Zahra🌺
16.1K posts

Zahra🌺
@Call_Me_Zahra
Data Analyst • Bibliophile • Interested in Infectious Diseases & Antimicrobial Resistance • https://t.co/mIeYAg67UK in View • Highly Misunderstood •
Jannah In Shaa Allah Katılım Aralık 2019
1.1K Takip Edilen1.9K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Zahra🌺 retweetledi
Zahra🌺 retweetledi

My iPhone went missing from my desk. 10 minutes later, I got a notification on my iPad. There was a photo of a stranger holding my iPhone. His expression was panicked. He didn’t know he was being photographed. This isn’t magic. iPhones have a feature that automatically does this if stolen.
And you can activate it now:
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Zahra🌺 retweetledi
Zahra🌺 retweetledi

Umar ibn Khattab رضي الله عنه said: “I am not worried about whether my dua will be responded to, but rather I am worried about whether I will be able to make dua or not. So if I have been guided to make dua, then I know that the response will come with it.”
(Al-Awayishah p. 117)
Ms_Miriti@MsMiriti
Be honest, has prayer ever worked for you ??
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Zahra🌺 retweetledi

If you have CCTV in your House, Read this now
You installed cameras for security but what if I tell you
Someone else may still be watching your home right now?
Not a th!ef.
Not a stranger.
The person that installed it.
Yes.
After installation, many CCTV installers still retain:
🥢 Your login details
🥢 Remote access
🥢 Backend control
Meaning they can log in anytime and see everything.
Your sitting room.
Your compound.
Your movements.
And you won’t even know.
The law protects your privacy but only after it has been violated.
So this is what you must do immediately:
🥢 Change all passwords NOW
🥢 Take full admin control
🥢 Disable access you don’t understand
🥢 Let another expert check it
Because listen carefully…
Not every invasion comes with a broken door.
Some come with installation receipts. If you have CCTV in your home or office, don’t ignore this.
Act now!
©️Confidence Aribibia

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@ridwan_exists @sadiqGsadiq @amynat18 Experienced that before. Sometimes they weren’t thinking you did Tasleem but are intentionally letting you know you should have done that😂😂
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@sadiqGsadiq @amynat18 unrelated, please what do I do when i greet someone hello and they reply ‘wa alaykumus salam…’ thinking i did tasleem.. wa alaykumus salam? Or I go just bone am, which I’m very sure is wrong, i no fit just explain
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Me whenever I start a call with “hello” and the other person says “Assalama Alaikum” 😭
Auwal 🦇@SkinnyBoi001_
They have outmuslim me today 😭😭😭😭😭😭
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Zahra🌺 retweetledi
Zahra🌺 retweetledi

You make a cancer-fighting chemical in your brain every night. It kills tumor cells and fixes broken DNA while you sleep. Only works in the dark. The hormone is called melatonin, and when you flip on the lights at 2 AM, your brain stops making it.
Melatonin is the sleep hormone. But it moonlights as your body’s overnight cancer patrol. It chokes off the blood supply to tumors and wakes up your natural killer cells (the white blood cells that hunt down cancer). Melatonin also flips on genes that order damaged cells to stop dividing. Researchers at Tulane ran an experiment where they exposed rats to dim light at night. Not bright light. Dim. The tumors lost their natural growth rhythms and grew nonstop.
The WHO classified night shift work as “probably carcinogenic” in 2007. Reviewed everything again in 2019. Kept the classification. Same risk category as UV radiation.
Your body’s internal clock controls more than when you sleep. It schedules DNA repair. There’s a repair protein called XPA that rises and falls on a 24-hour cycle, timed by your clock genes. When scientists knocked those genes out in mice, DNA repair went haywire and tumors grew faster. The same clock decides when damaged cells kill themselves off before they turn cancerous. Wreck the clock, you lose all of that.
Denmark started paying workers’ comp for this. In 2008, the Danish government said: if you worked night shifts at least once a week for 20+ years and got breast cancer, that’s an occupational disease. Between 2007 and 2011, 110 women got compensated. One was a flight attendant who did 30 years of overnight flights for SAS airlines. No other country has followed.
1 in 5 workers worldwide works night shifts. In the US, that’s around 15 million people, mostly in healthcare, factories, and trucking. The exposure tilts hard toward people who can least afford it: 20% of workers without a high school diploma pull non-daytime shifts vs. under 2% of college grads.
I’ll be straight with you, the science isn’t totally settled. A big 2020 analysis pooling 57 studies and 8.5 million people found no clear overall link between night shifts and cancer. But a 2024 study tracking how risk changes with time on the job told a different story: 9% higher breast cancer risk after 20 years of night work. 13% higher after 30. The lab evidence in animals is clear cut. The human data is messier, the way it always is when you’re studying something millions of people do in a thousand different ways.
Keith Siau@drkeithsiau
Share a medical fact that would surprise most people💡
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Thought Twas going to be a dress or skirt😂

Aisha is wealthy (The Book Girly 📚✨)@Opulent_Maisha
Dear Pinterest girlies 🎀🩷, Quote this with the last thing you saved from Pinterest
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This year, I trashed stage fright😁


Lade🎀@gbxlade
March dump? make it screenshot from your iMessage🙂↔️
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So they asked me if one of their high paying clients toasts me, what will I do?
(Role: Medical Sales Rep)
Zahra🌺@Call_Me_Zahra
Weird question you were asked at interview?
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Is it lethal? Talk fast before I use my money chop shawarma.
Aliyu, H. S.@HASPhD
I've just compiled my research on Hakorin Makka but some of you don't adhere to simple precautions. 🤓🦷
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