in Ekiti

    Family, lawyer urge EFCC to release CBEX promoter

    Army kills terrorist kingpin, Jidda, others in Yobe, Borno

    NAF probes death of detained corporal

    Army celebrates troops battling insecurity in S’East

    Divestment key to oil sector growth- Lokpobiri

    FG to train 100,000 youths annually in forex trading

    FG budget cut leaves 1,500 health workers without pay

    FG eyes private capital for infrastructure at PPP summit

    SEC directs firms to honour unclaimed dividends

    Maritime bank to upgrade major shipyards – CEO

    Wike Renames International Conference Centre After Tinubu

    UNIJOS ready to host 2025 NUGA Games, says VC

    Gregory varsity inducts 83 medical doctors

    Ugosimba chieftaincy title for First Lady Tinubu in Enugu

    90% of Yoruba kings don’t believe in Yoruba gods — Seun Kuti

    My business collapsed after public criticism of pastors – Daddy Freeze

    No prayers can erase six million Igbo deaths, group tells Gowon

    Youths kick as gunmen kill 58, burn 82 houses in Plateau

    June 12: Ijaw youths ask Tinubu to restore democracy in Rivers

    Tinubu has failed to improve governance after Buhari’s era – Baba-Ahmed

    Diesel, petrol to cost more as four depot owners raise prices

    TAJBank signs agreement for N20bn Mudarabah Sukuk bond issuance

    Accion MfB opens new branch in Ilorin

    Local telecom operators spend $350m annually on diesel – Report

    Edo Line retruns 15 years after

    10 startups emerge winners of JusticeTechNG

    i-Fitness boosts expansion plan

    Reconcile or face impeachment, Rivers APC warns Fubara

    Obi, Otti responsible for our crisis, not Fed Govt, says LP

    We will police our votes in 2027, Obi vows

    Saraki, PDP reconciliation committee meet Makinde

    Power play: PDP convention caught in Wike-Makinde camps crossfire

    Ajayi, PDP set to appeal tribunal’s verdict affirming Aiyedatiwa

    Makinde, Speaker mourn Adefope

    Adeleke commiserates with Oke-IIa monarch over wife’s death

    Sanwo-Olu urges parents to instill values in children

    Ododo warns against politicising insecurities

    Mokwa flood: We don’t know where waters are coming from – Niger gov

    Residents seek intervention as erosion sacks nine Anambra villages

    Low turnout in Kano as civil servants resume

    Many escape death as petrol-laden tanker explodes in Oyo

    Pastor Adeboye visits Alaafin of Oyo

    Ondo traders get N43m, 150 solar lights to boost business

    1 Killed, 3 Abducted As Gunmen Invade Cashew Warehouse In Kwara

    Two Truck Drivers Gunned Down, Vehicles Set Ablaze In Imo


    ---------------------------

    *TODAY IN HISTORY*

    * On this day in 1994, Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola declared himself as Nigeria’s president in what is now known as the Epetedo Declaration. This was a year after the June 12, 1993, which it is now cofirmed he won, was annulled by the military regime of General Ibrahim Babangida. Less than 24 hours, he was arrested by the military government led by General Sani Abacha and detained without trial. He remained in custody till July 7, 1998 when he died under suspicious circumstances, just days after Abacha died.

    ---------------------------

    Put all excuses aside and remember this: YOU are capable. – Zig Ziglar

    *Compiled by Hon. Osuji George osujis@yahoo
    *SOME NIGERIAN NEWSPAPER HEADLINES+, 11/06/2025* Tinubu returns to Abuja, inaugurates rehabilitated ICC Deadly flood: Niger communities battle stench from decaying corpses Mokwa flood: Borno, Taraba donate N350m to victims NiMet workers finally receive minimum wage NSCDC debunks fake recruitment on social media Naira appreciates to N1,600/$ in parallel market Trump unveils $1,000 investment accounts for newborn Americans US to restore some medical research grants, says Trump official 17 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes near Gaza aid site Seven dead, schoolchildren missing as storm hits South Africa World Bank projects three-year steady economic growth for Nigeria Saudi’s Aramco delays Nigeria’s crude-backed $5bn loan Lagos court jails nine Chinese for cybercrimes 19-year-old Nigerian artiste beaten to death in Ghana --------------------------- *DID YOU KNOW?* * Octopuses have three hearts and blue blood. Two hearts pump blood to the gills while one pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of the body. Their blood is blue because it uses copper to transport oxygen unlike the red blood of humans which is transported with iron. * Joal-Fadiouth, a district in Senegal, has an island and a beach entirely made of seashells. --------------------------- Tinubu mandates MDAs to pay for Abuja conference centre National Assembly mulls extension of 2024 budget capital vote Senate pushes to move presidential inauguration venue from Eagle Square to N’Assembly Petroleum subsidy was a scam, Nigeria can’t go back – Orji Kalu Alleged N5.2b fraud: Court rejects ex-JAMB Registrar’s no-case submission Court to hear suit on proposed sale of Lafarge Court jails Afriq System’s CEO, Michael, over alleged $854.4m, N590m fraud Indian, Dangote workers arraigned for diverting N4bn diesel Court jails three for vandalising IKEDC cables Woman jailed three years for child abuse in Ekiti Family, lawyer urge EFCC to release CBEX promoter Army kills terrorist kingpin, Jidda, others in Yobe, Borno NAF probes death of detained corporal Army celebrates troops battling insecurity in S’East Divestment key to oil sector growth- Lokpobiri FG to train 100,000 youths annually in forex trading FG budget cut leaves 1,500 health workers without pay FG eyes private capital for infrastructure at PPP summit SEC directs firms to honour unclaimed dividends Maritime bank to upgrade major shipyards – CEO Wike Renames International Conference Centre After Tinubu UNIJOS ready to host 2025 NUGA Games, says VC Gregory varsity inducts 83 medical doctors Ugosimba chieftaincy title for First Lady Tinubu in Enugu 90% of Yoruba kings don’t believe in Yoruba gods — Seun Kuti My business collapsed after public criticism of pastors – Daddy Freeze No prayers can erase six million Igbo deaths, group tells Gowon Youths kick as gunmen kill 58, burn 82 houses in Plateau June 12: Ijaw youths ask Tinubu to restore democracy in Rivers Tinubu has failed to improve governance after Buhari’s era – Baba-Ahmed Diesel, petrol to cost more as four depot owners raise prices TAJBank signs agreement for N20bn Mudarabah Sukuk bond issuance Accion MfB opens new branch in Ilorin Local telecom operators spend $350m annually on diesel – Report Edo Line retruns 15 years after 10 startups emerge winners of JusticeTechNG i-Fitness boosts expansion plan Reconcile or face impeachment, Rivers APC warns Fubara Obi, Otti responsible for our crisis, not Fed Govt, says LP We will police our votes in 2027, Obi vows Saraki, PDP reconciliation committee meet Makinde Power play: PDP convention caught in Wike-Makinde camps crossfire Ajayi, PDP set to appeal tribunal’s verdict affirming Aiyedatiwa Makinde, Speaker mourn Adefope Adeleke commiserates with Oke-IIa monarch over wife’s death Sanwo-Olu urges parents to instill values in children Ododo warns against politicising insecurities Mokwa flood: We don’t know where waters are coming from – Niger gov Residents seek intervention as erosion sacks nine Anambra villages Low turnout in Kano as civil servants resume Many escape death as petrol-laden tanker explodes in Oyo Pastor Adeboye visits Alaafin of Oyo Ondo traders get N43m, 150 solar lights to boost business 1 Killed, 3 Abducted As Gunmen Invade Cashew Warehouse In Kwara Two Truck Drivers Gunned Down, Vehicles Set Ablaze In Imo --------------------------- *TODAY IN HISTORY* * On this day in 1994, Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola declared himself as Nigeria’s president in what is now known as the Epetedo Declaration. This was a year after the June 12, 1993, which it is now cofirmed he won, was annulled by the military regime of General Ibrahim Babangida. Less than 24 hours, he was arrested by the military government led by General Sani Abacha and detained without trial. He remained in custody till July 7, 1998 when he died under suspicious circumstances, just days after Abacha died. --------------------------- Put all excuses aside and remember this: YOU are capable. – Zig Ziglar *Compiled by Hon. Osuji George osujis@yahoo
    0 Comentários 1 Compartilhamentos 125 Visualizações
  • * ATTENTION JAMB CANDIDATES 2025*

    Change of course and institution has commenced
    O’level result upload has not started
    JAMB result slips are yet to be uploaded

    *Please stay calm, you’ll be updated on this group as soon as there’s any development.*

    Honestly, I don't understand why the portal for changing institutions and courses would be opened when people are yet to check their results or even know the general cutoff marks for universities this year.

    Omo, it is well. This year get as things be.

    Here are my 2 cents: DON'T CHANGE YOUR INSTITUTION OR COURSE UNTIL YOU CHECK YOUR RESULT OR JAMB RELEASES THE CUT- OFF MARK FOR UNIVERSITIES, POLYTECHNICS AND COLLEGE OF EDUCATION FOR THIS YEAR.
    This will save you from unnecessary stress and waste of funds.


    *For more information, keep following us
    *📢 ATTENTION JAMB CANDIDATES 2025* ✅ Change of course and institution has commenced ❌ O’level result upload has not started ❌ JAMB result slips are yet to be uploaded *Please stay calm, you’ll be updated on this group as soon as there’s any development.* Honestly, I don't understand why the portal for changing institutions and courses would be opened when people are yet to check their results or even know the general cutoff marks for universities this year. Omo, it is well. This year get as things be. Here are my 2 cents: DON'T CHANGE YOUR INSTITUTION OR COURSE UNTIL YOU CHECK YOUR RESULT OR JAMB RELEASES THE CUT- OFF MARK FOR UNIVERSITIES, POLYTECHNICS AND COLLEGE OF EDUCATION FOR THIS YEAR. This will save you from unnecessary stress and waste of funds. *For more information, keep following us✌️
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  • Good morning Royalties

    Let's do some gratitude journaling today.

    Sometimes we feel unfulfilled but when we're able to write down the things we're grateful for, we'll definitely find a sense of fulfillment. Journaling is a form of expressive therapy.

    A gratitude journal is a diary of things for which someone is grateful. Keeping a gratitude journal is a popular practice in the field of positive psychology. It is also referred to as “counting one's blessings” or “three good things”.

    Keeping a gratitude journal can enhance your overall wellbeing, helping you nurture your mental, emotional, and physical health. Researchers have found that people who regularly write in a gratitude journal tend to feel happier, self-aware and experience fewer feelings of loneliness and isolation.

    *Gratitude Journal prompts for this week*
    What is one thing that you love and why should other people love it?

    What do you wish someone had told you about love?

    Write about someone you've
    never met but who has enriched your life in some way.

    What is your favorite time of day to be outside? What do you like about it?

    What is something that you can do today that people 30 years ago couldn't?

    Choose 3 people to say thanks today. Write about why you are thankful

    What three things could you let go of that would give you more time, energy, and peace?

    How to begin;
    When you choose which prompt to use, begin writing with, 'I am grateful ....'

    I wish you the best of connection with yourself and its endless abilities. Feel free to reach out, if you need some support with getting started.

    Gratitude journaling is one of the beautiful therapeutic techniques we'll have during our Wellness Retreat beginning July 5 in Buea, Cameroon. Feel free to sponsor a loved one to attend.

    Never forget to keep unveiling your uniqueness because it is within you that BLISS is found. I love you

    #stellaeyabi
    Good morning Royalties 👑 Let's do some gratitude journaling today. Sometimes we feel unfulfilled but when we're able to write down the things we're grateful for, we'll definitely find a sense of fulfillment. Journaling is a form of expressive therapy. A gratitude journal is a diary of things for which someone is grateful. Keeping a gratitude journal is a popular practice in the field of positive psychology. It is also referred to as “counting one's blessings” or “three good things”. Keeping a gratitude journal can enhance your overall wellbeing, helping you nurture your mental, emotional, and physical health. Researchers have found that people who regularly write in a gratitude journal tend to feel happier, self-aware and experience fewer feelings of loneliness and isolation. *Gratitude Journal prompts for this week* 📍 What is one thing that you love and why should other people love it? 📍What do you wish someone had told you about love? 📍Write about someone you've never met but who has enriched your life in some way. 📍What is your favorite time of day to be outside? What do you like about it? 📍What is something that you can do today that people 30 years ago couldn't? 📍Choose 3 people to say thanks today. Write about why you are thankful 📍What three things could you let go of that would give you more time, energy, and peace? How to begin; When you choose which prompt to use, begin writing with, 'I am grateful ....' I wish you the best of connection with yourself and its endless abilities. Feel free to reach out, if you need some support with getting started. Gratitude journaling is one of the beautiful therapeutic techniques we'll have during our Wellness Retreat beginning July 5 in Buea, Cameroon. Feel free to sponsor a loved one to attend. Never forget to keep unveiling your uniqueness because it is within you that BLISS is found. I love you 💞 #stellaeyabi
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  • Words of Encouragement for Any Situation

    1. "No one is you, and that is your superpower."

    2. "Believe you can, and you're halfway there." — Theodore Roosevelt

    3. "You are doing awesome!"

    4. "This is tough, but you're tougher."

    5. "Don't stress. You got this!"

    6. "Good luck today! I know you are going to do great."

    7. "You're making a big change, and I'm so proud of you!"

    8. "Sending some good vibes and happy thoughts your way."

    9. "If I cannot do great things, I can do small things in a great way." — Martin Luther King, Jr.

    10. "I know things are difficult right now, but I also know you've got what it takes to get through it."

    11. "Sending good thoughts your way—I believe in you and don't doubt for a minute that you will kill it."

    12. "Keeping you close in my thoughts, today especially."

    13. "In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity." — Albert Einstein

    14. "We've got friends for our happiest days and saddest moments. I hope you know I'm your friend now just as much as ever."

    15. "I'm so sorry you're going through this, but this too shall pass."

    16. "You are always on my mind and in my heart."

    17. "Courage, dear heart." — C.S. Lewis, The Chronicles of Narnia Book 3: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

    18. "You are so strong, and you are amazing for facing this with so much courage."

    19. "If you ever need to talk or just cry, you know where to find me!"

    20. "I hope you have a better day today."

    21. "The next chapter of your life is going to be so amazing."

    22. "Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement." — Helen Keller

    23. "I believe in you! And unicorns. But mostly you."

    24. "What you're going through right now is hard, but I'm rooting for you every minute of every day."

    25. "I can't wait to catch up with you soon so you can fill me in on all that's been going on in your life."

    26. "I hope you are surrounded by people who are good for your spirit."

    27. "You can get through this. Take it from me. I'm very wise and stuff."

    28. "Just sending you a quick note to let you know that you're on my mind and in my prayers."

    29. "It takes serious courage to get on this path and stay on it. Good for you!"

    30. "Remember that you aren't alone as you go through this difficulties

    Encouraging Words and Quotes

    31. "It doesn't matter who you are, where you come from. The ability to triumph begins with you. Always." — Oprah Winfrey

    32. "Be good to yourself. And let others be good to you, too."

    33. "Take everything one day at a time. I'm just a phone call away."

    34. "There's no doubt in my mind that you'll succeed in whatever path you choose next."

    35. "Be the change that you wish to see in the world." — Mahatma Gandhi

    36. "Be kind to yourself."

    37. "You are completely and unconditionally loved."

    38. "No matter what you're going through, there's a light at the end of the tunnel." — Demi Lovato

    39. "Sorry things are crappy. If you need somebody to binge-watch a whole season of something with you, I'm there."

    40. "You're doing exactly what you should be doing. Hang in there."

    41. "At a time like this, don't even bother with a dish. Just grab a spoon and start shoveling ice cream straight from the carton."

    42. "A champion is defined not by their wins but by how they can recover when they fall." — Serena Williams

    43. "You're being so strong—and patient. Keep the faith. Things are going to start looking up soon."

    44. "Thinking of you, and trusting that this difficult time is just a stepping stone along the path to something better."

    45. "This totally sucks, but you totally don't suck!"

    46. "I'm so sorry you're going through a difficult time. I don't know what to say except that I care about you, and I'm here for you."

    47. "Just wanted to send you a smile today."

    48. "And you ask, 'What if I fall?' Oh, but my darling, what if you fly?" — Erin Hanson

    49. "Don't live off of someone else's script. Write your own."

    50. "Remember, I'm here for you. And I have wine."

    51. "You must do the thing you think you cannot do." — Eleanor Roosevelt

    52. "Stop beating yourself up.  You are a work in progress, which means you get there a little at a time, not all at once."

    53. "It doesn't matter how slow you go as long as you don't stop." — Confucius

    54. "A journey starts with one step."

    55. "Anything's possible if you've got enough nerve." — J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

    56. "I admire how strong you are!"

    57. "No matter what people tell you, words and ideas can change the world." — Robin Williams

    58. "Faith can move mountains. Believe everything is possible and you will change the results!"

    59. "Don't let how you feel make you forget what you deserve."

    60. "Try to be a rainbow in someone else's cloud." — Maya Angelou

    Related: 111 Bible Quotes That'll Lift Your Spirits and Help You Get Through Anything

    Positive Words of Encouragement

    61. "Fall seven times, stand up eight." — Japanese Proverb

    62. "It always seems impossible until it is done." — Nelson Mandela

    63. "You will never do anything in this world without courage. It is the greatest quality in the mind next to honor." — Aristotle

    64. "Don't let anyone dull your sparkle."

    65. "Always be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of a second-rate version of somebody else." — Judy Garland


    66. "You are braver than you believe, stronger than you seem and smarter than you think."

    67. "This, too, shall pass. And you are going to look back on this period in your life and be so glad that you never gave up."

    68. "You're in a storm right now. I'll hold your umbrella."

    69. "It is never too late to be what you might have been." — George Eliot

    70. "Today will never come again. Look forward to tomorrow."

    71. "The most beautiful thing you can wear is confidence." — Blake Lively

    72. "God gave you this life because he knew you were strong enough to live it."

    73. "Sometimes when you are in a dark place, you think you have been buried, but actually you have been planted." — Christine Caine

    74. "You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have."

    75. "The only time you run out of chances is when you stop taking them." — Alexander Pope

    76. "When the world says, 'Give up,' hope whispers, 'try it one more time.'"

    77. "Encourage yourself, believe in yourself and love yourself. Never doubt who you are." — Stephanie Lahart, Overcoming Life's Obstacles

    78. "You have to fight through some bad days to earn the best days of your life."

    79. "Trust yourself. You know more than you think you do." — Dr. Benjamin Spock

    80. "Take a deep breath; it's just a bad day, not a bad life."

    81. "Every day may not be a good day, but there is something good in every day."

    82. "Your life is your message to the world. Make it inspiring." — Sady Ali Khan

    83. "When the wrong people leave your life, the right things start happening." — Zig Ziglar

    84. "You have my full support, no matter what you do."

    85. "Believe in yourself because I believe in you!"

    86. "You are in charge of your own happiness."

    87. "Don't wait for opportunity. Create it!"

    88. "Storms don't last forever!"

    89. "Today's a good day to have a great day."

    90. "Don't be afraid to try. Be afraid to fail."

    Related: 100 Quotes To Get You Through a Tough Time

    Motivational and Inspirational Words

    91. "This is what you're going through, not who you are."

    92. "Don't try to be perfect. Just try to be better than you were yesterday."

    93. "Don't forget to be awesome."

    94. "Follow your dreams—they know the way."

    95. "You are stronger than you think you are."

    96. "Your attitude determines your direction."

    97. "A positive mind finds opportunity in everything."

    98. "It always seems impossible until it's done."

    99. "Your speed doesn't matter. Forward is forward."

    100. "Grow through what you go through."

    101. "Sometimes you win, sometimes you learn."

    102. "Success doesn't come from what you do occasionally. It comes from what you do consistently."

    103. "It doesn't matter what others are doing. It matters what you are doing."

    104. "Mistakes are proof that you are trying."

    105. "The best view comes after the hardest climb."

    106. "You are capable of more than you know."

    107. "If you never try, you'll never know."

    108. "Every accomplishment starts with the decision to try."

    109. "I can't wait to see what you do next."

    110. "Progress, not perfection."

    111. "It may not be easy, but it will be worth it!"

    112. "You should be so proud of yourself."

    113. "You can do anything you set your mind to."

    114. "Don't forget to take notice of how far you have come!"

    115. "Being brave doesn't mean you're not afraid. It just means you try anyway."

    116. "Make today matter!"

    117. "No matter what happens, you are strong enough to handle it."

    118. "All things are difficult before they become easy."

    119. "You don't have to be perfect to be amazing."

    120. "Tighten your ponytail and try again!"

    Related: 101 Anxiety Quotes

    Short Words of Encouragement and Strength

    121. "Great things never come comfort zones


    122. "Believe in the power of yet."
    123. "Don't let your dreams be dreams." — Jack Johnson
    124. "The expert at anything was once a beginner." — Helen Hayes
    125. "Be positive, patient and persistent."
    126. "Unless you puke, faint or die, keep going."

    127. "If you're going through hell, keep going." — Winston Churchill
    128. "Keep going until you are proud."
    129. "Give yourself some credit for all you've done so far."
    130. "The most effective way to do it, is to do it." — Amelia Earhart

    131. "Tomorrow will worry about itself."
    132. "Every moment is a fresh beginning."
    133. "You are valuable. Don't let anyone make you believe differently."
    134. "Success is getting what you want, happiness is wanting what you get." — Ingrid Bergman

    135. "Remember why you started."
    136. "Small progress is still progress."
    137. "If it was easy, everyone would do it."
    138. "Nobody cares if you can't dance well. Just get up and dance. Great dancers are not great because of their technique, they are great because of their passion." — Martha Graham

    139. "Embrace every challenge."
    140. "Doing nothing is a great way to change nothing!"
    141. "Nothing will work unless you do."
    142. "Don't trade your authenticity for approval."
    143. "Keep your sunny side up, keep yourself beautiful and indulge yourself." — Betsey Johnson

    144. "Remember your why."
    145. "You can do hard things."
    146. "Put your hair up in a bun, drink some coffee and handle it."
    147. "We can do no great things, only small things with great love." — Mother Teresa

    148. "People, even more than things, have to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed and redeemed. Never throw out anyone." — Audrey Hepburn
    149. "If you stumble, make it part of the dance."
    150. "The only time you run out of chances is when you stop taking them."

    Pls support my page....
    Words of Encouragement for Any Situation 1. "No one is you, and that is your superpower." 2. "Believe you can, and you're halfway there." — Theodore Roosevelt 3. "You are doing awesome!" 4. "This is tough, but you're tougher." 5. "Don't stress. You got this!" 6. "Good luck today! I know you are going to do great." 7. "You're making a big change, and I'm so proud of you!" 8. "Sending some good vibes and happy thoughts your way." 9. "If I cannot do great things, I can do small things in a great way." — Martin Luther King, Jr. 10. "I know things are difficult right now, but I also know you've got what it takes to get through it." 11. "Sending good thoughts your way—I believe in you and don't doubt for a minute that you will kill it." 12. "Keeping you close in my thoughts, today especially." 13. "In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity." — Albert Einstein 14. "We've got friends for our happiest days and saddest moments. I hope you know I'm your friend now just as much as ever." 15. "I'm so sorry you're going through this, but this too shall pass." 16. "You are always on my mind and in my heart." 17. "Courage, dear heart." — C.S. Lewis, The Chronicles of Narnia Book 3: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader 18. "You are so strong, and you are amazing for facing this with so much courage." 19. "If you ever need to talk or just cry, you know where to find me!" 20. "I hope you have a better day today." 21. "The next chapter of your life is going to be so amazing." 22. "Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement." — Helen Keller 23. "I believe in you! And unicorns. But mostly you." 24. "What you're going through right now is hard, but I'm rooting for you every minute of every day." 25. "I can't wait to catch up with you soon so you can fill me in on all that's been going on in your life." 26. "I hope you are surrounded by people who are good for your spirit." 27. "You can get through this. Take it from me. I'm very wise and stuff." 28. "Just sending you a quick note to let you know that you're on my mind and in my prayers." 29. "It takes serious courage to get on this path and stay on it. Good for you!" 30. "Remember that you aren't alone as you go through this difficulties Encouraging Words and Quotes 31. "It doesn't matter who you are, where you come from. The ability to triumph begins with you. Always." — Oprah Winfrey 32. "Be good to yourself. And let others be good to you, too." 33. "Take everything one day at a time. I'm just a phone call away." 34. "There's no doubt in my mind that you'll succeed in whatever path you choose next." 35. "Be the change that you wish to see in the world." — Mahatma Gandhi 36. "Be kind to yourself." 37. "You are completely and unconditionally loved." 38. "No matter what you're going through, there's a light at the end of the tunnel." — Demi Lovato 39. "Sorry things are crappy. If you need somebody to binge-watch a whole season of something with you, I'm there." 40. "You're doing exactly what you should be doing. Hang in there." 41. "At a time like this, don't even bother with a dish. Just grab a spoon and start shoveling ice cream straight from the carton." 42. "A champion is defined not by their wins but by how they can recover when they fall." — Serena Williams 43. "You're being so strong—and patient. Keep the faith. Things are going to start looking up soon." 44. "Thinking of you, and trusting that this difficult time is just a stepping stone along the path to something better." 45. "This totally sucks, but you totally don't suck!" 46. "I'm so sorry you're going through a difficult time. I don't know what to say except that I care about you, and I'm here for you." 47. "Just wanted to send you a smile today." 48. "And you ask, 'What if I fall?' Oh, but my darling, what if you fly?" — Erin Hanson 49. "Don't live off of someone else's script. Write your own." 50. "Remember, I'm here for you. And I have wine." 51. "You must do the thing you think you cannot do." — Eleanor Roosevelt 52. "Stop beating yourself up.  You are a work in progress, which means you get there a little at a time, not all at once." 53. "It doesn't matter how slow you go as long as you don't stop." — Confucius 54. "A journey starts with one step." 55. "Anything's possible if you've got enough nerve." — J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince 56. "I admire how strong you are!" 57. "No matter what people tell you, words and ideas can change the world." — Robin Williams 58. "Faith can move mountains. Believe everything is possible and you will change the results!" 59. "Don't let how you feel make you forget what you deserve." 60. "Try to be a rainbow in someone else's cloud." — Maya Angelou Related: 111 Bible Quotes That'll Lift Your Spirits and Help You Get Through Anything Positive Words of Encouragement 61. "Fall seven times, stand up eight." — Japanese Proverb 62. "It always seems impossible until it is done." — Nelson Mandela 63. "You will never do anything in this world without courage. It is the greatest quality in the mind next to honor." — Aristotle 64. "Don't let anyone dull your sparkle." 65. "Always be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of a second-rate version of somebody else." — Judy Garland 66. "You are braver than you believe, stronger than you seem and smarter than you think." 67. "This, too, shall pass. And you are going to look back on this period in your life and be so glad that you never gave up." 68. "You're in a storm right now. I'll hold your umbrella." 69. "It is never too late to be what you might have been." — George Eliot 70. "Today will never come again. Look forward to tomorrow." 71. "The most beautiful thing you can wear is confidence." — Blake Lively 72. "God gave you this life because he knew you were strong enough to live it." 73. "Sometimes when you are in a dark place, you think you have been buried, but actually you have been planted." — Christine Caine 74. "You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have." 75. "The only time you run out of chances is when you stop taking them." — Alexander Pope 76. "When the world says, 'Give up,' hope whispers, 'try it one more time.'" 77. "Encourage yourself, believe in yourself and love yourself. Never doubt who you are." — Stephanie Lahart, Overcoming Life's Obstacles 78. "You have to fight through some bad days to earn the best days of your life." 79. "Trust yourself. You know more than you think you do." — Dr. Benjamin Spock 80. "Take a deep breath; it's just a bad day, not a bad life." 81. "Every day may not be a good day, but there is something good in every day." 82. "Your life is your message to the world. Make it inspiring." — Sady Ali Khan 83. "When the wrong people leave your life, the right things start happening." — Zig Ziglar 84. "You have my full support, no matter what you do." 85. "Believe in yourself because I believe in you!" 86. "You are in charge of your own happiness." 87. "Don't wait for opportunity. Create it!" 88. "Storms don't last forever!" 89. "Today's a good day to have a great day." 90. "Don't be afraid to try. Be afraid to fail." Related: 100 Quotes To Get You Through a Tough Time Motivational and Inspirational Words 91. "This is what you're going through, not who you are." 92. "Don't try to be perfect. Just try to be better than you were yesterday." 93. "Don't forget to be awesome." 94. "Follow your dreams—they know the way." 95. "You are stronger than you think you are." 96. "Your attitude determines your direction." 97. "A positive mind finds opportunity in everything." 98. "It always seems impossible until it's done." 99. "Your speed doesn't matter. Forward is forward." 100. "Grow through what you go through." 101. "Sometimes you win, sometimes you learn." 102. "Success doesn't come from what you do occasionally. It comes from what you do consistently." 103. "It doesn't matter what others are doing. It matters what you are doing." 104. "Mistakes are proof that you are trying." 105. "The best view comes after the hardest climb." 106. "You are capable of more than you know." 107. "If you never try, you'll never know." 108. "Every accomplishment starts with the decision to try." 109. "I can't wait to see what you do next." 110. "Progress, not perfection." 111. "It may not be easy, but it will be worth it!" 112. "You should be so proud of yourself." 113. "You can do anything you set your mind to." 114. "Don't forget to take notice of how far you have come!" 115. "Being brave doesn't mean you're not afraid. It just means you try anyway." 116. "Make today matter!" 117. "No matter what happens, you are strong enough to handle it." 118. "All things are difficult before they become easy." 119. "You don't have to be perfect to be amazing." 120. "Tighten your ponytail and try again!" Related: 101 Anxiety Quotes Short Words of Encouragement and Strength 121. "Great things never come comfort zones 122. "Believe in the power of yet." 123. "Don't let your dreams be dreams." — Jack Johnson 124. "The expert at anything was once a beginner." — Helen Hayes 125. "Be positive, patient and persistent." 126. "Unless you puke, faint or die, keep going." 127. "If you're going through hell, keep going." — Winston Churchill 128. "Keep going until you are proud." 129. "Give yourself some credit for all you've done so far." 130. "The most effective way to do it, is to do it." — Amelia Earhart 131. "Tomorrow will worry about itself." 132. "Every moment is a fresh beginning." 133. "You are valuable. Don't let anyone make you believe differently." 134. "Success is getting what you want, happiness is wanting what you get." — Ingrid Bergman 135. "Remember why you started." 136. "Small progress is still progress." 137. "If it was easy, everyone would do it." 138. "Nobody cares if you can't dance well. Just get up and dance. Great dancers are not great because of their technique, they are great because of their passion." — Martha Graham 139. "Embrace every challenge." 140. "Doing nothing is a great way to change nothing!" 141. "Nothing will work unless you do." 142. "Don't trade your authenticity for approval." 143. "Keep your sunny side up, keep yourself beautiful and indulge yourself." — Betsey Johnson 144. "Remember your why." 145. "You can do hard things." 146. "Put your hair up in a bun, drink some coffee and handle it." 147. "We can do no great things, only small things with great love." — Mother Teresa 148. "People, even more than things, have to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed and redeemed. Never throw out anyone." — Audrey Hepburn 149. "If you stumble, make it part of the dance." 150. "The only time you run out of chances is when you stop taking them." Pls support my page....
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