Ethan's Mum
20.6K posts

Ethan's Mum
@Mide_AyaOba
Biochemist | Research & Clinical Biochemistry | Exploring disease from molecules to medicine | Disease & Drug Interactions | Agbafian | Mum
Katılım Haziran 2014
2.5K Takip Edilen2.6K Takipçiler
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Things I do once my husband is back from from work.
1. Greet him once he steps in
2. Collect his bag
3. Give him water to drink
4. Prepare his bathing water
5. Serve his food
6. Ask about how his day went and vice versa.
7. Give him massage that might lead to where we don't know.
Men deserve all the pampering they can get😁😁
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Three months of tweeting consistently on this app, there's something I've noticed.
Small accounts like mine complaining so much about big accounts not engaging them but in reality, most of these small accounts just follow and drop comments say 3-4 times and when and when they don't get a follow back, they either unfollow or stop engaging.
It's true that some people have worn pride as shoulder pad on here, but the harder truth to swallow is that, most of these big accounts you see actually paid their dues in full.
They all started just like you and I.
The difference between you and them now is, they weren't so desperate but you are.
Where most of you are found is in the "follow me I follow you groups"
Check your pages, no meaningful posts to engage with.
Tell me, how do you expect to grow? Even when you comment, you drop very lazy comments.
You're not consistent.
How then do you expect to get seen? Think about it.
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Ethan's Mum retweetledi

The Lagos beggar that crossed my path today at Ikorodu Garage will think twice before approaching someone like me again in his life… that is if he didn’t go and repent after what I did to him.
I was just on my own, heading to Oshodi. When I got to the BRT terminal, I saw a long queue. I quietly joined the standing line to secure my spot.
After about 15 minutes, a bus finally showed up. I stepped out to go and load my card, only to realize I didn’t carry my pouch where I usually keep my Cowry card. I didn’t want to waste money buying another one cause I already have like three at home. So I left the queue and decided to take those mini buses going to Oshodi instead, because those red buses would just waste my time.
As I was leaving the terminal, those Okada riders heading to Agric almost tore my clothes. At that point, frustration had already built up in my body.
Then this beggar started following me up and down, as if my village people sent him. Meanwhile, I see him there almost every time around the Okada riders, begging.
That was when I made up my mind: this one will carry all my frustration today. And somehow, it felt like God said, “Yes, go ahead, my son.”
So I gave him audience, and he entered my trap.
I asked him what happened. He said he was stranded and needed money to get to work at Oshodi, that his transport fare wasn’t complete.
I asked, “How much do you still need?”
He started stammering.
I already knew the werey just wan lie collect money.
I said, “No problem. Since you’re going to Oshodi, enter bus.”
He said, “Ah, this small bus is expensive o. I prefer the red bus.”
I told him, “Don’t worry, I’ll pay.”
The guy quickly realized that my level of madness was higher than his and immediately entered the bus without argument.
I sat in the front seat, and he sat behind me.
Before the journey started, he leaned forward and said, “Egbon, you don’t need to spend this much on me. I can still go and take standing in the red bus.”
I replied calmly, “Don’t worry, God will handle it.”
In my mind, I knew God would handle the money, but I would handle him personally.
We started the journey.
Anytime I turned to look at him, he was frowning, probably thinking about how I had ruined his business for the day.
Then we got to Ketu and this guy wanted to get down.
I almost changed it for him, but I stayed calm.
After I had paid ₦1500 for his transport to Oshodi, he now wanted to stop halfway? Impossible.
When I saw him trying to alight, I said, “We haven’t reached Oshodi yet,” pretending like maybe he was confused.
He replied, “Mo fẹ ra nkan ni ibi ni” (I want to buy something here).
I said, “You have money to buy something in Ketu, but you don’t have money for transport to Oshodi?”
I asked him what exactly he wanted to buy.
Instead of answering properly, he just said, “Don’t worry, brother, I’ll get it in Oshodi.”
At that point, I looked at him and said, “Whether you’ll get it in Oshodi or not, enter this bus now before I remove your teeth.”
He quietly adjusted himself and sat down quietly with no arguments.
We continued the journey.
When we finally got to Oshodi, he was even reluctant to say thank you because, clearly, I didn’t help him; I stressed him.
But that one no concern me.
I helped him get to Oshodi like he claimed. From there, he can trek back to Ikorodu and continue his begging business.
If he ever sees me again in Ikorodu, he will either run… or pretend he has never begged in his life.
©️ Yushab Abolore Ayomide
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@Mide_AyaOba My mom has hammered on this for years. I never and will never patronize or recommend it.
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Ethan's Mum retweetledi
Ethan's Mum retweetledi
Ethan's Mum retweetledi


@Adunniolaide02 Do you need shoulder pad to make it firm and higher 😂😂
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For the love of God and for the sake of your loved ones pls stay away from herbal mixtures
Before you attack this post, just read it. For your own sake and your family's health.
Many of this herbal mixtures contains,
Heavy metals (lead, arsenic)
Hepatotoxic (liver-damaging) plant compounds
Nephrotoxic (kidney-damaging) substances,
Contaminants from poor preparation/storage
The increasing number of cases we see weekly of liver/kidney damage from "herbal cleansers." Is alarming and devastating.
You're not detoxing. You're poisoning yourself
Your liver is a 1.5kg biochemical powerhouse that processes everything you eat, drink, or breathe.
Every single minute, it filters 1.5 liters of blood removing toxins, neutralizing poisons, breaking down drugs, and recycling waste.
It does this 24/7 without breaks, since the day you were born.
And let's not forget your kidneys,
They filter 180 liters of blood DAILY, removing waste and excess substances while keeping what your body needs.
They regulate electrolytes, balance pH, and eliminate toxins through urine.
Your kidneys don't need agbo to do their job either.
"But our grandparents drank agbo and lived to 90!" Right?
They lived despite the agbo, not because of it. Survival bias.
For every elder who thrived on agbo, there are countless others who suffered kidney disease, liver cirrhosis, or died from contaminated mixtures.
Anecdotes aren't evidence.
If you want to support your liver and kidneys
Drink enough water , it helps your kidneys to flush waste.
Eat balanced meals, it gives your liver nutrients for detox enzymes.
Limit alcohol it reduces your liver workload
Exercise often, it improves circulation and organ function
Sleep well, your liver regenerates at night
That's it. Free.
Your liver has been detoxifying your blood 24/7 since the day you were born.
It doesn't need any herbal mixture to do its job.
Not vibes, not opinion. Just biochemistry!
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