IDI
596 posts


Good morning🌿☀️☕🕊️
A person turns 30 and they're "old."
A person dies at 30 and they're "young."
This is the world we live in.
Run your own race.
Because no matter what you do, people will judge you through the lens of their own fears.
Their timelines are not your timeline.
Their definition of too late, doesn't apply to you.
You're not behind. You're not ahead. You're exactly where you're supposed to be.
Growth is a daily choice. 🌿☀️
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NIGERIA WOMEN RANKING:
Most Intelligent Women
1. 🟢Igbo
2. 🟤Edo
3. 🔴Hausa
4. 🟠Nupe
5. 🟠Idoma
6. 🟤Ijaw
7. 🔴Urhobo
8. 🟠Tiv
9. 🟤Ibibio
10. 🔴Kanuri
Most Industrious Women
1. 🟢Igbo
2. 🟤Ogoni
3. 🟤Kalabari
4. 🟤Efik
5. 🟤Akwa Ibom
6. 🟠Ebira
7. 🔴Hausa/Fulani
8. 🟠Tiv
9. 🟤Ijaw
10. 🟤Urhobo/Itsekiri
Most Beautiful Women
1. 🟢Igbo
2. 🔴Fulani
3. 🟠Ebira
4. 🟠Idoma
5. 🟠Nupe
6. 🟤Ibibio
7. 🔴Hausa
8. 🟤Akwa Ibom
9. 🟤Edo
10. 🟠Tiv
Best Wife Material:
1. 🔴Hausa/Fulani
2. 🟤Akwa Ibom
3. 🟤Cross River
4. 🟢Igbo
5. 🟠Tiv
6. 🟠Ebira
7. 🟣Yoruba
8. 🟤Edo
9. 🟤Idoma
10. 🟤Efik
Most Sharp Mouth:
1. 🟣Yoruba
2. 🟤Akwa Ibom (Calabar)
3. 🟤Urhobo/Itsekiri
4. 🟤Edo
5. 🟤Ibibio
6. 🟤Ijaw
Most Lazy Women:
1. 🟣Yoruba
2. 🔴Fulani
3. 🔴Hausa
4. 🟤Esan
5. 🟤Bini
6. 🔴Barbur
7. 🟠Ebira
#WAF
Indonesia

@ruffydfire We missed you brotherly.
You're welcome back to the morning show.
Show your fire once again.
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@MrPitbull07 Fascinating story. I'm feeling nostalgic of the 70s.
Gone are the days.
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My mother used one knife for everything. She’d prep the chicken, chop eggs for the salad, and then wipe it off to butter the bread. Everything happened on that same old wooden cutting board—I can still smell the seasoned oak if I close my eyes.
There were no hand sanitizers, no organic sprays, and zero panic. And you know what? I don’t remember any of us ever getting sick from it.
Sundays smelled like roast chicken and pan-fried potatoes. There were no delivery apps, no fast-food runs—just a heavy pot simmering on the stove and the sound of laughter echoing around the family table. Life was just... warmer back then. More human.
We took our school lunches in brown paper bags that sometimes got a little greasy from the sandwich inside. A slice of bread, maybe a small treat... and the agonizing wait for the bell to ring so we could bolt outside. Despite the lack of "modern hygiene," we grew up strong.
You knew it was summer by the damp clothes hanging on the line and the chain grease on our shins from our bikes. We swam in creeks, ponds, and the lake—the water was our entire world. Beaches didn't have "Closed" signs because freedom didn't have a limit back then.
In the mornings, we’d head to school in sneakers that squeaked on the linoleum. We’d fall, scrape our knees, and come home covered in dust—but always with a smile. Those scratches didn't teach us to be afraid; they taught us how to be brave.
Our classrooms were packed, forty or fifty kids to a room, yet somehow every single one of us learned to read, write, and do math. We knew our multiplication tables by heart, did our homework before dinner, and took pride in our neat handwriting. There was effort. There was ambition. There was a quiet sense of dignity in doing things right.
During the holidays, the classroom smelled like homemade cookies. And seeing your name on the Honor Roll felt like winning an Olympic gold medal.
We played outside until the streetlights came on. Then, you’d hear the chorus of parents calling from their front porches—voices echoing across the neighborhood. That was the most comforting sound in the world: "Time to come home!"
Stung by a wasp? A little baking soda paste or a slice of onion, and you were back in the game. A fight with a friend? A few words, a quick "sorry," and you were best friends again five minutes later.
And the most important thing? We didn't even know the term "dysfunctional family." Problems were handled quietly, without labels or dramatic speeches. There was conversation. There was forgiveness. There was patience.
There was a real sense of Family.
How did we survive it all?
Maybe because we lived more simply.
Maybe because we were closer to one another.
Or maybe because the world was just a little cleaner back then, and hearts were a lot more open.
To everyone who remembers those days—I’m sending you a hug.
And to those who missed it... sometimes I’m just sorry you never got to feel that kind of simplicity and warmth.
[ Fictional ]
Credit: Soulful Stories

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@Nithya_Shrii Not necessary. The world is in constant motion. The older generation of the 60s (we call it 'high life' era in Nigeria) are having nostalgia about their days. We the 80s and 90s are are missing our days, and behold, the 'GENZI' are saying that the current era is the best.
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@danielholkss That's human ingenuity. Anything the mind can imagine, he can achieve.
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I don’t really understand the maths it takes to send humans behind the Moon and bring them back safely. And the more I sit with that, the more it genuinely messes with my head even tho my love for physics and my knowledge of physics is astounding to a point
Somebody had to work out a path where the Moon’s gravity is pulling you in, the Earth is pulling you back, and you’re moving just fast enough and not slow enough not to get trapped by either. They had to figure out the exact angle to come back into Earth’s atmosphere too. Too steep, you burn up. Too shallow, you bounce off and drift into space. And they had to get all of that right at the same time, for real people sitting in a small metal capsule about 400k kilometres away from home.
Nothing in that system is standing still.
The Moon is moving.
The Earth is moving.
Even the Sun is pulling on everything. And still, some people looked at all of that motion, all of that chaos, and turned it into numbers you can follow. Go here.
Adjust here.
Come back here.
And unlike nepa light, it infact works.
There’s also that moment in the journey where the crew passes behind the Moon. No contact with Earth. No signal. Just silence, with a massive rock blocking everything they’ve ever known. The only reason they can stay calm in that moment is because someone, somewhere, did the maths and proved they’ll come out the other side.
I don’t know what it feels like to trust something that much. To put your life in an equation when you’re that far away from everything.
But I do know this for sure, whatever that level of thinking is, whatever it takes to reach it, it might be one of the most extraordinary things human beings have ever done...
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@realgerhardtvdm QUIT FALLING FOR THE THEATRICS!
WE LIVE ON ONE PLANE OF LAND,ON A FIXED PILLAR,WITH WATERS ABOVE AND BELOW!
THE FIRMAMENT CAN NOT BE PENETRATED!
PEOPLE GET PAID MILLIONS OF DOLLARS TO TELL LIES!
WE NEVER HAVE AND NEVER WILL GO TO THE MOON!

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It’s my BIRTHDAY today..
Lord,I thank you for the gift of life..I thank you for good health,sound mind,peace that passes all understanding..
Thank you for family,loved ones and the entire human race..
Thank you for grace and Favour..
I pray for intimacy,alignment,synergy and proximity with the blessed Holy Spirit..
Grace to stay and remain rapturable..
Thank you Lord Jesus..
Say a prayer for me pls..

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@machioluoma Whether believing in religion or not, the devil is always there. The trials of life is an attribute to existentiality of evil.
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@drpaulenenche @drbeckyenenche @dunamiswrldwide Glory to God.
May his anointing spill over to my location.
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IT’S HAPPENING LIVE IN ANKPA! 🔥
Hearts are open.
Hands are lifted.
There is a deep hunger for more of God.
The people are pressing in;
desiring His presence, yearning for His touch,
and responding to the move of the Spirit.
ANKPA Healing & Deliverance Crusade 🔥
Jesus is meeting hungry hearts right now.
Kogi State College of Education Convocation Ground, Ankpa
Ongoing⏳
If you’re nearby, don’t stay away; come and encounter Him.👏🔥




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IDI retweetou

He delivered a 2-hour speech detailing his achievements in one year. Then he flew to Switzerland, & delivered a profound hour & twelve minutes speech. In Davos, he engaged several world leaders on the sidelines.
He found additional time to sign the “Board of Peace” Charter as well. His mental alertness is truly remarkable for a 79-year-old. Love or hate him, some of your favorites cannot pull it off.
He is eccentric & unrehearsed, brash even. Far removed from perfect, but an incredible man.

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Aliko Dangote has the power, money and resources to make Farook go to prison with a single trial.
Dangote has the connection and wire transfers needed to drag Farouq on the streets of Nigeria handcuffed like a tomato thief either by EFCC or DSS.
Dangote is such a household name that we can say this for sure that right now a certain amount of dangote commodities are inside Farouq's alimentary canal.
Dangote is an authority in Nigerian politics, so it makes me wonder why in all of the available ways Dangote can influence or have this man arrested or brought to book, Dangote chose the method that will make Farouq go scot free.
Dangote could actually clean Farouq's clock, have him arrested, get him locked or hooked on media trails without anyone knowing who did it.
The police, Dss or EFCC will just take credit for it.


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