تغريدة مثبتة
Jayko 🇳🇬
48.3K posts

Jayko 🇳🇬
@jaykodicot
Global citizen • Positive vibe only • Striving to live a full life • One dream
انضم Ekim 2010
92 يتبع450 المتابعون

Ten years ago, I was named Valedictorian of my secondary school.
Today, a decade later, I am being inducted as a Medical Doctor, graduating with:
• Distinction and as Best Graduating Doctor in Pediatrics.
• Distinction and Best Graduating in Community Medicine.
• Best Graduating Doctor in Internal Medicine.
This Excellence is just admirable.
Love it.


English

Have you ever seen a female General in uniform? 👀🔥
Meet Brigadier General Paulina Oluwabunmi Aburime one of Nigeria’s outstanding female Generals, breaking limits and proving that excellence has no gender.
From Ekiti State, she stands tall as a symbol of discipline, courage, and leadership, inspiring a new generation of Nigerian women to aim higher and dream bigger.
Her journey is proof that resilience and hard work can take you all the way to the top of the ladder 💪🔥
#WomenInUniform #NigerianArmy #Inspiration #GirlPower
#Riseforge
English

Today makes it 3 years since my wife had a second surgery to fix the mess from the first one.
The surgery ended, and the doctor asked me to go buy antibiotics because they discovered sepsis.
I ran to a pharmacy in Festac and bought them, only to return and find that she had passed away. She had gone into cardiac arrest.
Keep resting, babe.
English

@DazylingQueeen If you’d continue that relationship or marriage with him, ensure you address how you feel about his “marry you with all your baggage” comment with him.
Read his body language more than his words and you’d know whether you’re with a 🚩 or not.
Good luck
English

My people, I am in tears as I type this. I need your honest advice because my heart is heavy and I don’t know what to do anymore.
I am a 28 year old lady, a graduate, and I have a 4 year old son from a previous relationship. For the past four years, I have been dating a man who I thought was my God sent. He accepted my child like his own and has been supporting us. He is a successful businessman and very financially comfortable.
We recently started marriage plans. My parents, considering that they spent so much to send me to university despite the challenges of being a single mother and because I am also very beautiful, asked for a bride price of 2.5 million naira. To my greatest surprise, my fiancé said no. He said the amount is too high for a woman who already has a child for another man.
My parents were offended and I tried to convince them to reduce it to 1.8 million naira. Because they love me, they agreed to 1.8 million.
He is still refusing. He told me directly that the highest he can pay is 800,000 naira. He said I should be grateful he is even marrying me with my baggage.
I am heartbroken. This is a man who buys me expensive hair and takes me on trips, yet he is bargaining over my head like I am at the market. My parents are saying that if he truly values me and the education they gave me, he would not be acting this way. They feel he is looking down on our family.
My parents even made it clear to him that he should be happy he met me as a single mother, which is proof that I am fertile and can handle pressure, but he is still being stubborn.
Is it wrong for my parents to want a good bride price for their graduate daughter? My parents have struggled to send me to school, don’t they deserve to reap the fruits of their labor?
I love him, but the things he said to me have made me lose sleep. Should I cancel everything and move on, or should I beg my parents to accept the 800,000 naira? What should I do?
English

These were the first group of Nigerian soldiers to expose the injustice and corruption within the Nigerian Army while fighting Boko Haram in the Northeast in 2014. They were also the first to wage a fierce and determined campaign against the insurgents. Yet, when they later discovered that some senior generals had no real desire to end the conflict, these soldiers stood firm and refused to be used as mere cannon fodder.
In an instant, they were branded enemies of the state: arrested, court-martialled, and imprisoned for years. Eventually, they received a presidential pardon from President Buhari, only to be dishonourably discharged without any compensation or benefits.
Today, some of them eke out a living as local shoemakers, fishermen, traders, pastors, and in other modest occupations. The very nation they served with passion and zeal has turned its back on them, while the Boko Haram fighters—the very destroyers of the country—are being rehabilitated and compensated with state resources.
I like the way they held their shoulders high
What a cruel irony.
𝐶𝑅𝐸𝐷𝐼𝑇: 𝑇𝐻𝐸 𝑀𝑂𝑂𝑁

English

💔 A story that reminds us how strong even the smallest hearts can be…
This is Camila.
A brave young girl facing a battle no child should ever have to fight.
Behind her quiet eyes is a journey filled with courage,
long days, tough moments, and a strength that inspires everyone around her.
Her family is standing beside her every step of the way—
holding on to hope, love, and the belief that brighter days are coming. 🌈
In times like these, even the smallest gesture of kindness matters.
A kind word, a thoughtful comment, or simply sending love can mean more than we realize.
Let’s come together as a community and surround her with support.
Because no one should face a fight like this alone.
If this touched your heart,
drop a 💖 or leave a message of encouragement below.
Your positivity could be the light someone needs today. ✨
#StayStrong #SpreadKindness #Hope #SupportEachOther #StrongerTogether

English

My husband passed away from a heart attack two years ago. Last month, I finally cleaned out his closet. In the pocket of his old jacket, I found a crumpled grocery list in his handwriting: “milk, bread, strawberries for Emily.” That was me. I cried for an hour, just holding that piece of paper.
English

South Africa had a secret government program called Project Coast.
Its job was to KILL Black people.
Not with bullets. With science.
A cardiologist named Wouter Basson ran it. His nickname was Dr. Death.
His team built umbrellas that fired poison pellets.
Screwdrivers with hidden syringes. Beer cans laced with anthrax. Envelopes that killed when you opened them.
They drugged SWAPO prisoners. Then pushed them out of planes over the ocean.
They tried to develop a bacteria that would only kill Black people. Their own surgeon-general called it "the most important project for the country."
They hung a baboon fetus outside Desmond Tutu's house. As a warning.
They produced tons of ecstasy and mandrax. Then sold it into Black communities to fund the operation.
Israel helped build it. The US and UK knew.
When apartheid ended Basson was charged with 67 crimes including 229 murders.
He was acquitted on every charge.
He went back to practicing medicine.
As of 2021 he was still working at a hospital in the Western Cape.
💀🇿🇦

English

@ikhanvbode The country still has a long way to go. More will die prematurely
English
















