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O.B.A.L.O.L.A👑
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O.B.A.L.O.L.A👑
@Better_Gee
// fcChelsea🏅// 30BG
Ahead of you Se unió Aralık 2011
3.3K Siguiendo681 Seguidores


Ará ilé ẹni níí mọ̀ọ́ ní àmódi
Oluwatobi 🎀@_tobyblush
Chef shares her new Amala invention for Yoruba people called “Amala fries”.
Tiếng Việt

@DanielRegha @instablog9ja Imagine ó 80 taasan tó bẹ besides drums of drinks
Español

From the story he just assumed that his friend dropped him because of social class, but that might not even be the case. If I were in his position I will ask questions before deciding on what to do next.
Personally, I feel like watching over refreshments is far more important than just bein a man in suit, it's a very hectic job and it takes trust to be asked. I am saying this based on experience, nothing stresses a celebrant more than seeing refreshments being mis-shared, so you would be doing them a big favour by making sure everything goes well.
If this wasn't this case and his friend dropped him because of social class, he should've still gone to the wedding (arriving late), or just attend the church ceremony. Why? They might reconcile in the near future, however, the opportunity is gone to witness the union.
If someone is really your friend, you won't jump into conclusions. Unless you were uninvited, don't skip entirely.
English

The Stubbornness of Birds
There is something almost admirable about the stubborness of birds, in their breeding season.
I live in the rural outskirts of Ibadan, so birds are common here. Two species in particular are almost always around my house: the common kingfisher and the bronze mannikin. The mannikins have been breeding in my house for about three years now. They have somehow chosen my house as their community meat as they make nests in three different locations around my roof.
One of those sites sits dangerously close to my electric wiring, and I was not about to let a bird's real estate preferences burn my house down. So I started destroying the nest at that particular spot whenever they built it, while leaving the other two untouched. I thought this was a reasonable arrangement. Generous, even.
They disagreed. They kept rebuilding at the same spot, with the same confidence, as if I had not just dismantled their work the day before.
I want to sit them down. Call a proper meeting. Put it to them plainly: I have given you two out of three sites. That is a 67% concession. In what negotiation is that not a win? What exactly are your objections?
But birds do not negotiate. They just build. And build. And build again.




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