Khenny

158 posts

Khenny

Khenny

@Edun_Jobii

Beyond The Smiles Are Battles Within

Lagos Katılım Mayıs 2022
395 Takip Edilen34 Takipçiler
JUST KINGS
JUST KINGS@JustKingss·
Aside money, what do you need right now? Maybe I can help.
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Arinolami
Arinolami@Elizabe0308·
@Edun_Jobii This AB inbev dumped me like immediately I finished applying I was like “what did I do wrong”😂😂😂
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Dear Self.
Dear Self.@Dearme2_·
Congratulations in May.
Dear Self. tweet media
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Mohammed Jammal
Mohammed Jammal@whitenigerian·
Being unemployed can really drain you. Praying that everyone job hunting lands something this May 🙏
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Foundational Nupe Lawyer
Foundational Nupe Lawyer@egi_nupe·
It’s okay to feel disappointed about poor academic performance, especially in a country like Nigeria where many competitive graduate trainee programmes, multinationals, and corporations still use a minimum 2.1 (Second Class Upper) as an initial screening filter. Pretending otherwise does no one any favours, particularly the younger ones still in school. Low grades can make the formal job hunt tougher from the start. But let’s be clear: graduating with a strong CGPA does not guarantee success in life, just as finishing with a 2.2, Third Class, or Pass does not condemn you to failure. Many who started with lower grades have gone on to build impressive careers through resilience, further education, networking, or alternative paths. The real danger lies in settling for bare minimum effort and expecting comfort or excuses to carry you forward. If you are still in school, treat your studies with seriousness and aim for really good grades. Put in consistent, focused effort as if your future depends on it; because in many ways, it shapes your options early on. Aim high, manage your time well, and seek help when you need it. Disappointment can serve as fuel, but don’t let shame paralyse you. At the same time, don’t stop at academics. Nigeria’s job market is evolving rapidly. Employers increasingly complain that many graduates are not job-ready, and skills often matter more than paper qualifications alone, especially in tech, fintech, digital marketing, data analysis, UI/UX design, software development, content creation, sales, and entrepreneurship. While chasing good grades, dedicate time to learning practical, high-income skills. Build a portfolio, earn relevant certifications, intern, freelance, or start small projects. These can open doors that a transcript alone might not either through corporate roles, remote international work, or building your own venture. Success is rarely linear. Combine strong academics with real-world skills, emotional intelligence, networking, and adaptability. Hold yourself accountable, but also show yourself compassion. Your worth is not defined by one CGPA. Start building value today both on paper and in practice and keep moving forward with purpose.
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Resko★
Resko★@Bloke_Baz·
Bro.. the job market is really bad. Like REALLY BAD
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Cruzzy
Cruzzy@CruzzyTYE·
E lo ra speakers. New BNXN music tonight.
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Benson
Benson@BNXN·
New music on Monday. 👨🏽‍✈️
Benson tweet media
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name cannot be blank
name cannot be blank@obscurenigga·
I'm finishing NYSC less than 3 months, and my worst nightmare is not having a new job by the time it ends.
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OladiAyo
OladiAyo@Oladayo_isomer·
I graduated with a first class 2. I graduated as the best student in my department 3. I graduated as the best student in my Faculty 4. Out of 10 semesters, I wrote first class results 8 times. 5. My lowest GPA was 4.45 6. I had a C just twice and it was in 100 level 7. I never had a system (Laptop) throughout my undergraduate days, yet I had an A in my research (Project) All these I achieved with plenty financial challenges. Glory to God
Ọmọ Akin@GuyMr10

brag about your academic excellence :

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Mayor Of Ekiti
Mayor Of Ekiti@Ekitipikin·
Poverty doesn’t care how good you are. You can be kind, intelligent, talented, prayerful, disciplined.. and still be ignored, disrespected, and passed over because you lack money. Poverty makes you invisible bro 💔 your opinion matter less when you can’t pay. Fuckkkkkkkkkkkkk
ẹwàtómi 💕@theewatomi

i hate poverty so much.

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Technical Ben
Technical Ben@TechnicalBben·
If you want to move from 0-$10k in 2026 retweet and save this. If you’re broke and struggling, your first job is survival, not luxury. Stabilize your life, then re-strategize. Cut off anything draining your money and energy. Betting, reckless spending, chasing women nonstop. Be honest with yourself. If sex or distractions are costing you focus and cash, pause it. Discipline first, enjoyment later. If you want to go from zero to $10,000 next year, you must learn how to manage every lil penny, even if they call you stingy. Control expenses. Control habits. Control what you consume. Your mindset matters. Be intentional about the content you watch, read, and listen to. Good content sharpens your thinking and keeps your goals alive. Garbage content keeps you stuck. If you don’t have money to take risks, use conversation as leverage. Talk to more people. Way more. If you only meet five new people a year, push it to fifty. Online or offline, it counts. Opportunities follow people who speak, share, and show up. But before you reach out, have something to offer. Skills, effort, value, help. And be kind. Be respectful. Be genuine. People like good people. Even strangers will help you if you carry yourself well. Build discipline. Build relationships. Build momentum. Broke ones will rise again.
a meek thug@gib_smoke

bro to bro:

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