Roseline Ilori

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Roseline Ilori

Roseline Ilori

@Roserite

Level 10x Life Coach| Serial Entrepreneur| Technology and Innovation Enthusiast| Business Coach | Perpetual Learner| Speaker| #Possibilities https://t.co/NyXjSRHLbd

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Kasım 2010
730 Takip Edilen564 Takipçiler
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Roseline Ilori
Roseline Ilori@Roserite·
I am eager to hear about the life lessons that others have learned, so please share your thoughts in the comments. Let's learn from each other and make the most of this beautiful journey called life. See you on Monday!
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Vala Afshar
Vala Afshar@ValaAfshar·
I asked a CEO of one of the biggest industrial groups in India which is on the verge of bankruptcy, why this happened? He replied, “Bosses who don’t listen will eventually be surrounded by people who have nothing to say.” —@hvgoenka
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Roseline Ilori
Roseline Ilori@Roserite·
Well articulated! Thank you.
Jason Helmes@anymanfitness

Just finished this book - Bad Therapy by @AbigailShrier This is one of the most eye-opening books I've ever read. It's a must read for any parent, any teacher, and should be required reading for any school administrator as well. The book dives into trying to figure out why kids are having so many mental health problems, when there are so many resources devoted to improving mental health outcomes. Anxiety, depression, suicide, etc are all higher than they've ever been with kids, even though their lives are arguably better than ever before. It just doesn't make sense. A few key takeaways from the book: A constant attention on how kids are "feeling" or "thinking" is causing negative outcomes. Constantly ruminating on your emotions and how you feel negatively impacts your mental health. If all you do is focus on your emotions, you are destined to be anxious or depressed. We incessantly ask kids how they're feeling, if they're happy, how their mental health is, etc, and this is creating kids who think they're fragile instead of resilient. Trying to solve every problem for kids has caused a generation who can't do anything for themselves. We (Gen X) were told to "suck it up" or "you'll live" or "rub some dirt on it" all the time. Many of us came to the conclusion this is "bad parenting" because our feelings were neglected, and we vowed not to do this to our own children. Because of that, kids immediately over-dramatize everything that happens to them, making mountains out of molehills, and thinking the world must revolve around their emotions and feelings. You develop confidence and strong mental health by doing things, not by thinking or via therapy. You can't think your way out of anxiety. You don't gain confidence by analysis of your thoughts or mental health issues. You gain confidence and eliminate anxiety by doing gradually more difficult tasks, excelling at them, and realizing you are a competent, capable person. The non-stop attention therapy gives to these small, common emotions we all feel blows them out of proportion to their seriousness (not talking about genuine disorders here, just normal anxieties that millions of people go to therapy to try to avoid). One of the best ways to decrease your happiness is to chase it. Our society constantly tells kids they should be "happy" and asks them if they are. Happiness isn't a state you should be in 24/7. That's not realistic. Joy and bliss aren't permanent states - they are fleeting. Contentment, stillness, and being even-keeled are much better goals to aim for mentally. The happiest, most well adjusted kids come from families with loving parents that have strict rules for the household. This one really set off the confirmation bias in me... I feel really blessed we have 2 well adjusted middle school kids who do great in school, are very respectful and well mannered, and we barely even need to parent them. But for years, we were very strict with them. Bedtimes, family rules, how we do things, etc. The in-laws and lots of friends thought we were totalitarian. In reality, we just had high standards. And it's really paying off right now. I found it really interesting that strict rules equals happy kids. Makes sense, though, as kids need to know what their boundaries are. Constantly surveying school-age kids about their mental health causes more issues than it solves. Mental health resources is big money. Districts need to validate all the resources allocated towards mental health, and they often do that via surveys. Asking kids non-stop questions like: - Have you thought about self harm? - Have you thought about suicide? - Have you been so anxious you can't get out of bed? Etc, etc puts into their heads the idea that themselves, or many of their peers are broken and cannot function properly in the real world. It normalizes situations that would be incredibly rare at any other time in history. There's a lot of other takeaways, too, but I'll stop there. It's a fantastic book. Go pick it up and read it. This isn't an affiliate thing or a promotion thing at all. I just really enjoyed it, and it will further shape the way I parent moving forward.

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Kay
Kay@ohKAYx33·
The New York Times did an investigation and found 5,000 child accounts are being followed by 32 million men. Consider that before creating a social media presence for your child.
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Roseline Ilori
Roseline Ilori@Roserite·
That's 37 days of scrolling, liking, and tapping. Imagine what we could accomplish if we reclaimed even a fraction of that time for our goals and dreams. Are you up for the challenge? Let's make every second count! #TimeToThrive #ProductivityChallenge
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Roseline Ilori
Roseline Ilori@Roserite·
Procrastination is like a credit card: it's a lot of fun until you get the bill" - Christopher Parker
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Roseline Ilori
Roseline Ilori@Roserite·
@EGYI_SA @kekere02 @EGYI_SA Countless women have done not just this but a lot more. Not all women, married or otherwise depend solely on what their men bring. Perhaps, you need to do some waking up to this reality.
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EGYI
EGYI@EGYI_SA·
@Roserite @kekere02 Woman, use her own money process visa, wake up, that na dream
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Roseline Ilori
Roseline Ilori@Roserite·
Yippppeeeeee! Party rice loading........
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Roseline Ilori
Roseline Ilori@Roserite·
@asemota I had a conversation with an entrepreneur friend recently. He had just returned from a trip from India. His point is an average Indian startup is thinking of market expansion from Day 1. We need to improve our Entrepreneurial mindset as a people
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Osaretin Victor Asemota
Osaretin Victor Asemota@asemota·
Screw it, let me write it. If you are a black African, without a cofounder who is not black (as I had), and trying to sell to enterprise software or services to people in Africa who are black, you will crumble fast without playing stupid games. Find foreign clients first to validate. It is a sad fact that we don't trust our own until someone else has validated it. I have been using Calendly to drive impact (and get some income) in the last few weeks and each of the people I spoke with had products that could have potential global reach and I asked a few of them why their minds are still stuck in Africa where you can't even ascertain proper market size? Why can't you build for the world like Tope? If @TopeAwotona had built for Africa, he would have long been history. I have met several Israeli founders who have this global mindset from day one and their ecosystem supports it. More importantly, they build bridges to those markets. We now have the bridges but they are still looking back home. WTF? Anyway, back to my original gist. You will crumble if you don't hack the African enterprise market by validating elsewhere. That adage of “nobody ever got fired for choosing IBM” is very true in enterprise. Someone here rightly said that the goal of enterprise SaaS is to make people in enterprise look good and not get fired. That is the simple goal. I won't say don't play in it because the global enterprise market is massive. If you must in Africa, get a foreign cofounder or you will end up in the mother of all rabbit holes. I lost a lot because I didn't belong to the right clubs or belonged to the wrong nationality and ethnic group. Meanwhile, my Indian competition didn't need to do any of that shit. They showed workings in other markets and charged double. They were also not above corruption. I couldn't do corruption because I didn't want to and also because it would have been a self fulfilling prophecy. The Indians used Africans to do corruption for them. Those Africans became quite rich. A caveat, don't use fronts and don't deceive people but know that when you are thinking of building for the world, the world has to trust you. Unfortunately, they don't trust us enough yet and sadly we have to either keep using props or build products 100x better. Both are possible and not mutually exclusive. Getting foreign enterprise partnerships in Africa is the dream but it is also comes with a lot of compromise. You know they are bullshitting and you play along because you have mouths to feed. I know people playing that game now for decades but I opted out of it. Why? I went outside and saw these same companies hustling and in decline. Africa is a frontier market that they are bleeding until Africa awakens. The few places worth building for are compromised but more are growing to become big enough. The awakening won't happen because of small startups. You have to go outside to form a Voltron of African enterprise products. A word is too much for the wise.
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