The_Artist

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The_Artist

The_Artist

@edifix_studios

My tweets are not for your validation. Arsenal | Software Engineer | Data Analyst | Designer

Worldwide Entrou em Ekim 2013
1.3K Seguindo1.2K Seguidores
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The_Artist
The_Artist@edifix_studios·
I came across an interesting write-up by Prof Dr. Kunirum Osia on the issue of "Anioma/Asaba People are not Igbo" arguments, so I thought to share it here. I'm wary of the agendas of the so-called Ohanaeze Ndigbo group in the affairs of Anioma, hence my research. A thread 👇👇
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The_Artist
The_Artist@edifix_studios·
@Iamdherjavu Not totally a scam. But they have a flawed and crooked way of viewing economic issues Let them just stick to their legal profession
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The_Artist
The_Artist@edifix_studios·
One of the fastest ways to destroy a country or state, is to hand it over to a Lawyer
Haryo_dheji@Iamdherjavu

@egi_nupe Shebi you are highly educated with a first class, what’s stopping you from being the person?

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The_Artist
The_Artist@edifix_studios·
@Benson_xo There are many more professions I did not add sef 😂😂 The decision to add other professions was made since 2017 😃
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Benson
Benson@Benson_xo·
@edifix_studios As I see ur bio I first smile 😂😂😂 U understand what I have been through.
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16@Josh__IK·
Omo shey na until I drag this agency to pay me my money before dem pay me? I get bills to sort chale!
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AntiColonial Warrior
AntiColonial Warrior@Anticolonial22·
@cirnosad Their assets in the region is not good enough, at this point the mainland should be targeted.
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carti
carti@lavish_traee·
@Oluwatom1wa @thelola_01 Typical example of why men shouldn't keep women as friends... It's a lose lose situation till one person moves on. Total summary in a video
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The_Artist
The_Artist@edifix_studios·
@slimvnsn May God continue to bless our fathers 🙏
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smv@slimvnsn·
@edifix_studios Fatherly love wey dey inside. God bless am
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The_Artist
The_Artist@edifix_studios·
Primary school o, secondary school o, higher institution o, not once have my dad attended any of my important occasions But you see that man, I don’t joke with him. I owe him everything
smv@slimvnsn

My father never came to a single thing I invited him to. Not my primary school graduation. Not my secondary school prize giving where I collected 3 awards and kept looking at the gate. Not my university matriculation. Not the ceremony when I got called to bar in 2012. I'd send him the date weeks in advance and he'd say I'll try and that was always the full sentence. I'll try. No follow up. No explanation after. My mother would sit in his place and clap loud enough for 2 people. I stopped inviting him after the bar call. Not from anger. Some people love you completely and still cannot show up and after a while you stop making them feel guilty about it. He was not a bad man. I want to be clear about that. He was a mechanic in Mushin for 35 years. Worked 6 days a week. Sent every one of us to school. Never raised his hand. Never left. The lights stayed on and the rent was paid and there was always food and he did all of it quietly without asking to be celebrated. He just could not sit in a plastic chair and watch something. I accepted that and moved on. Last year I bought my first property. A flat in Ojodu. Took 9 years of saving and 2 years of paperwork and a lawyer who nearly finished me. When the keys finally came I sat in the empty flat on the floor for an hour just breathing. I called my mother first. She screamed. My sister cried. I didn't call my father. 3 days later he called me. Said he heard about the flat from my mother. Said he wanted to come and see it. I didn't know what to do with that so I just said okay. Gave him the address. Figured he'd say I'll try and we'd never speak of it again. He showed up on Saturday at 9am. Stood at the door in his good agbada. The one he only wears for serious things. Holding a small nylon bag. I let him in and he walked through every room without speaking. Not quickly. Slowly. Like he was counting something. He checked the pipes under the kitchen sink. Knocked on the walls. Opened and closed the windows twice each. Looked at the ceiling in every room the way only a man who has fixed things his whole life looks at ceilings. Then he came and stood in the sitting room and looked at me. Said the pipework is good. Said the windows seal properly. Said whoever built this knew what they were doing. I nodded. Long silence. Then he opened the nylon bag. Inside was a small framed photo. Me at maybe 7 years old sitting on the bonnet of an old car in his workshop. Grinning. Both legs swinging. He's standing beside me with his hand on my shoulder looking at something outside the frame. I remember that day. I had gone to the workshop after school and he let me sit there while he worked and gave me a Fanta and put a Michael Jackson cassette on the small radio. I didn't know anyone had taken a photo. He said he kept it on his workshop table for 22 years. Said he wanted me to have something for the new place. I held that frame and stood very still. He said he knew he missed things. Said he was not good at the sitting and watching. That crowds made something in him go wrong in a way he never knew how to explain. Then he said the flat was good and he was proud and he asked if there was anything in the kitchen because he hadn't eaten. I laughed. Made him eggs and bread while he sat at my kitchen table in his good agbada like he owned the place. We ate and he told me about a car he was working on. I told him about a case that was giving me trouble. Normal conversation. The kind we should have been having for years. He left at 1pm. At the door he gripped my shoulder the same way he did in that photo. Didn't say anything. Didn't need to. The photo is on my sitting room wall now. First thing I hung in the whole flat. Some fathers cannot sit in the plastic chair. But mine drove to Ojodu in his good agbada on a Saturday morning with a 22 year old photograph in a nylon bag. That was his standing ovation. I just didn't know to look for it in that shape.

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The_Artist
The_Artist@edifix_studios·
@nkaysyout I don’t want them to be the ones retaliating I want them to be the attacker. They need to be the aggressors
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D@nkaysyout·
@edifix_studios If Trump carries out that attack as planned tonight, Iran will retaliate
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