Shadi

3.2K posts

Shadi banner
Shadi

Shadi

@Shadi_Kay

Equity! Equality!! Justice!!! [email protected]

Katılım Ağustos 2016
4.2K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Shadi retweetledi
Her Voice Foundation
Her Voice Foundation@campus_babe·
During our teenage pregnancy advocacy campaign last month @campus_babe, a student asked us what will happen to the man after she gets pregnant. Listen to the response from our team member. That’s the message we want every girl to remember. #campusbabeinitiative #girls
English
0
2
3
71
Shadi
Shadi@Shadi_Kay·
Act Now: You, Me, Communities
Shadi tweet media
English
0
0
0
15
Oba, Young OG Pino
Oba, Young OG Pino@Pinovibes·
N150k for whoever gets the correct score of the match between Liverpool and Mancity?
Oba, Young OG Pino tweet media
English
13.1K
859
7K
712.7K
Shadi
Shadi@Shadi_Kay·
@0xgaut Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
English
0
0
0
6
gaut
gaut@0xgaut·
What book is so good you’ve read it more than three times?
English
4.2K
411
4.6K
3.6M
Menak
Menak@Officialmenak·
I’ve seen my Dad asked my Mom not to go to a place she wanted to go and she obeyed. I’ve seen my Mom asked my Dad and he obeyed her too. My dad would pull off and say: "if I even go this place, I go too spend money self” then, proceeds to calling either me or any of my…
English
219
3K
16.6K
1.6M
Shadi retweetledi
First Doctor
First Doctor@FirstDoctor·
If you have the choice, marry a virgin; Less chances of divorce. Less emotional baggage. Less psychological damage. Less 'wokenized'. Less risks of STIs. Less likely to cheat. Better respect for you. Better morals and self control. Stronger bond with you: they lose their pair bonding capacity as they rack up body counts. Past behavior is a succinct predictor of future behavior. Little or nothing changes. The more promiscuous, the more unmarriageable. The less promiscuous, the more peace.
English
315
719
3K
244.3K
Shadi retweetledi
Channels Television
Channels Television@channelstv·
The Chairman of EFCC, Ola Olukoyede has said the embattled former governor of Kogi ,Yahaya Bello, withdrew $720,000 from the government account to a Bureau de Change to pay for his child's school fees in advance #CTVTweets
English
1K
3.6K
6.2K
1.2M
Toluwani
Toluwani@gabe_teee·
See how Pastor Adeboye was very vocal under Jonathan when Dollar was 180 naira Versus under Drug dealer Tinubu and Dollar is 1500+. Don't let anyone gaslight you, they know what they're doing.
Toluwani tweet mediaToluwani tweet mediaToluwani tweet mediaToluwani tweet media
English
667
2.9K
4.5K
359.3K
Shadi retweetledi
Osaretin Victor Asemota
Osaretin Victor Asemota@asemota·
22 is usually the age when most people have their most options. The choices you make at that age will provide enough inner momentum to change the trajectory of your life unless there is a stronger external force. Inaction at that age is also something that’ll affect you as well.
English
88
692
2.3K
228.2K
Shadi
Shadi@Shadi_Kay·
@Khanstillday Bode Thomas: No matter where you go, remember the road that leads home.
English
0
0
0
56
Khan 🧢 🌟
Khan 🧢 🌟@Khanstillday·
Lmao Ilorin yahoo boys will lodge in a hotel and be going home to eat.
English
269
846
6K
457.7K
Sir Dickson
Sir Dickson@Wizarab10·
You already made a decision. We do what we have to do 🤷‍♂️ Good luck
Sir Dickson tweet media
English
1.2K
401
4.1K
575.8K
Shadi retweetledi
Hammed Kayode Alabi
Hammed Kayode Alabi@iamkayfactor·
The story you may still not find in the news. I hope it inspires someone not to give up. I was raised and born in Makoko I lost my Mum at 7 We moved to Bariga at 12, another slum in Lagos My dad lost everything at 12, sold his property, and a couple of stuff I hawked sweet and spaghetti at 13 At 15, I was awarded the best prefect in my secondary school At 15, I also worked as a labourer in construction sites At 15, I taught basic education in a nursery school At 15, we were sent packing from our rented apartment in Bariga. Nearly homeless for the first time. At 17, I worked as Airtel KYC agent, registering sim At 17, I got admission into the University of Ilorin At 19, 20, won the University of Ilorin scholarship award At 20, appointed as the deputy commandant of the Nigerian Red Cross At 21, in my final year last semester had a 5.0 GPA, scored A in my project dissertation. At 21, Graduated as the best student in my department At 22, won the NYSC Edo State Award. At 23, Founded a non-profit to support children of my kind. At 23, attended my First international conference. At 23, started a blog with over 275k views and readership from more than 20+ countries At 24, selected as an SDGs Youth Champion with African Monitor and engaged Office of the Senate President At 24, selected as a Fellow, Carrington Youth Fellowship Initiative and winter $5000 grant with other 4 fellows. At 24, won the Keenista African Youth Competition Award (top 2 -7) prize. At 24, awarded Talent of the Future Africa At 24, featured by UNFPA as a global goal champion At 24, spoke at an international summit At 25, won the United State Consul General Award At 25, completed, authored my first book and sold in more than 3 countries At 25, became a Fellow-in-Residence and Regional Manager of a global non-profit in the United States (Peace First) At 25, won a scholarship in the UK (IDS) At 25, facilitated in another continent outside Africa At 25, made my first million in Naira At 26, won two most prestigious scholarships (Chevening and Mastercard Foundation Scholarship) At 26, studying at The University of Edinburgh (top 16 in the world, best in Scotland and top 5 in the UK) At 26, completed my second book titled 5 years At 27 graduated from the The University of Edinburgh At 27, won the First-ever Ufahamu Africa Essay contest for my piece on life and politics in Africa At 27, Published my Second book “5 Years” on Amazon At 27, became, the first young African Board Member at Peace First At 27, worked with the MasterCard Foundation and co-created a mentoring programme for refugees in Uganda At 27, got a role with Refugee Education UK. At 27 became a World Economic Forum, Global Shaper. At 28, won Oxford Rhodes Scholars-in-Residence African Finance Initiative Grant to scale my social innovation Skill2Rural Bootcamp. At 28, spoke at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris as a youth delegate at the pre-summit of the Transforming Education Summit. At 28, worked with the British Red Cross, and coordinate the Refugee and Befriending Programme in Hammersmith, London. At 28, worked as a Research Assistant with the Mastercard Foundation at the University of Edinburgh on the Identity in Transition project At 28, invited as a guest lecturer by the Open University, UK to take a module on communications for development. At 28, partnered with the American corner to organise a launch and learn event for my second book “5years” the room was filled At 28, presented at the University of Edinburgh Teaching and Learning Conference and was featured by them too. At 28, made the University of Edinburgh Climate 75 list At 29, selected as 1 of the 20 for the University of Pennsylvania Centre for social impact strategy Global Social Impact House Fellowship. Was the youngest in the Fellowship. At 29, Co-authored and published my third book titled “Career Wisdom” and all profit goes to my non-profit.
Hammed Kayode Alabi tweet media
English
127
450
2.3K
233.1K
Shadi retweetledi
FlowzPam Art
FlowzPam Art@flowzpam·
It'll take you 2 secs to share my pencil drawing Don't skip😭 Please repost my hustle ☝️🙏♥️ Sold out omah lay o2 arena edo road orban wole soyinka #unilag biafra revolution plus 1 usd south africans prince morocco akobo yoruba mourinho ololufe d prince popsy
FlowzPam Art tweet mediaFlowzPam Art tweet media
English
3
18
51
19.9K
Winifred🌻
Winifred🌻@Winifunds·
What's your greatest fear in a relationship?
English
312
164
777
1.4M
Shadi retweetledi
A Lizard Lady
A Lizard Lady@LexiconLass·
After a man broke into my house and raped me when I was 20, many of male friends got VERY emotional about it and I felt like I was babysitting THEM instead of being supported. Except one who came over, night after night, and slept on my couch so I could feel safe in my room.
English
345
8.4K
164.4K
10.6M
Shadi
Shadi@Shadi_Kay·
@WunmiWonka I'm sorry about this Wunmi. I can only imagine how difficult it was for you. It may not be too late to report him so he doesn't take such indiscipline to the next person. @Lagosdsva can help (even with referrals) if you're outside Lagos.
English
0
0
0
147
African Queen 💀
African Queen 💀@WunmiWonka·
My dad’s nephrologist was actively trying to sleep with me. We did a lot of work and had spent a lot of money before we were finally referred him and when he took us on, my dad started to improve so I had to be “friendly” and kept politely turning him down
Ìfẹ́@diaryofa9jagirl

I agree. The Feminism portrayed on twitter is MANY TIMES different from the true essence of feminist values. Numerous "Twitter feminists" seem more inclined to hurl insults than extend help to fellow women, prioritizing uncouth language and rigid expectations over educating and empowering others. In contrast, many real-life feminists actively contribute to women's lives, irrespective of their stance on feminism, by challenging systemic barriers. Their primary focus lies in empowering women intellectually, financially, and mentally, recognizing that true empowerment fosters self-belief and knowledge. On twitter, it seems to be a raging war where the fastest finger is deluded into thinking the best comeback has solved a gender bias problem. On twitter, it seems women only have the right to choose if the choice conforms to the expectations set by these Twitter feminists. If you do otherwise, you’re probably an open or closeted misogynist. Sigh… It's disheartening that Twitter feminism almost compels me to add disclaimers like "I'm a feminist but not a Twitter feminist," or "I'm a feminist who loves my partner and doesn't hate men." “I am a feminist but I love cooking for my husband…” I should simply be a able to say “I am a feminist” and that should universally acceptable. Also, there’s so much anger… Don’t get me wrong, anger could be justified especially when there’s so much historical and current injustices against women and the stark gender bias could be annoying. In some occasions, anger is NEEDED to convey emotions because staying silent is tantamount to participating in evil doing. Truth is, the reproduction of a bias system can make you go mad if you care enough. Is the root to your anger because of the injustice of an action, because of a personal pain you feel in relation to the event or because you’re so narcissistic that you completely refuse to accept that there are other ways that lead to a destination aside from YOUR way? Please understand, I’m not an expert on anger, this is because I rarely get angry, it’s not an emotion that I prioritise so I can’t categorically state ALL reasons why these twitter feminists usually sound angry. I sense vibes and energy though and I have made successful life decisions based on the energy I feel so I can categorically say that I do not hear anger alone from the twitter feminists, I also sense contempt, bitterness and cruelty. In few occasions, I have allowed my anger override my emotional intelligence and my true intentions but in time, I have come to prioritise real life direct impact over public outrage and winning an argument. Before you come for a woman’s choices, I beg you to pause and reflect on your words and intentions. Will it empower her, educate her? Are you open to dialogue to understand her intentions or you just want to Lord your self righteous opinions over her? I’m going to close with Chimamanda’s words. She said, “I say to young Nigerian feminists – please do not use feminism to justify your wickedness… Sometimes, I see some of these young ladies and when talking to them, they sound really mean, and I say to them this isn't feminism; you're just being nasty.” Note: I’m on holiday so I’ll not be reading responses. If this tweet incites anger, I offer no apologies.

English
168
1.2K
4.6K
831.1K